Article

How To Manage Cross-Functional Teams

Topic: CreativityBy Barbara StennesPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 1,821 legacy views

Teamwork is necessary for a business or organization to function. In recent years, however, “teams” and “teamwork” have been so overused that they have become yet another (almost) meaningless business buzzword. We now talk about cross-functional teams, multinational teams, hot teams, distributed teams, and virtual teams. Technological development has certainly facilitated communication and hence teamwork across enormous geographic gulfs. Audio, video, and web-conferencing, along with e-mail and other data transmission channels, permit companies to work in ways that would have been unimaginable even a few years ago.

A team involves a collection of individuals with different strengths and weaknesses united by a common purpose. Cross-functional teams assemble individuals from diverse, unrelated areas of an organization. For example, in deciding whether to introduce a new product, a CEO might appoint a cross-functional team, with team members drawn from the marketing, accounting, purchasing, engineering, manufacturing, IT, and R&D departments. This diversity is the primary strength of a cross-functional team; because the team incorporates so many different perspectives, it becomes possible to analyze a problem from every direction. Less diverse teams run the risk of overlooking a major issue because they lack the relevant knowledge. For example, a team of engineers and scientists may have a terrific product idea, but without input from the marketing department, how will they know whether customers will buy it?

Some cross-functional teams are assembled around short-term projects and hence have relatively short lives. Other cross-functional teams are “standing,” meaning that they are conce
ed with long-term (possibly perpetual) business issues. These teams may meet regularly for years, becoming a de facto managerial organ.

Although diversity is the main strength of cross-functional teams, it also represents their biggest weakness. When so many different perspectives and attitudes gather at a single table, maintaining a congenial, productive atmosphere can be difficult. However, a team leader can take steps to mitigate these pressures and keep the team functioning smoothly.

First, if the team is working virtually, with team members in different offices, make sure that geography does not become an obstacle. This entails effective management of time zones and vast distances. Moreover, if the team depends on sophisticated communications technology, it becomes absolutely critical that the technology works correctly. Make a point of testing the communications hardware and software before every team meeting, and be sure to have a backup system in case of system failure.

Second, clearly establish the team’s goals and objectives, deadlines, and criteria for success. This is a very important step towards creating a well-knit cross-functional team. Note that these goals, objectives, and criteria must be measurable, or else they will be meaningless, and the team will never know if it has achieved its goal. In addition, team members need to know their roles, as well as the expectations that the team leader has for them.

Managing a cross-functional team can be a challenge, but it can also be a tremendously rewarding experience. These types of teams often create unique innovations and strengthen their organizations, but achieving this level of success demands a good team leader who understands the risks and rewards.

Article author

About the Author

Barbara Stennes is a CSP (Certified Speaking Professional), President and Owner Resources Unlimited who conducts training sessions and facilitates meetings to help organizations focus on their real business issues such as creativity and innovation, team building, and customer service. Barbara's work in creativity and innovation utilizes the thinking systems from Dr. Edward de Bono, world-renowned creative thinker. Barbara is also an Authorized Inscape Publishing Distributor, offering the Online DiSC Classic Profile and other learning assessments from Inscape Publishing.

For more information, call 515.278.1292 or email info@ResourcesUnlimited.com.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

People paint for a lot of different reasons. To relax, to express themselves , to create beauty and meaning, to make money, because they have a passion to create, to gain approval, to stay sane, to make sense of the world, to play and have fun. All of the above are wonderful and valid ...

Related piece

Article

Creativity is a subtle and magnificent dance between the rational and the intuitive, between the left and right parts of the brains, between technique and imagination. Both partners in this dance are absolutely necessary and are needed in equal proportion, which means that imagination is not more important than technique and visa versa. If you only live in the imagination, you will never get organized, you will never complete your story. However, if you start from the rational, linear, organizational part of the process, ( ie. Gotta have the perfect opening sentence and first paragraph...

Related piece

Article

Recently, I was considering the question of peace, which doesn't happen often while writing fiction. There's all that drama, love, hate, desire, envy and so on. Peace, with any luck, comes at the end of the novel. I was considering this aimlessly as I lay with my head on Phoebe's warm flank. Phoebe, being the sensitive, intuitive creature she is, immediately tuned into my musings and suggested we consider the question of love instead, which she quite rightly observed was a precursor to true peace.

Related piece

Article

It is sometimes said that the truth should never be allowed to get in the way of a good story. Sometimes, however, it is the true events that turn out to be the stories that tell us the most. This is the case with the story of my friend's cat. My friend, Rachel, has a cat. Nothing special ...

Related piece