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If the team works to build core competence and encourage creative problem solving,what stage of team development is the team at?


A) Forming
B) Norming
C) Storming
D) Performing

Correct Answer

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At what stage would these behaviors be exhibited: ignoring disagreements,cooperativeness,and conformity to standards and expectations?


A) Forming
B) Norming
C) Storming
D) Performing

Correct Answer

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The Tallahassee Democrat's ELITE Team Katzenbach and Smith (1993, pp. 67-72), as part of their extensive research on teams, observed the formation of a team at the Tallahassee Democrat, the only major newspaper left in Tallahassee, Florida. Here is their description of how the team, which called itself "ELITE Team," performed over time. All incidents and names are factual. As you read the description, look for evidence of team development stages. Fred Mott, general manager of the Democrat, recognized [the declining profitability and distribution of most major metropolitan newspapers] earlier than many of his counterparts. In part, Mott took his lead from Jim Batten, who made "customer obsession" the central theme of his corporate renewal effort shortly after he became Knight-Ridder's CEO. But the local marketplace also shaped Mott's thinking. The Democrat was Tallahassee's only newspaper and made money in spite of its customer service record. Mott believed, however, that further growth could never happen unless the paper learned to serve customers in ways "far superior to anything else in the marketplace." The ELITE Team story actually began with the formation of another team made up of Mott and his direct reports. The management group knew they could not hope to build a "customer obsession" across the mile-high barriers isolating production from circulation from advertising without first changing themselves. It had become all too common, they admitted, for them to engage in "power struggles and finger pointing." Using regularly scheduled Monday morning meetings, Mott's group began to "get to know each other's strengths and weaknesses, bare their souls, and build a level of trust." Most important, they did so by focusing on real work they could do together. For example, early on they agreed to create a budget for the paper as a team instead of singly as function heads. Over time, the change in behavior at the top began to be noticed. One of the women who later joined the ELITE Team, for example, observed that the sight of senior management holding their "Monday morning come-to-Jesus" meetings really made a difference to her and others. "I saw all this going on and I thought, 'What are they so happy about?"' Eventually, as the team at the top got stronger and more confident, they forged a higher aspiration: to build customer focus and break down the barriers across the broad base of the paper.... A year after setting up the new [team], however, Mott was both frustrated and impatient. Neither the Advertising Customer Service department, a series of customer surveys, additional resources thrown against the problem in the interim, nor any number of top management exhortations had made any difference. Ad errors persisted, and sales reps still complained of insufficient time with customers. In fact, the new unit had turned into another organizational barrier. Customer surveys showed that too many advertisers still found the Democrat unresponsive to their needs and too concerned with internal procedures and deadlines. People at the paper also had evidence beyond surveys. In one instance, for example, a sloppily prepared ad arrived through a fax machine looking like a "rat had run across the page." Yet the ad passed through the hands of seven employees and probably would have found its way into print if it had not been literally unreadable! As someone commented, "It was not anyone's job to make sure it was right. If they felt it was simply their job to type or paste it up, they just passed it along." This particular fax, affectionately known as the "rat tracks fax," came to symbolize the essential challenge at the Democrat.... At the time, Mott was reading about Motorola's quality programs and the goal of zero defects. He decided to heed Dunlap's advice by creating a special team of workers charged with eliminating all errors in advertisements. Mott now admits he was skeptical that frontline people could become as cohesive a team as he and his direct reports. So he made Dunlap, his trusted confidante, the leader of the team that took on the name ELITE for "ELIminate The Errors." A year later, Mott was a born-again believer in teams. Under ELITE's leadership, advertising accuracy, never before tracked at the paper, had risen sharply and stayed above 99 percent. Lost revenues from errors, previously as high as $10,000 a month, had dropped to near zero. Ad sales reps had complete confidence in the Advertising Customer Service department's capacity and desire to treat each ad as though the Democrat's existence were at stake. And surveys showed a huge positive swing in advertiser satisfaction. Mott considered all of this nothing less than a minor miracle. The impact of ELITE, however, went beyond numbers. It completely redesigned the process by which the Democrat sells, creates, produces, and bills for advertisements. More important yet, it stimulated and nurtured the customer obsession and cross-functional cooperation required to make the new process work. In effect, this team of mostly frontline workers transformed an entire organization with respect to customer service. ELITE had a lot going for it from the beginning. Mott gave the group a clear performance goal (eliminate errors) and a strong mix of skills (12 of the best people from all parts of the paper). He committed himself to follow through by promising, at the first meeting, that "whatever solution you come up with will be implemented." In addition, Jim Batten's customer obsession movement helped energize the task force. But it took more than a good sendoff and an overarching corporate theme to make ELITE into a high-performance team. In this case, the personal commitments began to grow, unexpectedly, over the early months as the team grappled with its challenge. At first, the group spent more time pointing fingers at one another than coming to grips with advertising errors. Only when one of them produced the famous "rat tracks fax" and told the story behind it did the group start to admit that everyone not everyone else was at fault. Then, recalls one member, "We had some pretty hard discussions. And there were tears in those meetings." The emotional response galvanized the group to the task at hand and to one another. And the closer it got, the more focused it became on the challenge. ELITE decided to look carefully at the entire process by which an ad was sold, created, printed, and billed. When it did, the team discovered patterns in the errors, most of which could be attributed to time pressures, bad communication, and poor attitude. Commitment to one another drove ELITE to expand its aspirations continually. Having started with the charge to eliminate errors, ELITE moved on to break down functional barriers, then to redesigning the entire advertising process, then to refining new standards and measures for customer service, and, finally, to spreading its own brand of "customer obsession" across the entire Democrat..... Inspired by ELITE, for example, one production crew started coming to work at 4 A.M., to ease time pressures later in the day.... To this day, the spirit of ELITE lives on at the Democrat. "There is no beginning and no end," says Dunlap. "Every day we experience something we learn from." ELITE's spirit made everyone a winner the customers, the employees, management, and even Knight-Ridder's corporate leaders. CEO Jim Batten was so impressed that he agreed to pay for managers from other Knight-Ridder papers to visit the Democrat to learn from ELITE's experience. And, of course, the 12 people who committed themselves to one another and their paper had an impact and an experience none of them will ever forget. -Explain the principles that have been found to be effective in providing feedback to others.

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Focus feedback on the following: behavio...

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The following behaviors are key to building and maintaining credibility among team members: (1) Be clear and consistent,(2) Manage agreement and disagreement,(3) Encourage and coach,and (4) Provide training.Which statements are correct?


A) All four statements are correct.
B) Only statements 1, 2, and 4 are correct.
C) Only statements 2, 3, and 4 are correct.
D) Only statements 1 and 3 are correct.
E) Only statements 1, 2, and 3 are correct.

Correct Answer

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Teddy Roosevelt once said,"There is no room in this country for hyphenated Americanism....The one absolutely certain way of bringing this nation to ruin,of preventing all possibility of its continuing to be a nation at all,would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities." How does this statement compare to the criteria of an Everest goal?


A) It has the necessary characteristics to be considered an Everest goal.
B) It lacks specific objectives and is not interesting.
C) It lacks interest.
D) It lacks passion.

Correct Answer

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You find that you are asking yourself the following questions: "How can I show my support to others?" and "How can I fit in?" What stage of team development are you most likely at?


A) Forming
B) Norming
C) Storming
D) Performing

Correct Answer

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If your team's development was in the storming stage,which of the following behaviors would you most likely see?


A) Dependence
B) Coalitions being formed
C) Conformity to standards and expectations
D) Unconditional commitment to the team

Correct Answer

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Your best friend in another department remarks that the team members in her group are very self-conscious.Also,she indicates that she has yet to speak up in the meetings.What stage is her group most likely at?


A) Forming
B) Norming
C) Storming
D) Performing

Correct Answer

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Which of the following characteristics is least likely to be reflected in a SMART goal?


A) Specific
B) Measurable
C) Altruistic
D) Realistic but stretching
E) Time-bound

Correct Answer

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High-performing teams in the performing stage of development emphasize (1) elevating the team's performance and (2) improvements that are large and dramatic.Which statements are correct?


A) Both statements are correct.
B) Only statement 1 is correct.
C) Only statement 2 is correct.

Correct Answer

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A key objective in the performing stage is continuous improvement.

Correct Answer

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You have just returned from a seminar on teams.Your employees perform routine,highly structured work (painting the eyes on Barbie dolls) .Is this situation well suited for teams?


A) Any situation can benefit from a team structure.
B) The situation is not well suited for teams.
C) There is not enough information.

Correct Answer

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Providing supportive feedback and fostering commitment to a vision are needed from team leaders.You are at what stage of team development?


A) Forming
B) Norming
C) Storming
D) Performing

Correct Answer

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To reach the fourth stage of the four stages of team development labeled by Tuckman,a team must progress through the first three stages of development.

Correct Answer

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The Tallahassee Democrat's ELITE Team Katzenbach and Smith (1993, pp. 67-72), as part of their extensive research on teams, observed the formation of a team at the Tallahassee Democrat, the only major newspaper left in Tallahassee, Florida. Here is their description of how the team, which called itself "ELITE Team," performed over time. All incidents and names are factual. As you read the description, look for evidence of team development stages. Fred Mott, general manager of the Democrat, recognized [the declining profitability and distribution of most major metropolitan newspapers] earlier than many of his counterparts. In part, Mott took his lead from Jim Batten, who made "customer obsession" the central theme of his corporate renewal effort shortly after he became Knight-Ridder's CEO. But the local marketplace also shaped Mott's thinking. The Democrat was Tallahassee's only newspaper and made money in spite of its customer service record. Mott believed, however, that further growth could never happen unless the paper learned to serve customers in ways "far superior to anything else in the marketplace." The ELITE Team story actually began with the formation of another team made up of Mott and his direct reports. The management group knew they could not hope to build a "customer obsession" across the mile-high barriers isolating production from circulation from advertising without first changing themselves. It had become all too common, they admitted, for them to engage in "power struggles and finger pointing." Using regularly scheduled Monday morning meetings, Mott's group began to "get to know each other's strengths and weaknesses, bare their souls, and build a level of trust." Most important, they did so by focusing on real work they could do together. For example, early on they agreed to create a budget for the paper as a team instead of singly as function heads. Over time, the change in behavior at the top began to be noticed. One of the women who later joined the ELITE Team, for example, observed that the sight of senior management holding their "Monday morning come-to-Jesus" meetings really made a difference to her and others. "I saw all this going on and I thought, 'What are they so happy about?"' Eventually, as the team at the top got stronger and more confident, they forged a higher aspiration: to build customer focus and break down the barriers across the broad base of the paper.... A year after setting up the new [team], however, Mott was both frustrated and impatient. Neither the Advertising Customer Service department, a series of customer surveys, additional resources thrown against the problem in the interim, nor any number of top management exhortations had made any difference. Ad errors persisted, and sales reps still complained of insufficient time with customers. In fact, the new unit had turned into another organizational barrier. Customer surveys showed that too many advertisers still found the Democrat unresponsive to their needs and too concerned with internal procedures and deadlines. People at the paper also had evidence beyond surveys. In one instance, for example, a sloppily prepared ad arrived through a fax machine looking like a "rat had run across the page." Yet the ad passed through the hands of seven employees and probably would have found its way into print if it had not been literally unreadable! As someone commented, "It was not anyone's job to make sure it was right. If they felt it was simply their job to type or paste it up, they just passed it along." This particular fax, affectionately known as the "rat tracks fax," came to symbolize the essential challenge at the Democrat.... At the time, Mott was reading about Motorola's quality programs and the goal of zero defects. He decided to heed Dunlap's advice by creating a special team of workers charged with eliminating all errors in advertisements. Mott now admits he was skeptical that frontline people could become as cohesive a team as he and his direct reports. So he made Dunlap, his trusted confidante, the leader of the team that took on the name ELITE for "ELIminate The Errors." A year later, Mott was a born-again believer in teams. Under ELITE's leadership, advertising accuracy, never before tracked at the paper, had risen sharply and stayed above 99 percent. Lost revenues from errors, previously as high as $10,000 a month, had dropped to near zero. Ad sales reps had complete confidence in the Advertising Customer Service department's capacity and desire to treat each ad as though the Democrat's existence were at stake. And surveys showed a huge positive swing in advertiser satisfaction. Mott considered all of this nothing less than a minor miracle. The impact of ELITE, however, went beyond numbers. It completely redesigned the process by which the Democrat sells, creates, produces, and bills for advertisements. More important yet, it stimulated and nurtured the customer obsession and cross-functional cooperation required to make the new process work. In effect, this team of mostly frontline workers transformed an entire organization with respect to customer service. ELITE had a lot going for it from the beginning. Mott gave the group a clear performance goal (eliminate errors) and a strong mix of skills (12 of the best people from all parts of the paper). He committed himself to follow through by promising, at the first meeting, that "whatever solution you come up with will be implemented." In addition, Jim Batten's customer obsession movement helped energize the task force. But it took more than a good sendoff and an overarching corporate theme to make ELITE into a high-performance team. In this case, the personal commitments began to grow, unexpectedly, over the early months as the team grappled with its challenge. At first, the group spent more time pointing fingers at one another than coming to grips with advertising errors. Only when one of them produced the famous "rat tracks fax" and told the story behind it did the group start to admit that everyone not everyone else was at fault. Then, recalls one member, "We had some pretty hard discussions. And there were tears in those meetings." The emotional response galvanized the group to the task at hand and to one another. And the closer it got, the more focused it became on the challenge. ELITE decided to look carefully at the entire process by which an ad was sold, created, printed, and billed. When it did, the team discovered patterns in the errors, most of which could be attributed to time pressures, bad communication, and poor attitude. Commitment to one another drove ELITE to expand its aspirations continually. Having started with the charge to eliminate errors, ELITE moved on to break down functional barriers, then to redesigning the entire advertising process, then to refining new standards and measures for customer service, and, finally, to spreading its own brand of "customer obsession" across the entire Democrat..... Inspired by ELITE, for example, one production crew started coming to work at 4 A.M., to ease time pressures later in the day.... To this day, the spirit of ELITE lives on at the Democrat. "There is no beginning and no end," says Dunlap. "Every day we experience something we learn from." ELITE's spirit made everyone a winner the customers, the employees, management, and even Knight-Ridder's corporate leaders. CEO Jim Batten was so impressed that he agreed to pay for managers from other Knight-Ridder papers to visit the Democrat to learn from ELITE's experience. And, of course, the 12 people who committed themselves to one another and their paper had an impact and an experience none of them will ever forget. -What were the stages of development of the ELITE Team? Identify specific examples of each of the four stages of development in the case.

Correct Answer

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Students should be able to identify the ...

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Which is an effective principle for providing feedback?


A) Focusing feedback on persons rather than behavior pinpoints directly the problem
B) Focusing feedback on inferences and judgments eliminates blocking behavior
C) Focusing feedback on the amount of information the recipient can use helps team members
D) Focusing feedback immediately is more important than looking for the appropriate time

Correct Answer

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To avoid groupthink,(1) the team should have second-chance meetings,(2) the team should invite outside experts to listen to the rationale for the team's decision and critique it,and (3) the team leader should express an opinion at the outset of the meeting to save time.Which statements are correct?


A) All three statements are correct.
B) Only statements 1 and 2 are correct.
C) Only statements 1 and 3 are correct.
D) Only statements 2 and 3 are correct.
E) Only statement 3 is correct.

Correct Answer

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Relationships must be formed and trust established.Clarity of direction is needed from team leaders.Your team is at what stage?


A) Forming
B) Norming
C) Storming
D) Performing

Correct Answer

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If you find that you ask yourself this question,"How can we foster innovativeness and creativity?",what stage is your team most likely at?


A) Forming
B) Norming
C) Storming
D) Performing

Correct Answer

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Two critical aspects of team leadership are developing credibility and influence among team members and establishing a motivating vision and goals for the team.

Correct Answer

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