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Ten Components Of Effective Team Problem Solving By: Ken Wallace

Ten components of effective team problem solving

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Page 1: Ten components of effective team problem solving

Ten Components Of Effective Team

Problem Solving

By: Ken Wallace

Page 2: Ten components of effective team problem solving

1. Team members readily contribute from their experience and listen to the contributions of others.

Page 3: Ten components of effective team problem solving

2. Disagreements arising from different points of view are considered helpful; they are seen as the crucible out of which unambiguous and honest solutions can flow.

Page 4: Ten components of effective team problem solving

3. Team members challenge suggestions they believe are unsupported by facts or logic but avoid arguing just to have their way or to be noticed for their own individual input.

Page 5: Ten components of effective team problem solving

4. Poor solutions are not supported just for the sake of harmony or agreement.

Page 6: Ten components of effective team problem solving

5. Differences of opinion are discussed and resolved. Coin tossing, averaging, straw-drawing, majority vote and similar cop-outs are avoided when making a decision.

Page 7: Ten components of effective team problem solving

6. Every team member strives to make the problem solving process efficient and is careful to facilitate rather than hinder discussion; each member strives to encourage and applaud individual efforts to contribute as well as the contributions themselves.

Page 8: Ten components of effective team problem solving

7. Team members encourage and support co-workers who are reluctant to offer ideas or to offer differing views from those already expressed.

Page 9: Ten components of effective team problem solving

8. Team members understand the value of time and work to eliminate extraneous and/or repetitious discussion.

Page 10: Ten components of effective team problem solving

9. Team decisions are not arbitrarily overruled by the leader simply because he/she doesn’t agree with them; each member is committed to respecting each other’s views and to honoring the sources of these views as being legitimate and sincere.

Page 11: Ten components of effective team problem solving

10. The team understands that the leader will make the best decision he or she can if a satisfactory team solution is not forthcoming; they each agree to support and promote the decision that results from the problem solving process whether it is made collectively by the team or individually by the leader of the team.