3D Team Leadership: A New Approach for Complex Teams


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Description

Many organizations believe that high-functioning teams hold the key to breakthrough thinking, superior customer service, and high-quality products. But, all too often, leaders and managers fail to support teams so that they can deliver on their promises. For instance, many leaders ask for teamwork, but only reward and evaluate individual performance; focus on the group at the expense of individual members; or leave team members to sort out their differences, leading to the formation of unhealthy cliques.

In 3D Team Leadership, Bradley L. Kirkman and T. Brad Harris present a dynamic new model for maximizing team performance. Previous books have treated teams as groups of people working interdependently, an approach that overlooks two crucial components: the individuals who make up the team and the subgroups that form within and between teams. To create a fuller portrait of team behavior, Kirkman and Harris propose an innovative 3D framework that takes into account all three factors. Drawing on their own research, best-in-class studies, and extensive consulting, they show leaders how to properly diagnose the state of their teams, hone in on the element that needs attention, and seamlessly shift focus among the three components of teamwork as time goes on. Delivering practical guidance rooted in scholarship, 3D Team Leadership is a thoughtful and straightforward guide for the complex challenge of teaming today.



Author: Bradley L. Kirkman, T. Brad Harris
Publisher: Stanford Business Books
Published: 09/12/2017
Pages: 312
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.24lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.81d
ISBN13: 9780804796422
ISBN10: 0804796424
BISAC Categories:
- Business & Economics | Leadership
- Business & Economics | Management | General

About the Author
Bradley L. Kirkman is General (Ret.) H. Hugh Shelton Distinguished Professor of Leadership in the Poole College of Management at North Carolina State University. T. Brad Harris is Assistant Professor in the Neeley School of Business at Texas Christian University.