Read Team Genius: The New Science of High-Performing Organizations Online
Authors: Rich Karlgaard,Michael S. Malone
52.
Liden, R. C., Wayne, S. J., Jaworski, R. A., and Bennett, N. 2004. “Social loafing: A field investigation.”
Journal of Management
30(2), pp. 285–304.
53.
Ancona, D. G., and Caldwell, D. F. 1992. “Bridging the boundary: External activity and performance in organizational teams.”
Administrative Science Quarterly
37, pp. 634–65.
54.
Hoegl, M., Weinkauf, K., and Gemuenden, H. G. 2004. “Interteam coordination, project commitment, and teamwork in multiteam R&D projects: A longitudinal study.”
Organization Science
15(1), pp. 38–55.
Hoegl, M. 2005. “Smaller teams—better teamwork: How to keep project teams small.”
Business Horizons
48, pp. 209–14.
5: MANAGING TEAMS TO GENIUS
1.
Wageman, R., and Gordon, D. 2005. “As the twig is bent: How group values shape emergent task interdependence in groups.”
Organization Science
16, pp. 687–700.
2.
Wageman, R. 1995. “Interdependence and Group Effectiveness.”
Administrative Science Quarterly
40(1), pp. 145–180.
3.
Ginnett, R. 1990. “Airline cockpit crew.” In J. R. Hackman (ed.),
Groups That Work (And Those That Don’t)
. San Francisco: CA: Jossey-Bass.
Ginnett, R. 1993. “Crews as groups: Their formation and their leadership.” In E. Wiener, B. Kanki, and R. Helmreich (eds.),
Cockpit Resource Management
. San Diego, CA: Academic Press, pp. 71–98.
4.
Hackman, J. R. 2002.
Leading Teams: Setting the Stage for Great Performances
. Boston: HBS Press.
5.
Ibid.
6.
Steiner, I. D. 1972.
Group Process and Productivity
. New York: Academic Press.
Forsyth, D. R. 2006, 2010.
Group Dynamics
. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, Cenpage Learning.
7.
Edmondson, A. C. December 1999. “Psychological safety and learning behavior in work teams.”
Administrative Science Quarterly
44(4), pp. 350–83.
8.
Liden, R. C., Wayne, S. J., Jaworski, R. A., and Bennett, N. 2004. “Social loafing: A field investigation.”
Journal of Management
30(2), pp. 285–304.
9.
Van Dick, R., Tissington, P. A., and Hertel, G. 2009. “Do many hands make light work? How to overcome social loafing and gain motivation in work teams.”
European Business Review
21 (3), pp. 233–45.
10.
Köhler, O. 1926. “Kraftleistungen bei Einzel- und Gruppenarbeit.” [“Physical performance in individual and group work.”]
Industrielle Psychotechnik
3, pp. 274–82.
11.
Weber, B., and Hertel, G. 2007. “Motivation gains of inferior group members: a meta-analytical review.”
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
93(6), pp. 973–93.
12.
Hertel, G., Deter, C., and Konradt, U. 2003. “Motivation gains in computer-mediated work groups.”
Journal of Applied Social Psychology
33(10), pp. 2080–2105.
7: SUCCESSFUL PAIRING
1.
In terms of an effect on modern life, perhaps no one has ever been better at spotting and developing these “perfect pairs” than Frederick Terman Jr., the professor who set up the first electrical engineering program in
the western United States at Stanford University, where his father had been president. Terman is rightly celebrated as the father of Silicon Valley because of his lab, his students who went out to build the electronics industry, and his successful advocacy of the creation of the first great industrial park.
Less noticed is that Terman, perhaps alone among any academic or business executives, helped create and then successfully managed two Castor and Pollux pair-teams, each exemplifying a different type. The most famous of these perfect pairs is, of course, Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard. Both men had crossed paths for years but didn’t really meet until they were in Terman’s lab. It was Terman who suggested that the two men work together, beginning in the celebrated Packard garage. He also found them employees, contracts, and clients, and even gave them business advice until their skills far outpaced his own.
Bill and Dave in time created what is still generally considered among the greatest companies of all time. Less appreciated is their almost superhuman friendship: over the course of nearly sixty years, the table-pounding Packard and the genial Hewlett appear never to have had an argument, much less a fight. Not only did they work together every day, but their families often vacationed together—despite the stress of presiding over one of the fastest-growing and most innovative technology companies in history.
Also in Terman’s lab in the mid-1930s was an even more unlikely Castor and Pollux team, the Varian brothers. The two men may have been siblings, but in person few would have guessed that fact. Russell Varian was a gentle giant, with a great square jaw and huge hands; phlegmatic and slow moving. Sigurd Varian (“Sig”) was small and handsome. They were the sons of Irish theosophists and had been raised in the utopian community of Halcyon, California. As boys, the brothers had built and flown their own airplanes, a swashbuckling career that Sigurd pursued (he flew for Pan Am, opening new routes over Latin America) after dropping out of college. Russell took a different path. Developing a deep interest in the emerging field of electronics, he was accepted to Stanford. Because the family was poor, he chose to hike the 220 miles to school—and during his years studying under Terman, he often lived off the fruit growing on campus. Turned down for work on a PhD, Russell took a job in private industry.
It was Sigurd who came up with the idea for a new kind of microwave device, the klystron tube. This might seem surprising, but in fact Sig Varian had a good reason: dealing with old flight maps that sometimes showed swamps when there were mountains instead, he wanted a way to see the flight path ahead at night or through inclement weather. Thanks
to one of Russell’s old classmates, now a professor at their alma mater, Russell was invited back to Stanford with his brother to work on building a klystron.
What happened next was something that no one who saw it ever forgot. In exchange for giving away half of any royalties, the brothers set up in a physics lab near Terman’s and began to work. In the weeks and months that followed, the brothers seemed to work continuously, day and night. Visitors, including Hewlett and Packard, were astounded by what they saw: despite being so different, and having lived such different lives, Russell and Sigurd worked together like a kind of perpetual motion machine—rarely taking a break, seemingly sharing the same thoughts, finishing each other’s sentences, like two minds in one. Officially, Russell was responsible for the design, Sig for the building of the prototype, but each was deeply involved in the work of the other.
In August 1937, the Varian brothers completed and successfully fired up the prototype klystron. Within a year, it was licensed by Sperry Gyroscope—and just in time. The British, facing the prospect of German attack, were desperate to build a low-weight version of their new radar technology to put into planes and ships. The Varian klystron was the perfect solution. In radar, it played a crucial role in the Allied victory.
After the war, the Varian brothers founded Varian Associates to build multiple versions of the klystron. Interestingly, one of their most important customers was Stanford University, where Russell’s old professor and supporter William Hansen lined up scores of klystrons on a mile-long path and created the linear accelerator. By then, Russell and Sigurd had gone back to their old lives: Sigurd to building machinery and flying (he would die in a plane crash off the coast of Mexico) and Russell to helping design the equally monumental MRI technology for the medical world.
8: TRIOS
1.
By the way, some NFL teams learned to counter the West Coast offense by taking a cue from the other Niner hall of famer of those years, the defensive safety Ronnie Lott. Lott’s solution was to break up the precision of the offense, and thus Walsh’s controlled randomness, by asserting a randomness of his own, improvising his own play responses on the fly, shortening his decision-making time to what almost seemed like intuition, unmatched open field tackling, and sufficiently intimidating receivers so that
they
hesitated and he regained any lost time. This response resulted in a new kind of defensive back, the hybrid “elephant” linebacker—huge, fast, and free to take any role from pass coverage to rushing the quarterback—best exemplified by Charles Haley of the Cowboys
(though trained by the Niners) and Lawrence Taylor of the New York Giants. This underscores the fact that one of the
biggest
weaknesses of trios is coordination and the time it takes to achieve it.
9: FOUR AND MORE
1.
Belbin M. 2011. “Size matters: How many make the ideal team?” Belbin.es, www.belbin.es/rte.asp?id=153&pressid=31&task=View.
11: THE BIRTH AND LIFE OF TEAMS
1.
Scheer, George F., and Hugh F. Rankin. 1957.
Rebels and Redcoats: The American Revolution Through the Eyes of Those That Fought and Lived It
. New York: World Publishing Company, p. 504.
The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific entry, please use your e-book reader’s search tools.
Adams, Franklin Pierce, 175
additive tasks, 97
Adelphia Communications, 9
aftermath phase, 218, 239–46
age diversity, 73, 76, 86–87
Aglioti, Salvatore, 48
Alcoholics Anonymous, 129
Alibaba, 5, 14
Allen, Paul, 14, 125
Allen, Steve, 147
alumni group, 248
Amazon, 5, 8, 93
Anderson, Darrell, 105–12, 125
Andreessen, Marc, 8
antagonistic partnerships, 121–24
Aparaicio, Luis, 175
Apollo 13
, 7
Apple, xii, 7–15, 94, 119–20, 190, 193, 208
Aramis, 160
Arcade Fire, 193
Arcadia Invitational race, 104–5
Armani, Giorgio, 134
Armstrong, Louis, 118, 131
Arnold, Benedict, 249
Artist-Angel pairs, 133–35, 154, 159
Attila the Hun, 147
attitudes, 223
Australian Aboriginals, 26, 203
Australopithecine, 38
averaging contributions, 98
Ballmer, Steve, 14
Baran, Paul, 137–38
Bardeen, John, 120, 166–68, 170, 179
Barton, Bruce Fairchild, 145–46
Beach Boys, 122, 183
Beatles, 15, 184–85
Beck, Jeff, 122
Becker, Greg, 81
Behar, Howard, 102
Belbin, Meredith, 185
beliefs, 79–80
Bell Labs, 166–68, 170
Benét, Steven Vincent, 187
Berra, Yogi, 142
Berteig, Mishkin, 23
Best, Pete, 184
best practices, 248–49
Bezos, Jeff, 188–89, 198
Big Data, 32–34
Bismarck High School team, 105–12
Blaine, Hal, 193
Bligh, William, 140
bliss point, 85
body language, 57
bonding, 44–47
Bono, Sonny, 193
boundedness, 88, 94–95
Boyer, Ken, 142
brain, xix, 22, 36–37, 43, 47–54, 59–62, 68–70
Brando, Marlon, 137
Branson, Richard, 49
Braque, Georges, 120–21
Brattain, Walter, 120, 166–68, 170, 179
Brewer, Marilynn, 46–47
Brin, Sergey, 20, 119
British Army, 21, 142, 158, 210
British Empire, 24
Brock, Lou, 142
Brubeck, Dave, 118
Bryant, Boudleaux and Felice, 128
Bryant, Kobe, 81
Buffett, Warren, 126
Burns, Ursula, 49
Bushkin, Henry, 131
Busicom, 150–51, 169
Caesar, Julius, 18
Calloway, Cab, 122
Campbell, Glen, 193
Carnegie, Andrew, 127, 139
Carson, Johnny, 131
Carson, Kit, 116, 140
Castor-and-Pollux pairs, 102, 117, 122, 126–28, 143, 154–55
Catz, Safra, 136
celebrations and rituals
departure, 229
end of task, 238–39
formation, 220–23
welcoming, 229–30
Chained-Together-By-Success pair, 121–24
Chambers, John, 3
Chance, Frank, 165, 175–78, 181
Chanel, Coco, 134
change, 1–15
Chicago Cubs, 175–78
Chicago White Sox, 175
Chinese army, 18, 21
Christensen, Clayton, xiii, 208
Chrysler, 9
Churchill, Winston, 148
Cincinnatus, 246
Cisco, 3
Clapton, Eric, 184
Clark, Jim, 8
Clark, William, 116, 136
Clausewitz, Carl von, 147
Clinton, George, 193
Coakley, Andy, 175
cognitive diversity, 65–73
cognitive fitness, 87
collaboration, 38–39, 55–56, 62–64, 71, 118–19.
See also
cooperation
Collins, Bootsy, 193
combinatorics, 32, 71
communication, 58–59, 64, 72, 84, 89, 188–89, 224, 227
compelling tasks, 97
compensatory tasks, 98–99
completion phase, 217, 237–39
component tasks, 96
configural tasks, 99
conflicts, 70
conformity, 67–68, 85–86
congruence, 82–83
conjunctive tasks, 98
consequential tasks, 95, 97
consolidation and maturation phase, 217, 230–35
context-dependent thinkers, 66–67
context-independent thinkers, 66–67
control, 19, 95, 189
controlled randomness, 162–64
convergent thinkers, 69
conversational turn-taking, 72
Cook, James, 7, 140
Cook, Tim, 13
cooperation, 38–41, 54.
See also
collaboration
coordination, 89, 97
Cortés, Hernán, 7
Counterweight pairs, 135–38, 158
Cox, Wally, 137
Craig, Roger, 161–65, 177
creative abrasion, 69–70
creativity, 51, 67–68, 84–85
Crosby, Bing, 122
culture, 66–68, 73, 93, 95, 216, 223, 226–28
Custer, George Armstrong, 107
Davis, Jim, 93
Dean, John, 81
debate, 56
debriefings, 57, 99
Dell, Michael, 94–95
departures, 216–17, 229–30
Descartes, René, 115
Desmond, Paul, 118
Difference, The
(Page), 72–73
Digital Equipment Corporation, 169
DiMaggio, Joe, 142
Dior, Christian, 134
discretionary tasks, 99
discrimination and fairness perspective, 79
disjunctive tasks, 97
Disney, Roy, 127, 139
Disney, Walt, 127, 132, 139, 183
dissent, 84
Distant-Idol pairs, 145–49
divergence, 69, 85–86
diversity, xix, xx, 65–91, 95–96
challenges of, 72–77
cognitive, 65–71
formation phase and, 219
framing and, 78–79
mitigating cost of, 77–87
team size and, 189–91, 199, 207
diversity prediction theorem, 74
division of labor, 18, 64, 88, 96, 140, 190, 194
divisions, 27–30, 186, 206
Domesday Book, 25
Dumas, Alexandre, 160
Dunbar, Robin, 25–28, 43–44, 185
Dunbar numbers, 24–28, 31, 43, 185–86, 198, 203.
See also
team size
interconnections and, 31
multipliers and, 26–27
Durant, William, 120, 139
dyadic interactions, 46
Earl, Harley, 134
Earp, Wyatt, 116
Eastman Kodak, 7
eBay, 119, 190
Ebert, Roger, 122
Edison, Thomas, 120
educational diversity, 74, 82
egalitarian values, 92
Egypt, ancient, 18, 188
Elizabethan acting troupes, 203
Elizabeth I, queen of England, 148
Ellison, Larry, 127, 136, 139
Ely, Robin, 79
Eminent Victorians
(Strachey), 147
end phase, 217–18, 236–37
Epstein, Brian, 184
ESPN, 104
establishment phase, 215, 220–24
ethnic diversity, 74–75, 82
Everly Brothers, 122, 128
Evers, Johnny, 165, 175–78, 181
evolution, 37, 46–48
exclusion, 76
Exner, Virgil, 134
experience, 72–73, 82, 86–88
Explorer-Navigator pairs, 140
extroverts, 56
Facebook, 11, 14, 25, 30, 190, 197, 202
Fadell, Tony, 70
Faggin, Federico, 151, 169–70
failing teams, 245
healthy, 242–44
unhealthy, 227, 239–40
Fairchild Semiconductor, 1, 137, 151, 169
faked results, 241–42
farewells, 246–50
feedback, 56, 98
field-effect transistor, 167
Fields, Dorothy, 131
Finder-Grinder-Minder trios, 139–40
Finder-Grinder pairs, 139–40
finish, good, 236–37
Fisher, Lawrence, 134
Flatt, Lester, 118
Fleming, Lee, 71
focus, 96, 207
Forbes
, 4, 34, 148, 162
forced-ranking system, 95
formation phase, 215, 218–20
Four Tops, 193
Fox, Craig, 90
Fox, Nellie, 175
framing, 78–79
free riders (social loafers), 55, 89, 91, 97, 241
Frémont, John C., 116, 140
Frick, Henry Clay, 127, 139
fulfillment partnerships, 125
functional diversity, 76
functional phase, 215–16
Funk Brothers, 192–93
Future Arrived Yesterday, The
(Malone), 203
gaps, 208–9
Garbo, Greta, 118
Garland, Judy, 118
Garvey, Steve, 175
Gates, Bill, 14, 125
gating factor, 5
Gauguin, Paul, 121
Gehrig, Lou, 175
gender diversity, 70, 73–75, 77, 82
General Electric (GE), 14
generalists, 83
General Motors, 9, 120, 134
George III, king of England, 246
Gershwin, George and Ira, 126
ghost partnerships, 146, 148
Gilbert, John, 118
Gilbert, William, 121
Gillespie, Dizzy, 118, 122
Glaser, Joe, 131
Goleman, Daniel, 36
Goodwin, Doris Kearns, 148
Google, 2, 5, 8, 11, 20, 30, 70, 190, 197, 217
Got-Your-Six pairs, 116–17, 130, 149, 155
Grant, Ulysses S., 127, 130
Greene, Nathaniel, 212, 247
Grove, Andrew, 20, 122, 150–51, 171–74
Guggenheim, Peggy, 134
Hackman, J. Richard, 31–32, 95
Hamilton, Alexander, 212, 247–48
Hammerstein, Oscar, 122, 131
Hardy, Oliver, 125
Harrison, George, 184
Hart, Lorenz, 122, 131
Hatch, Orrin, 137
Hazel, Eddie, 193
healthy teams
successful, 244–45
unsuccessful, 242–44
Heathfield, Susan, 20, 21
Henrich, Joe, 42
Henson, Matthew, 140
Here-and-There pairs, 124, 159
Hewlett, William, 8, 27–29, 126–27, 226–27
Hewlett-Packard (HP), 27–29, 120, 127, 148, 226–27
hierarchy, 194–95, 198–99, 206, 219
Hillary, Edmund, 140
Hines, Earl, 118
HireVue, 34
hiring, 33–34, 74, 103
Hirshberg, Jerry, 69
Hoff, Ted, 150–51, 169–70, 170
Holiday, Billie, 118
Holliday, Doc, 116
hominids, 16–17, 21
Hope, Bob, 122
Hopkins, Margaret, 50
HP Way, The
(Packard), 27
Huawei, 20
Hunter, Joe, 192
hunter-gatherers, 16–17, 21, 26–27, 38, 203
Hutterites, 25
IBM, xii, xiii, 5, 13, 18
independence, 66–68, 93–94
information, 76, 80, 84, 96
innovation, xiii, 67–68, 208
Inside/Outside pairs, 138–39, 154–55, 159
Instrumental Trios, 174–78, 181
integration, 79, 83, 89, 99
Intel, 1, 20, 122, 137, 150–51, 169–74
interdependence, 92, 94–98
Internet, 2–3, 30–31, 138
interpersonal congruence, 82
interpretations, 73, 74
intuition, 53–54, 68
Isaacson, Walter, 148
Iwerks, Ub, 132
Jackson, Michael, 131
Jackson, Phil, 142
Jamerson, James, 192
James, LeBron, 81
Janus teams, 138
Java, 40
Jeter, Derek, 49
Jobs, Steve, xii, 9–15, 119–20, 131, 208
John, Elton, 131
Johnson, Kelly, xii
Jones, Ben, 71
Jones, Quincy, 131
Jordan, Michael, 142
Kandinsky, Wassily, 134
Kasparov, Garry, 53
Kaye, Carol, 193
Keeping Together in Time
(McNeill), 42
Kellogg, Harry, 81
Kennedy, Ted, 137
Kenobi, Obi-Wan, 141
Kern, Jerome, 131
key employees, 65
King, Don, 135
kin relations, 38–39
Kirk, Captain, 136
Kleiner, Eugene, 126
Kluszewski, Ted, 175
Knight, Phil, 109
knowing teams, 201
knowledge, 88
Knox, Henry, 212, 247–48
Köhler effect, 98
KPMG, 144–45, 158
Krzyzewski, Mike, 49
Kurosawa, Akira, 187
Lafayette, Marquis de, 247
Lamerala people, 42
Lane, Ray, 127, 139
Lasseter, John, 12
Latané, Bibb, 89–90
Laurel, Stan, 125
Lazzeri, Tony, 142
leaders, 19, 21, 63, 92–100, 185
diversity and, 67, 69–71, 76–79
launch tasks and, 94–96
mirror neurons and, 49–51
process losses and, 96–100
team life cycle and, 219–20, 223–28, 234, 237–45
team size and, 90, 186, 194–99, 206
Leakey, Richard, 17, 21
learned synergy, 52
learning, 56
Lee, Charles, 249
Lee, Henry, 212
Lehman Brothers, 9
Leingang, Jake, 105, 109–10
Lennon, John, 118, 122, 184
Lewis, Jerry, 122, 132
Lewis, Meriwether, 116, 136
Lifeboat pairs, 129–31, 155, 158
Lincoln, Abraham, 148
Loewy, Raymond, 134
logical approaches, 68
logistics, 97, 163
loneliness, 55–56
lone wolves, 70–71
longitudinal strength, 143
Lopes, Davey, 175
Lord of the Rings, The
(Tolkien), 152, 187
Los Angeles Dodgers, 175
Love, Mike, 122
Loy, Myrna, 118
Lu, Jonathan, 14
Ma, Jack, 14
Machiguenga people, 42
Magellan, Ferdinand, 7
Magic-Moment pairs, 117–21, 158
Magic Numbers, 22–24, 188, 192.
See also
Dunbar numbers
management, 92–100
7±2 teams and, 191–92
15±3 teams and, 194–99
50/150 teams and, 201, 205–6
diversity and, 76–78