Teams
Analysis of Self-Managed Work Teams
The autonomy of work teams has increasingly become a necessity in many enterprises who rely on a depth of expertise, experience and wealth of knowledge that their knowledge-rich employees provide (Roper, Phillips, 2007). Given how complex, diverse and deep specific areas of expertise are in the core functional areas of any business, it isn't possible for a single manager or leader to have an expert-level command of all expertise. This makes the formation and successful functioning of a team even more critical, as a leader must create a culture of trust, openness and shared communication and collaboration. This is accentuated and made clear in the empirical studies of exceptional leadership of virtual teams across diverse cultural and geographic locations (Muthusamy, Wheeler, Simmons, 2005). The intent of this analysis is to critically evaluate the role of compensation programs for teams, the pros and cons of work teams and validate the belief that teams reduce the number of managers required by an organization.
Analysis of Team Compensation Programs
There are a myriad of potential approaches of defining and delivering compensation programs, with the unique needs of large virtual teams emerging as a catalyst that is transforming the entire area. The greater the autonomy a given self-managed work team has the greater the accountability for results that require tight collaboration and communication across a geographically diverse set of team members (Power, Waddell, 2004). Team compensation therefore is becoming more attuned to the cross-functional, collaborative and highly communicative needs of self-managed teams. The traditional approaches of defining job-based pay which is only focused on outcomes, person-based pay...
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