Friday, March 21, 2014

Many for the Price of Two


           Professionalism is a word that most people understand, but few could define it. It spans such a wide range of characteristics and varies so much that often it is easier to stick with a vague conception rather than a detailed definition. However, you cannot be professional if you are vague on what it is. Two characteristics of being professional are: first, being constantly upbeat and second, always being punctual.
           As Deborah Ricker said, “acceptable behavior among peers is not necessarily acceptable among coworkers and superiors” (Silverman, 2013). Friends may be late and it may not even be mentioned. In the world of business being late is unacceptable; punctuality is a must (Silverman, 2013).
           If you are on time it shows others you value their time, but also your own. Everyone is busy and showing others that you understand and respect their time will gain you the same consideration in return. In addition punctuality conveys a myriad of other characteristics linked to professionalism. As such being punctual allows you to kill multiple birds with one stone.
           In the pursuit of being professional some believe that means becoming emotionless. If anything professionalism is the opposite. A negative or even neutral attitude will quickly gain the label of lazy or apathetic. Being upbeat creates an atmosphere of innovation and makes work far more enjoyable (Sundheim, 2013).
           Professionalism is very much a matter of your attitude but more importantly how others view you. Mastering the characteristics above will bring with it many other characteristics of professionalism. Punctual upbeat employees will quickly be noticed by those around them and gain the reputation of being top-notch professional employees.
References

Silverman, R. E. (2013, March 12). Professionalism at work: The kids are not alright. The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved from http://blogs.wsj.com/atwork/2013/03/12/professionalism-at-work-the-kids-are-not-alright/

Sundheim, K. (2013, April 02). 15 traits of the ideal employee. Forbes, Retrieved from http://www.forbes.com/sites/kensundheim/2013/04/02/15-traits-of-the-ideal-employee/



Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Communication is Knowledge

In order for a team to even have a chance of being successful, it must possess several characteristics. First, the team must develop effective intra-team norms that allow open communication, develop roles, and create a sense of purpose within the team (Gratton & Erickson, 2007). Second, teams must focus outward from their inception (Ancona, Bresman & Caldwell, 2009). Teams must have both of these characteristics if they wish to be exceptional.
            The driving principle of teams is simple, two heads are better than one. Teams bring together a group of individuals and hope they can become more than the sum of the individuals. Simply combining individual’s knowledge and skills is not enough. One plus one will always equal two; teams must find a way to make it equal more.
            It sounds impossible, especially when viewed literally, but ask yourself a question. How many times has someone said something that gave you an idea, which then led to someone else having another idea? The final product is something far beyond the addition of expertise and it comes from communication.
            Learning to share ideas with others and discuss and refine ideas as a group, in short communicate, is a lifelong pursuit. It is skills so basic we assume everyone can do it; the reality is most of us are horrible communicators. Setting norms to help us communicate is the first step to team success.
            The second is moving beyond your team and communicating with others. The whole point of teams is bringing people together, so why limit ourselves to an arbitrary team?  Each person on the team has a network of knowledgeable, skilled people. Reach out to them, involve them, and use their knowledge and resources. Doing otherwise is intentionally handicapping your team.
            Teams are about knowledge and synergy. The first key to successfully using teams is communication. The second is to ignore the boundaries of your team and use every tool available. The problems teams solve span the breadth of the world, and each team’s resources can as well.





References
Ancona, D., Bresman, H., & Caldwell, D. (2009). Six steps to leading high-performing x-teams. Organizational Dynamics, 38(3), 217-224. doi: 10.1016/j.orgdyn.2009.04.003

Gratton, L., & Erickson, T. J. (2007). 8 ways to build collaborative teams. Harvard Business Review,