Multiple case studies of team effectiveness in manufacturing organizations
β Scribed by Mark Pagell; Jeffrey A LePine
- Book ID
- 104323433
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 168 KB
- Volume
- 20
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0272-6963
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The use of teams in manufacturing contexts is increasing. Researchers have responded with a great deal of theoretical and empirical work aimed at identifying factors that influence the performance of these teams. Scholars, however, have tended to focus their research on variables human resource managers can readily control (e.g. the composition of teams relative to membersβ characteristics, team goals) and little emphasis has been placed on factors inherent to production systems. Identifying factors in the production system that influence team effectiveness is crucial because many of these factors are not changeable in the short term. Accordingly, these production system factors are likely to be a crucial factor when deciding whether or not to organize a production system around teams. In a departure from past research, this article reports a qualitative study aimed at identifying factors in operational systems that influence team effectiveness. Our qualitative results suggest that four characteristics of the operational system influence team effectiveness: work organized around the teamβs output, opportunities for informal communication, work that includes novel problems to solve, and management trust in teams.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract In this paper, we report on three case studies of South African manufacturing firms that made significant efforts to implement shopfloor improvement teams. Following Meredithβs [J. Operat. Manage. 16 (1998) 441] suggestion to use case studies as a basis for theory formulation, insights