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Management Team Development: A Problem‐centred Technique

Journal of European Industrial Training

ISSN: 0309-0590

Article publication date: 1 February 1984

198

Abstract

Working as a consultant in the field of team development, I frequently find myself at odds with people who have different perceptions about the nature of the work. This confusion was actually expressed in print when in 1980, following the publication of my article on team problem diagnosis, another consultant wrote of his “simpler” method. This turned out to be the “LIFO” system. Again, similar misunderstanding arose in 1982, within a large client organisation in the public sector. The client had undergone major reorganisation, and it had been decided to create an internal consultancy role, a central function of which was to be team development. I was engaged to train those appointed to the role, with emphasis on the skills required by internal consultants. It came as some surprise therefore to be told during a seminar with some of the organisation's directors, that “team building” had recently been conducted in the area concerned. I had not yet trained the internal consultants. It emerged of course that their “team building” and my “team development” were entirely different processes. Impatient to “get things moving”, the organisation had initiated a programme of “team‐building” activity based on packaged exercises, mainly concerned with the analysis of management style.

Citation

Kilcourse, T. (1984), "Management Team Development: A Problem‐centred Technique", Journal of European Industrial Training, Vol. 8 No. 2, pp. 3-38. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb002170

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1984, MCB UP Limited

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