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[HBR] Helping the behavioral “opposites” on your team win...

In your company, do opposites attract, attack…or avoid each other? There are numerous examples of successful partnerships built on shared passions and skills.

Bill Gates and Paul Allen were both enamored with computers and had a shared entrepreneurial spirit. Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield were high school friends who both loved food and especially ice cream!

But many other wildly successful partnerships included diversity in behaviors, skills, passions, and perspectives which were the KEYS to their success. The partners had learned to leverage their gaps.

Steve Wozniak created an original computer model but never thought about selling it or changing the world, until Steve Jobs suggested it.

Even Rocky, the loveable knuckle-cracking-bum-turned-champion, stated that one reason he liked his wife Adrian was because “She fills gaps...I dunno, she’s got gaps, I got gaps, together we fill gaps.”

Undoubtedly, the team you work with each day has gaps.

But, do you know what they are?

According to research reported by Harvard Business Review (HBR), “Organizations aren’t getting the performance they need from their teams,” which they attribute to “leaders who fail to effectively tap diverse work styles and perspectives.”

And this failure of leadership can be attributed to a failure to “recognize how profound the differences between the people are,” as well as to leaders who “don’t know how to manage the gaps and tensions (of differences) or understand the costs of not doing so.”

As a result, leaders fail to understand that “opposite styles can balance each other out.”

Is your team leveraging its gaps to win together?

Or, are the gaps creating conflict and failure to perform?

Do some of your team members who are more laid back and easygoing regularly clash with those who are task-focused and fast-paced? The Urgency and Intensity scale in our Teamalytics 360 Report uncovers the motivations behind the behaviors and their impact.

You likely have people on your team who are collaborative, team-oriented, and encouraging, but who find themselves at odds with others who display varying degrees of autonomy and independence and who rarely, if ever, say an encouraging word. The Need to Nurture scale in the Teamalytics 360 Report provides specific behavioral insights into these common team gaps and how to fill them.

And how productive are your meetings? Do the assertive, take-charge types run over the agreeable, cooperative members? Are the forceful, “I have to win” people escalating arguments that the more conciliatory folks are trying to avoid? Our Deference and Aggressiveness scales accurately identify each individual’s score on the continuum, providing awareness about the members’ impacts on others and the bottom line.

What are you doing about the gaps on your team?

Abraham Lincoln is credited with saying: "I don't like that man. I must get to know him better." President Lincoln understood and embraced the wisdom of pulling closer to those who are different or opposite from us.

The Teamalytics 360 Report can help you and your team identify where your “opposites” are hindering team performance rather than leveraging their gaps.

We can scientifically measure behaviors, identify the gaps, and utilize our proven coaching process to turn those gaps into strengths.

Let’s fill in your gaps!

Are you ready to win the war by creating a high-development culture? Contact us!

 

3 ways we can help you overcome the obstacles holding your team back:  

1. Learn how the Fortune 500 (e.g. LinkedIn, McKesson, Procter & Gamble) are using our behavioral analytics and coaching to optimize their teams for competition-busting results HERE.

2. Download our report “Solving the 5 Pervasive Team Challenges” and experience the power of our Teamalytics 360 Report for yourself or a team member at no charge HERE.

3. Grab a free Consultation to discuss the challenges on your team and how to leverage the power of behavioral analytics to solve them HERE.

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