The time has come to check whether the benefits of teamwork still outweigh the costs
Most white-collar employees have spent the bulk of their career working in teams. However, the rise of hybridity is changing work paradigms in ways that make us wonder whether we still need teams. We’re not saying this lightly: Between the two us, we’ve spent more than 40 years examining the ins and outs of teams in organisations.
Our recent conversations with employees at all levels have made something clear: While concern about work-life balance, burnout, employee disconnection and turnover is common, those that seem to worry the most are those leading or working in teams.
It’s good to take a step back and remember that teamwork – to the extent that it’s used now – is relatively new. Enabled by technological advances, it only became the norm for knowledge work in the early 1980s, in response to globalisation.
The world fell in love with teams because when they work, they really work. Great teams can generate creative solutions to complex problems. They can provide camaraderie and the right level of challenge for employees. Indeed, high-performing teams don’t just produce great results, they also underpin some of the most desirable organisational cultures out there.
Unfortunately, even high-performing teams have costs. In a 2009 interview with HBR titled “Why Teams Don’t Work”, our late mentor, J. Richard Hackman, said: “Research consistently shows that teams underperform, despite all the extra resources they have. That’s because problems with coordination and motivation typically chip away at the benefits of collaboration.”
[This article is republished courtesy of INSEAD Knowledge, the portal to the latest business insights and views of The Business School of the World. Copyright INSEAD 2024]