Changing the Way We Work

Changing the Way We Work

by RMeredithBelbin (Author)

Synopsis

How many problems at work arise from the way in which jobs are set up? Either people don't have a clear understanding of their duties and responsibilities, spending time and energy disentangling them from those of their co-workers or they are hemmed in by job specifications that allow no room for movement and initiative.

An alternative system is needed, where jobs can grow and develop: where communication about the work can flow up as easily as down. Dr Belbin describes a radical approach incorporating colour-coding and information technology derived from experiments now being undertaken in three countries. Workset is a new means of delivering greater efficiency in a dynamic process that equally involves managers and jobholders.

Dr R. Meredith Belbin, regarded as the father of team-role theory for his widely-read Management Teams: Why they succeed or fail and its successor Team Roles at Work, obtained his first and higher degree at Cambridge University. Later, in a research, lecturing or consulting capacity, he has visited and worked in many countries. In 1988 he founded Belbin Associates which produces Interplace, a computer-based Human Resource Management System, now used world-wide.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 115
Edition: New edition
Publisher: A Butterworth-Heinemann Title
Published: 24 Sep 1999

ISBN 10: 0750642882
ISBN 13: 9780750642880
Book Overview: Written by the internationally renowned father of team-role theory, R. Meredith Belbin Radical re-assessment of of how teams develop incorporating colour-coding Presents a new means of delivering greater efficiency in a dynamic process that equally involves managers and jobholders

Media Reviews
Review of The Coming Shape of Organization
'A new book from the father of team-role theory is an event....this stimulating, brief analysis suggesting that an effective model for the new flatter organization may be a helix, in which individuals and teams move forward on the basis of excellence rather than function.'
The Director, July 1996