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The Sorority Saga [FEMINA ]
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What happens when a team
consists entirely of women? Does gender impact group performance? Piya Mukherjee
discovers
It evokes neither sniggers, nor awe, just a tiny bit of
curiosity, perhaps. It comes with all the trimmings — laughter and
resentments, authority and camaraderie, success and failure. We are talking
about all-women teams at work, an increasingly common entity in industries such
as the media, advertising, financial services and information technology.
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Teams At Work — The
Players
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Irrespective of gender, any team created for a specific task
will usually consist of the following kind of
members:
The leader:
is the
person invested with authority and responsibility, accountable for the ultimate
execution of the project. She may be chosen on the basis of technical expertise,
creativity, or people-management
abilities.
The enthusiast:
is
the leader’s invaluable ally, brimming with ideas and willing to speedily
execute tasks as per the directions of the leader. Her lack of adequate
experience or fears about responsibility are the only impediments on her road
towards leadership.
The
plodder:
is marked by her steady handling of whatever task is assigned to
her. No pyrotechnics of temper or dazzling bursts of creativity here, only lots
of hard work.
The Devil’s advocate: is perhaps the least liked
member, questioning all that the group proposes, gleefully discovering loopholes
in plans and reasoning, and saying “no” to all and sundry. Her work
is invaluable — she discovers flaws in strategies before they can cause
damage.
The foxy one:
can
appear to be very busy without actually doing much at all. She hones her ability
to change her stance depending on which way the wind is blowing. Needs careful
handling.
The disinterested
one:
who sleeps through meetings, is comatose during brainstorming
sessions and generally lets life drift gently by. With adequate doses of pep
talk and area-specific training, she can soon move to the plodder or the
enthusiast category.
The Soothing
voice:
an expert at managing diverse temperaments.
The Diva:
whose airs would
put a headstrong artiste to shame.
Players sometimes switch roles or
even combine two roles.
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Team
In Action
Tuckman,
a writer on Organisational Behaviour uses an interesting model to describe the
stages of
teamwork:
Forming
— the first stage is marked by tentative explorations of each
other’s skill-sets and a rough understanding of how to go about the task
on hand.
Storming
— marks the uncovering of challenges and problems hitherto unknown,
clashes of personalities, and conflicts caused when personal beliefs and
attitudes clash. Issues arise over leadership, power and
authority.
Norming
— is the rational, adult-like approach where petty issues and personal
opinions are willingly kept aside for the sake of group productivity and norms
or rules for work are generated. Cohesion and a sense of group identity are
generated. Trust is the welcome new entrant in the
team.
Performing
— is the last stage, marking the actual implementation of the
task.
Now
For The
Results
While
evaluating the performance of teams, two criterions come into
play:
Quantitative
criteria include: issues like —, Was the goal successfully reached? Was
the work timely? Did it use optimal resources (money, labour, inventory of goods
and so on)? Did any major challenges arise and were they tackled
effectively?
Qualitative
criteria include: Was the client or customer satisfied? Did the team members
work in harmony? Would they want to work as members of the same team in future?
Are the learnings
and experiences from the project easily transplantable for the benefit of the
organisation?
Needless to
say, the criteria reveal that gender would rarely come into play as far as the
first set of criteria are concerned. Technical expertise and ingenuity are not
the exclusive domains of either sex; hence, effectiveness and efficiency are
visible in all-women teams, as well as other kinds of teams.
However,
social conditioning and gender-based biases may occasionally influence customer
satisfaction. And women do bring an extra something, a ‘woman’s
touch’, to a work environment, with their natural instinct for blending
relationships.
Why Mixed
Teams Work
But is
it all about “female buddy bonding” or are there any touchy issues
like... err... tendencies drawn from the female of the canine species or the
feline species for that matter? PMS notwithstanding, any team, irrespective of
gender composition, would carry a diverse mix of egos, talents, attitudes and
skills.
This is the
reason why Dhanashree Damle, Senior Officer, HRD, Bharat Petroleum Corporation
Ltd, says, “Mixed-gender teams work better than single-gender ones. Women
bring useful conflict resolution skills to a group, helping soothe male
ego-driven issues. Moreover, men display greater courtesy in the presence of
women. Their skills complement each other and the work gets done well.
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Final
Call
Work-specific
knowledge, problem-solving skills and savvy networking talents emerge as the
“must-haves” of any team member, male or female. Add to that
emotional intelligence, ability and willingness for clear communication and
empathy that a woman brings to a team, and one has the perfect recipe for
success. Long live the
sorority!
What
Women Bring To The
Team:
The
following traits and skills bode extremely well for the presence of women in
teams:
Better
listening skills: That are perhaps a result of social conditioning, and make for
good team spirit, allowing each member “space” for airing out ideas
and discussing
alternatives.
Empathy,
warmth and sensitivity: Which seem to arrive as a gender-specific package.
Perhaps these are partly attributable to the adroitness that comes from handling
the numerous roles in her personal and work
life.
A
win-win approach: As opposed to a confrontationist attitude, with members
willing to complement each other’s skills. This is particularly useful in
negotiations and conflict resolution. The odd exception is seen when a member
consistently needs acknowledgement and hence strives to prove a point to the
others.
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