Bob Greene: How to stand something up that's not business as usual requires teaming across multiple teams or multiple functions. He says most organizations do not have slack in the system, and so anything you land top is extra. Greene: You're basically playing a game that the system is not designed to play very well because most traditional firms don't have a value creation structure.
Picture it: Your company’s landed on an important and shiny new project and it needs a team to bring it to life. Cue the barrage of big questions—questions like: “So…who’s on this team? What support will they receive? When will they meet? Wait, is this extra work or something different?”Welcome to the wonderful world of cross-functional teaming. Standing up a cross-functional team is a place where plenty of organizations stumble—because it’s asking most systems to play a game they aren’t designed to play well.
In this episode of Brave New Work, Aaron Dignan and Rodney Evans team up (see what we did there?) to answer questions like:
- How should cross-functional teams—as well as the projects they work on—be chartered?
- Should the size and scope of an idea impact how a team is designed?
- What level and kind of authority should cross-functional teams be given?
- What are the first moves cross-functional teams always need to make?
- How can we bake experimentation into this cake?
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