Employer branding
Creating High-Performance Teams for Your Small Business
Rieva Lesonsky
Rieva Lesonsky, Author at Glassdoor US | Nov 6, 2014
Every small business owner wants to create high-performance teams. But what exactly defines a high-performance team, and how can you attract employees who have those qualities?
Charactaristics of high performance teams
In a survey by EY, business leaders named the following as the most important characteristics of high-performance teams:
- A clear, achievable goal: 44 percent
- A shared commitment 40.9 percent
- Clear roles and responsibilities 39.1 percent
- A sense of purpose 33.0 percent
- Clear processes and procedures 27.2 percent
- Joint accountability 25.7 percent
- Focus on results 18.4 percent
- Participative leadership that encourages empowerment and interdependence among team members
- Shared responsibility, demonstrated by respect for other team members
- A sense of common purpose and understanding of why the team is brought together
- A climate of clear and honest communication
- Members who are not threatened by change but see it as an opportunity for growth
- A clear focus on the task at hand
- Maximizes the talents of individual team members
- Responds rapidly to challenges or opportunities and acts on them quickly
- Create job descriptions that emphasize these qualities, such as the ability to respond rapidly to change, communicate clearly and work interdependently.
- Ask interview questions that will elicit stories of whether candidates worked as part of a high-performance team—or whether they fell short. For example, you could ask employees how they dealt with a communication challenge in their prior jobs, or what they do when their roles are not clearly defined.
- Look for results orientation. Candidates whose resumes and interview responses focus on achievements and results are likely to be good members of a high-performance team.
Rieva Lesonsky



