Title :
Exhibiting leadership and facilitation behaviors in project-based work: Does team personal style composition matter?
Author :
Dominick, Pete G. ; Aronson, Zvi H. ; Mo Wang
Author_Institution :
Stevens Inst. of Technol., Hoboken, NJ, USA
fDate :
July 28 2013-Aug. 1 2013
Abstract :
Teams are increasingly becoming primary in the way employees in organizations conduct work. The effects of similarities and differences among team members in project-based work influence every aspect of that work. We explored the relationship between team composition attributes and team members´ team leadership and facilitation behaviors, drawing from the literature on similarity-attraction effect. Data from two time points that are 12-week apart were collected from 144 professional employees working in 48 work teams to test the study´s hypotheses. Using HLM 6.0 [45]the current study shows that when it comes to team composition, members of a team who are similar on the personal style traits extraversion and neuroticism, that have an affective tone, demonstrate greater team leadership and facilitation behaviors, we refer to as team process behaviors. We provide implications for generating team leadership and facilitation behaviors in project-based work.
Keywords :
industrial psychology; personnel; team working; professional employees; project-based work; team facilitation behaviors; team leadership; team personal style composition; Analytical models; Biological system modeling; Correlation; Lead; Reliability; Springs; Technology management;
Conference_Titel :
Technology Management in the IT-Driven Services (PICMET), 2013 Proceedings of PICMET '13:
Conference_Location :
San Jose, CA