About The Career Compass.

The Career Compass is one of the largest providers and leaders of Career Development, Human Resource management services and psychometric testing. The Career Compass are specialists in recruitment, online career assessments, career coaching, career counselling, Resume (CV) and cover letter writing, corporate training and corporate outplacement services. We work with Human Resource professionals, senior management teams and CEO's as they make critical organizational choices and manage their most valuable resource: Their people.

Established as an idea in 2001 to focus on human behaviour in relation to the work environment, The Career Compass (TCC) has a proven success track record in Human Resources Development and Talent Management. Already a dynamic company, TCC is in a remarkable expansion phase. Managed and run by partners in the last few years, we bring a fresh approach to Human Resources Management and Career Development in the region. Because we have genuine interest and passion in Human Resources Management and believe in Career Development we actively engage well seasoned career management professionals from a cross section of industries and sectors so that the real and up-to-date issues in the Human Resource sector are efficiently addressed.

TCC’s focus is on talent identification and career management, a task achieved by matching the correct talent for the job and ensuring that our customers are satisfied with the placements they give through the profiling systems. We have a leading edge on human capital solutions for organizations and individuals, from profiling of individuals to the trainings that are offered to ensure that the potential within any organisation’s Human Capital is well utilized. The talent mix and personnel that are working with TCC are named below and bring the following on board.

With the utility of the Assessment Centre, The Career Compass is gradually changing the perspectives in the job search and satisfaction market.

Our Contacts:

We are located At. 5th Avenue Building 3rd floor, Ngong Road |Opposite Traffic.| P.O.Box: 7817 00300 Nairobi, Kenya. |Tel: +254 20 814 5522 |mobile: +0175 681 874/ 721 372 494. | e-mail: info@thecareercompass.org | www.thecareercompass.org

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Fostering team spirit amongst employees

These days when organizations are introducing several ways to foster team spirit amongst employees, in an endeavor to ensure that all team members are on the same page in terms of work, is it true that one poor performer can actually hamper the performance of the entire team as opposed to the rest?

The strength of the chain is determined by its weakest link. Yes, if poor performance on part of a team member is not caught upfront and corrective measures taken, it will bring down team performance. Team members tend to accommodate, step in and compensate for any weakness and that spreads the burden within the team. Systems should be put in place to provide leading indicators on non-performance to enable the organization step in support and take corrective measures.
One poor performer is, legitimately said to destroy the performance of an entire team only if the poor performance comes as a complete surprise. Otherwise, the team should be able to plan around its weak link and should not use the poor performer as an excuse for poor results. To take a sporting analogy – if you pass the ball to your star bowler in the last over and he bowls only wides and no balls and full tosses, that could destroy the team’s chances. But, if you know the bowler is weak, you would never put him in such a position.
Of course, it does especially if the poor performer is handling a task in a bottlenecking position. It becomes imperative in such situations for the team leader to distribute work in such a way that adequate redundancy planning is in-built into the team. To that extent, a leader needs to think “negatively” what all can go wrong with whom, and plan accordingly with alternative back ups to ensure that nothing goes wrong and the task is successfully completed.
The solidarity or cohesiveness of a team is an important indicator of how much influence the group has over its individual members. The more cohesive the group – the more strongly members feel about belonging to it – the greater its influence. If the members of a group feel strongly attached to it, they are not likely to violate its norms.
Team cohesiveness also plays a role in small companies. Team cohesiveness is critical in helping the individual feel good about his or her contribution to the effort. When TQM(Total Quality Management) was introduced at Kane, teams of between five and eight employees were set up to deal with specific problems and demonstrate the impact that teams could make. They also made sure that all employees understood that no improvement is too small. Over a period of time, they can make a major difference. The first team the Job Information Team, worked on improving the clarity of forms used to process orders. Once the project was completed the team’s recommendations were accepted and immediately implemented. Kane continue to emphasize the importance of every team and very employee to TQM.
Highly cohesive teams often have less tension and hostility and fewer misunderstandings than less cohesive groups do. Additionally studies have found that cohesive groups tend to produce more uniform output than less cohesive groups, which often have problems with communication and cooperation.
Research discovered that trust is the key to cohesiveness in teams. What this means is that cohesive teams cannot tolerate extremists, positive or negative. One of our most difficult realizations, is that some talented individuals cannot flourish in a team oriented environment. If team cohesion is not to be eroded, management must recognize such a mismatch and address the problem before team goals are jeopardized.

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