2005
DOI: 10.1037/0021-9010.90.3.497
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The External Leadership of Self-Managing Teams: Intervening in the Context of Novel and Disruptive Events.

Abstract: Relatively little empirical research has been conducted on external leaders of self-managing teams. The integration of functional leadership theory with research on team routines suggests that leaders can intervene in teams in several different ways, and the effectiveness of this intervention depends on the nature of the events the team encounters. External team leaders from 3 organizations first described a series of events (N ϭ 117), and leaders and team members then completed surveys to quantitatively descr… Show more

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Cited by 352 publications
(363 citation statements)
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References 58 publications
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“…Teams are often formed to deal with complex, novel, and disruptive tasks and environments (Kozlowski & Bell, 2003;Morgeson, 2005;Morgeson & DeRue, 2006). The availability of other members to exchange information and support one another with their work enables teams to deal more readily with these complexities, relative to individuals working alone.…”
Section: Managerial Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Teams are often formed to deal with complex, novel, and disruptive tasks and environments (Kozlowski & Bell, 2003;Morgeson, 2005;Morgeson & DeRue, 2006). The availability of other members to exchange information and support one another with their work enables teams to deal more readily with these complexities, relative to individuals working alone.…”
Section: Managerial Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Owing to the unique outcomes that often accompany many projects [43], novel and uncertain means are often required to achieve project goals. The leader must encourage these traits and allow participants to act with a certain degree of independence [44,45], rather than the leader merely giving instruction [46].…”
Section: The Relationship Between the Above Two Conceptsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To be sure, help may be straightforward when it consists merely of quick favors and advice (e.g., Borgatti & Cross, 2003;Flynn & Lake, 2008) but helping in a context of knowledge-intensive team projects may be more complex. Project teams often encounter unforeseen obstacles (Morgeson, 2005) and confront significant ambiguities throughout their work (Long Lingo & O'Mahony, 2010). Little is known about how external helping unfolds in these complex collaborative settings (Morgeson, Derue, & Karam, 2010;cf.…”
Section: Deep Help In Complex Project Work: Guiding and Path-clearingmentioning
confidence: 99%