Overcoming the Five Dysfunctions of a Team : A Field Guide for Leaders, Managers, and Facilitators

  Author:    Patrick M. Lencioni, Patrick M. Lencioni
  ISBN:    0787976377
  Sales Rank:    1542
  Published:    2005-02-25
  Publisher:    Jossey-Bass
  # Pages:    4
  Binding:    Paperback
  Avg. Rating:    5.0 based on 23 reviews
  Used Offers:    28 from $13.88
  Amazon Price:    $16.47
  (Data above last updated:  2008-09-06 03:40:24 EST)
  
  
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Overcoming the Five Dysfunctions of a Team : A Field Guide for Leaders, Managers, and Facilitators
  
In the years following the publication of Patrick Lencioni’s best-seller The Five Dysfunctions of a Team, fans have been clamoring for more information on how to implement the ideas outlined in the book. In Overcoming the Five Dysfunctions of a Team, Lencioni offers more specific, practical guidance for overcoming the Five Dysfunctions—using tools, exercises, assessments, and real-world examples. He examines questions that all teams must ask themselves: Are we really a team? How are we currently performing? Are we prepared to invest the time and energy required to be a great team? Written concisely and to the point, this guide gives leaders, line managers, and consultants alike the tools they need to get their teams up and running quickly and effectively.
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07-23-08 4 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Interesting Idea that Requires Personalization
Reviewer Permalink
"Overcoming the Five Dysfunctions of a Team: A Field Guide for Leaders, Managers and Facilitators" represents an interesting idea...that of offering tools and techniques to implement the Model set forth in another one of Patrick Lencioni's books, The Five Dysfunctions of a Team: A Leadership Fable.

In essence, this book offers a guide to implementing the Model noted above without the need to engage the consulting services of Lencioni and his firm. This is a novel, and generous, idea to facilitate the implementation of this Model at a low relative cost (compared to engaging a consulting firm, for example).

The book presents some tangible and easy-to-follow ideas focused on implementing the "Five Dysfunctions" Model. That being said, the actual implementation requires personalization based on a number of factors, including the dynamics of the team working on the Model.

While such personalization may be expected, given that a "one size fits all" solution is unlikely to meet the needs of all teams, this is a useful book, especially if you find the "Five Dysfunctions" Model of use.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-06 03:42:35 EST)
06-24-08 4 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Useful field guide
Reviewer Permalink
Overcoming the Five Dysfunctions of a Team is an essential guide for managers and team leaders of all levels. It contains practical exercises and models for addressing each dysfunction as well as additional resources for further education. No team leader should be without it!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-24 10:37:53 EST)
06-08-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Quick turn-around - Great Condition
Reviewer Permalink
Thanks much - I needed the books for work and had them quicker than expected.
Nancy
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-23 02:28:56 EST)
12-10-07 4 2\2
(Hide Review...)  Quick, easy, and practical
Reviewer Permalink
I'm not a big fan of management books because they tend to get long-winded, technical, and impractical. This book is none of the three.

I did not read the original book "The Five Dysfunctions of a Team: A Leadership Fable" (240 pages), but with this field guide, you don't need to read it. The field guide is 180 pages of easy reading. It's not complicated, very practical, and you don't need to be a CEO to implement the concepts.

I was pleasantly surprised and would recommend this book to anyone who labors in futility on a fumbling team. It's worth your time.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-09 10:26:50 EST)
11-07-07 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Workbook for improving team performance
Reviewer Permalink
Patrick Lencioni wrote this as a follow-up to his 2002 "fable," The Five Dysfunctions of a Team. It applies the earlier book's concepts, and suggests many exercises, approaches, examples and explanations you can use as you apply those ideas. If you found the first book useful, you'll want this one, though you can still get a lot of utility from it even if you haven't read the original. Lencioni recaps his concepts clearly here, including developing trust among team members and keeping teams focused on their goals. The result is broadly applicable. We believe that readers who want a basic introduction to improving team function will appreciate this book. That said, those looking for more complex or theoretical approaches, or for tools to deal with specific challenges, such as knowledge management among teams, may need a more advanced manual.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-12-10 10:59:49 EST)
09-24-07 5 1\2
(Hide Review...)  managementtrainer
Reviewer Permalink
This field guide is execellent. It is practical and helpful. Improving teamwork is difficult, to say the least, especially for highly dysfunctional teams. Patrick Lencioni's book is essential to working through these challenges.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-11-08 02:44:45 EST)
08-13-07 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Easy to use and very helpful
Reviewer Permalink
This field guide is extremely useful for working with teams - from dysfunctional teams to those that are running smoothly. The exercises are practical and get to the heart of team dysfunctions.

I am a pastor who also works in the corporate world. I will use the ideas and exercises in this book with teams in the office and in the church.

(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-09-24 10:27:58 EST)
07-21-07 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Outstanding Complement to The Five Dysfunctions of a Team
Reviewer Permalink
Teamwork really is the one sustainable advantage that a group or company can have. Patrick Lencioni has put together a prescriptive method of bringing a group of people together to form a team. He walks through a step by step approach of breaking down the levels of teamwork in a narrative format in The Five Dysfunctions of a Team: A Leadership Fable which really builds the case for why you would want to follow this method. In this book, he all but builds your team for you. It'll be imperative that you can foster the right levels of communication and potentially have someone with you to help as you rebuild your team; however, this method does give critical insight into how groups of people become a team.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-08-14 11:31:22 EST)
07-05-07 5 0\1
(Hide Review...)  Great toolkit and field guide
Reviewer Permalink
This is a very useful book that has lots of gold nuggets for team training facilitators. Well worth the money and then some.

Guy Plano, Texas
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-21 23:51:17 EST)
06-27-07 4 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  got it for work
Reviewer Permalink
Leaders are using it in team development and finding it helpful. Good as an HR Professional to guide the manager in how to develop the team.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-10 16:26:09 EST)
05-10-07 5 1\2
(Hide Review...)  Really powerful tools
Reviewer Permalink
I bought the field guide with Amazon's recommended "Emotional Intelligence Quick Book" because Patrick Lencioni wrote the foreword. In a nutshell, it's a great pairing. The field guide is an indispensible tool for putting the concepts from The Five Dysfunctions into practice, and the connection between emotional intelligence and effective team work is a solid one, which makes Amazon's recommendation a good one.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-06-19 23:43:19 EST)
04-05-07 4 1\1
(Hide Review...)  Everything you need
Reviewer Permalink
I have recommended Patrick Lencioni's works to several clients and have used his models in individual leadership coaching sessions with good results. My interest in the Leader's Guide is that the jump from individual leadership coaching to group learning requires a level of structure and activities that will keep a diverse group engaged. This book answers that need even to the point of presenting a framework for multiple meetings and an agenda and activities for each.

I have recommended the Five Dysfunctions to a client, and whether they decide they can do the work themselves or use me to facilitate, this Field Guide will provide important structure and activities. Working on team growth and development is a natural next step to nurturing individual growth and development. As leaders answer the question "who am I and who do I want to be?", the next step that the Five Dysfunctions effectively outlines is "who are WE and who do WE want to be?". Lencioni's pyramid from trust to results is a powerful model to drive team development work, and the Field Guide is an effective tool to guide that work.

Tom Nugent
Grosse Pointe MI
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-10 16:26:09 EST)
02-06-07 5 2\2
(Hide Review...)  A Practical Business Book!
Reviewer Permalink
I am tired of 'great' business books that do not easily translate to the corporate world. The good news is that "Overcoming.." changes that. It's a wonderful guide for just about any level of management. I purchased another one in the line as soon as I finished this one. You will not be disappointed.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-10 16:26:09 EST)
01-27-07 5 1\2
(Hide Review...)  A must for a team leader.
Reviewer Permalink
Valuable for every team member to hear (or read), understand and prctice.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-10 16:26:09 EST)
01-26-07 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  A must for a team leader.
Reviewer Permalink
Valuable for every team member to hear (or read), understand and prctice.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-02-08 22:56:39 EST)
01-15-07 4 2\2
(Hide Review...)  Something to study, then execute
Reviewer Permalink
I read this book since I was tired of weekly meetings at work going on and on, with the whole point of the meeting being to end it quickly. The book walked me through the people I meet with, the best part noticing the different characteristics over and over in various coworkers. I enjoyed the angle of telling the story, having little point and little distraction to the true meaning. During the read, I started jotting down notes and clips, soon it turned into developing an entire meeting around the triangle presented in the book.

I have to say that principles can be applied at almost any workplace meeting at any level if you want to focus on productivity rather than simple observations and statements. On the other hand, if you want a quick adn productive meeting, do the entire meeting standing up!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-10 16:26:09 EST)
10-09-06 5 1\2
(Hide Review...)  Help is on the way!
Reviewer Permalink
As a reading coach and future administrator, I found this book extremely helpful. The activities that are included for each of the 5 dysfunctions are very useful and vary from touchy-feely to down-to-business. I've already used some of them on a particularly dysfunctional team and the team is starting to evolve. This is a great tool!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-01 10:53:13 EST)
06-11-06 5 8\9
(Hide Review...)  How to get the most from a team
Reviewer Permalink
Having read Lenconi's first book, a parable titled "The Five Dysfunctions of a Team", I was curious about this follow up title. I believe this book is better than the original title because it provides practical solutions. Lenconi recommends disclosure of a childhood vulnerability that you overcame as a starting point for building trust. Overcoming self interest by keeping common goals visible to the team is also recommended. I highly recommend this book along with Optimal Thinking: How To Be Your Best Self (to teach teams how to consistently maximize situations) and Winning (to teach leaders how to put principles into practice).
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-06-24 01:09:52 EST)
06-05-06 4 17\18
(Hide Review...)  A Review by Dirk Davis
Reviewer Permalink
Lencioni begins the discussion concerning overcoming the five dysfunctions of a team by asking two questions that should be asked BEFORE any team building effort:
1. Are we really a team?
2. Are we ready for heavy lifting?
His definition of a team, "a relatively small number of people...that shares common goals as well as the rewards and responsibilities for achieving them" seems logical enough, but what I really liked was his overall attitude. He seemed to suggest that if your group isn't a team, well that's OK too, but regardless, be clear about who and what you are. The heavy lifting reference simply means that building a team, similar to any marriage or other worthwhile relationship, takes a considerable investment in time and emotional energy.

Dysfunction #1 is the absence of trust, so building trust is the key to overcoming this first dysfunction. Lencioni's definition of trust in one where vulnerability is paramount thus beginning to trust starts with showing vulnerability, usually by telling some personal history story that includes some important challenge that was overcome during childhood. The reasoning for this is based on something called the fundamental attribution error. Simply stated, this is the tendency to attribute (falsely) the negative behavior of others to their character while attributing our own negative behavior to the environment. In other words, I do bad things because of the situation I've been placed in, while you do bad things because you are a bad person. This personal story exercise helps individuals to understand each other at a more fundamental level by showing how each person became the individual that they are, at least in some small way. Lencioni's second exercise deals with behavior profiling (he recommends the MBTI for various reasons) in order to "give team members an objective, reliable means for understanding and describing one another" (p. 25). This is designed to facilitate individuals' discussion of strengths/weaknesses, and begin to make it "safe" at least in terms of constructive feedback.

Dysfunction #2 is fear of conflict and overcoming this fear, while admittedly uncomfortable at times, is essential in order to maximize a team's effectiveness. Lencioni argues that inevitability of discomfort is no reason to avoid conflict and goes on to describe a sort of conflict continuum where the ideal conflict point lies directly midway between artificial harmony and mean-spirited personal attacks. In order to engage in productive conflict, he advocates conflict profiling (MBTI and/or Thomas-Kilmann Instrument). This is important in order to understand all team members' comfort levels and viewpoints regarding conflict. Conflict norms among teams must be discussed, negotiated, and made clear and available. Lastly, there are times when an effective leader must "mine" for that productive conflict among respective team members especially if individuals are avoiding necessary, progressive conflict.

Dysfunction #3 is lack commitment and is best overcome by gaining buy-in and achieving clarity. Buy-in is not to be confused with consensus, and in fact, true commitment is about getting buy-in when all the team members don't agree. Clarity allows members to benefit from their commitment by removing assumptions and the accompanying frustrations. Lencioni discusses two techniques to best overcome this third dysfunction called commitment clarification and cascading communication. Commitment clarification deals with leaders asking: What exactly have we decided here today? This ensures that everyone leaves a meeting with the same impressions. Cascading communication demands that team members communicate these same impressions to the rest of the staff within 24 hours, again ensuring that everyone is on the same page.

Dysfunciton #4 is the avoidance of accountability. Lencioni argues that accountability is the willingness of team members to remind each other when they are not living up to whatever standards have been agreed upon by the group. This not only involves the leader, but peer-to-peer accountability is integral as well. Interestingly, most leaders are willing to hold team members accountable for results, but not so much for behavioral issues. When this filters down to the team members, and they become reticent to hold others accountable for their behavior, the result seems to be a lack of respect. Lencioni's team effectiveness exercise seems to be an effective method for beginning to hold others accountable by openly discussing each person's (including the leader) most important quality that contributes to or derails the strength of the team.

Dysfunction #5 is the inattention to results. Lencioni suggests that self-preservation and self-interest make this a difficult handicap to overcome. The key lies in keeping the results where members of the team can see them at all times, i.e. a visible scoreboard of some sort. How should these results be measured? It doesn't really matter, as long as the team has one or two items that they can consistently focus on and rally around. Distractions include egos, career advancement, and departmental priorities. Key points for negating this dysfunction are avoiding the distractions, and staying focused on clear, visible results.

Lencioni also goes into depth regarding many common questions, and obstacles to avoid. Additionally, he includes a host of exercises, schedules, definitions, and references that can be tailored to facilitate the team building process in any organization. I found that this book offers specific, practical guidance toward team building that any novice should be able to understand. Additionally, the tools, assessments and examples provided a clear picture of a roadmap to overcoming the five dysfunctions of a team. In short, an easy read, full of practical ideas and examples that bring the points home.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-10-08 08:01:07 EST)
03-13-06 5 4\4
(Hide Review...)  goes with book
Reviewer Permalink
This does give exercises that go with the book if you want to use it in training sessions and it leads you through how to use the concepts with your team. I think it would be valuable in an intact team. I used one of the exercises with a staff retreat recently with some success. I think it will take a skilled facilitator to use it, though.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-10-08 08:01:07 EST)
03-07-06 5 9\11
(Hide Review...)  Overcoming the Five Dysfunctions of a Team : A Field Guide for Leaders, Managers, and Facilitators
Reviewer Permalink
Not only does this book cover mistakes and problems within a team, it explains a way to address the problems. This book goes one more than, "The Five Dysfunctions of a Team: A Leadership Fable".

Don't just tell me about a problem, tell me how to fix it.

Jeff Howard
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-10-08 08:01:07 EST)
02-24-06 5 7\7
(Hide Review...)  Focussed practical advice
Reviewer Permalink
New and seasoned professionals leading teams will find lots of rich practical advice. Using the five dysfunctions of teams from his previous book, Lencioni provides readers with excellent tools to stay focused and keep their teams performing. The techniques offered in this book, along with its guiding questions will help anyone reflect on the dynamics of their teams and uncover a whole host of new ways to invigorate them. As a professional facilitator I see this book as an indispensable resource.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-10-08 08:01:07 EST)
02-19-06 5 3\3
(Hide Review...)  Lencioni Rules
Reviewer Permalink
Lencioni again speaks clear, insightful & practical knowledge and concepts. This field guide is a must-have for everyone in a position of leadership and influence. The foundations of successful team building laid out in the "Five Dysfunctions of A Team" are built upon here with real world ideas on how to overcome the problems that undermine progress and harmonious achievement.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-10-08 08:01:07 EST)
09-06-05 5 7\14
(Hide Review...)  Phenomenal System!
Reviewer Permalink
After reading the book, you just want to jump in there and start implementing the techniques described, but having the field guide makes it truly an easily understandable concept to implementation process. Now we need field guides for the other three books!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-07 06:49:15 EST)
04-18-05 5 44\50
(Hide Review...)  Following Up His BestSeller
Reviewer Permalink
A couple of years ago Mr. Lencioni published a book on the Five Dysfunctions of a Team. In it he listed the problems that if allowed to continue would destroy a teams effectiveness, and quite possibly destroy the team itself. As a result of questions and comments from readers he has produced this guide to specifically address how to overcome these dysfunctions.

The particular points beind addressed include:

Building Trust
Mastering Conflict
Achieving Commitment
Embracing Accountability
Focusing on Results.

Each of these points is discussed with a view towards increasing the functionality of the team. This is followed by questions and comments from participants in classes and seminars and finally by some exercises in helping to build the team.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2006-07-07 06:49:15 EST)
  
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