Intercultural
Team Building
by Neil Payne
Internal business structures have been radically transformed
over the past few decades. Changes in areas such as communication
and transportation technology and shifts towards global interdependency
have resulted in companies becoming increasingly international and
therefore intercultural.
In addition, the need to ‘go global’ and to cut outgoings
is demanding that companies combine protecting international interests
whilst keeping down staff numbers. The solution in most cases has
been the forming of intercultural teams.
As with all businesses, success depends upon effective cooperation
and communication within teams. The intercultural dimension of today’s
teams however brings with it new challenges. Successful team building
not only involves the traditional needs to harmonise personalities
but also languages, cultures, ways of thinking, behaviours and motivations.
Intercultural teams have an inherent disadvantage. Cultural differences
can lead to communication problems, unpredictability, low team cohesion,
mistrust, stress and eventually poor results. However, intercultural
teams can in fact be very positive entities. The combination of
different perspectives, views and opinions can lead to an enhanced
quality of analysis and decision making while team members develop
new skills in global awareness and intercultural communication.
In reality this best case scenario is seldom witnessed. More often
than not, intercultural teams do not fulfil their potential. The
root cause for this is that when intercultural teams are formed,
people with different frameworks of understanding are brought together
and expected to naturally gel. Without a common framework of understanding,
for example in matters such as status, decision making, communication
etiquette, this is very difficult and thus necessitates outside
help to commix the team.
Intercultural or cross cultural training is one method of helping
to blend a team together. Through analysis of the cultures involved
in a team, their particular approaches to communication and business
and how the team interacts, intercultural team builders are able
to find, suggest and use common ground to assist team members in
building harmonious relationships.
Intercultural training sessions look at helping a team to realise
their differences and similarities in areas such as status, hierarchy,
decision making, conflict resolution, showing emotion and relationship
building. These are then used to create mutually agreed upon structures
of communication and interaction. From this basis, teams are then
tutored how to recognise future communication difficulties and their
cultural roots, empowering the team to become more self reliant.
The end result is a more cohesive and productive team.
In conclusion, for intercultural teams to succeed, managers and
HR personnel need to be attuned to the need for intercultural training
to help cultivate harmonious relationships. Companies must be supportive,
proactive and innovative if they wish to reap the potential benefits
intercultural teams can offer. This goes beyond financing and creating
technological links to bring together intercultural teams at surface
level and going back to basics by fostering better interpersonal
communication. If international businesses are to grow and prosper
in this ever contracting world, intercultural synergy must be a
priority.
Neil Payne is Managing Director of Kwintessential Ltd. For more
information please visit http://www.kwintessential.co.uk/cross-cultural/training.html
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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