RESOURCES:
PUBLISHED ARTICLES & BOOK CHAPTERS
How
to Design Your Organization to Improve Team Performance
(Adobe Acrobat PDF)
by
Tracy C. Gibbons, Ph.D.
This
article was published in the Cutter IT Journal, Vol. 18, Number
2, February 2005, pp. 30-36. It can also be accessed at www.cutter.com/offers/teamperformance.html.
DEC’s
“Other” Legacy: THE DEVELOPMENT OF LEADERS
This
chapter was published in DEC Is Dead, Long Live DEC:
The Lasting Legacy of Digital Equipment Corporation,
by Edgar H. Schein, Berrett Kohler Publishers, Inc., 2003.
Q&A:
Getting IT security to reach company goals
Authored
by columnist Marcia Wilson, CISSP, CEO of Wilson Secure, this
article is based on her interview of Tracy Gibbons, President
of CoastWise Consulting, about the importance of goal alignment
to the success of IT and Security organizations and their customers.
The article was featured in Computerworld (www.computerworld.com).
Workforce
Collaboration: Building a Strong Team Foundation
By
Tracy Gibbons, Ph.D. and Randi Brenowitz
This
chapter was published in Information Executive,
the publication of the Association of Information Technology Professionals,
January-February 2002.
The
ever-changing economy, technology, and global market demands are
compelling enterprising organizations to manufacture products
faster and cheaper without losing sight of their objective
selling product. Since todays drivers of success are speed,
cost, and quality, its important to consider who in the
organization is responsible for keeping the process running smoothly.
In most thriving enterprises the responsibility is delegated to
teams that are expected to meet corporate goals through a collaborative
effort. To that end, it is critical to create an environment that
supports their efforts. Organizations that follow proven methods
to enable workforce collaboration among people and their functions
develop a vision in which everyone can subscribe. From an employers
perspective this synergy provides for better interdependent working
relationships among workers who ultimately produce better products.
Trust
in Teams--And Why it Matters
By
Tracy Gibbons, Ph.D. and Randi Brenowitz
This
chapter was published in Understanding Teams, edited
by Michael Welbourn, Prentice Hall 2001.
Trust
is the willingness to believe that others will behave in reliable,
predictable, non-hurtful ways. It is one of the most important
conditions for healthy and productive relationships. It contributes
to the sense of safety that allows us to let ourselves be known
to others and to try new things. Without trust, we are more guarded
in our interactions with others, less willing to share information
or other resources, and reluctant to work collaboratively with
others.
Designing
and Using a Course in Organization Design to Facilitate Collaborative
Learning In The Online Environment
By
Tracy Gibbons, Ph.D. and Randi Brenowitz
This
chapter was published in The Handbook of Online Learning,
edited by Kjell Rudestam and Judith Schoenholtz-Read, Sage Publications
2001.
In
today's computer-mediated economy, distance learning provides
more than just an opportunity to unite students from different
locations toward a common educational goal. It serves as a bridge
from the often theoretical basis of academic studies to the real-world
practices necessary for success outside university walls. With
workers in both traditional and technology-based companies using
computers and the Internet to accomplish their tasks, developing
technological skills through learning by doing becomes increasingly
important. In addition, people must learn how to engage one another
on a personal level and develop mutual respect in an environment
where face-to-face interactions are absent or scarce.
The
Impact of Downsizing on Corporate Culture
By
Tracy Gibbons, Ph.D. and Randi Brenowitz
This
article appeared in Data Center Management, July/August
2001.
Only
the luckiest businesses in any industry will survive their entire
lifecycles without experiencing the wrath of what is euphemistically
called corporate downsizing. Historically, the pre-, present and
post-downsizing environment are never envied, and emotions run
high. Regardless of the rung to which one has aspired, there's
really no safe zone during a corporate downsize of any kind.
Workforce
Collaboration: A By-Product of the Technology-Driven Marketplace
By
Tracy Gibbons, Ph.D. and Randi Brenowitz
This
article appeared in Mworld, the online periodical
of the American Management Association, July 2001.
Technology
has done wonders for American management. Yet the complexity of
today's technology makes it impossible for any one person to know
all of the intricacies behind a new product's design and development.
Only 20 years ago, designing and developing a product were more
of an individual effort, and organizational design centered on
a hierarchical approach. Today companies have to accept that rapidly
emerging technologies, a global marketplace and an increasingly
competitive and complex business environment demand workplace
collaboration.
Developing
Virtual and Geographically Dispersed Teams in Cyberspace
By
Randi Brenowitz and Tracy Gibbons, Ph.D.
This article appeared in the Conference Proceedings of the Organization
Development Annual Conference, November 1998 and the proceedings
of the Annual Conference of the Northern California Human Resources
Association, October 2000.
Teams
have become a way of life in most corporations. They are one of
the few work arrangements that enable the knowledge and experience
of many to be brought to bear on increasingly complex and difficult
problems. But teams give rise to their own unique problems of
joint decision-making, shared ownership, role clarification, etc.,
and not all members are equally skilled or predisposed to work
in a collaborative way. When the challenges of virtual and remote
teaming are added to the inherent organizational struggles over
interdependence and collaboration, new problems are created and,
therefore, new and creative approaches for supporting the work
and interaction of teams become necessary.
They
said it couldn't be done: OD success with knowledge workers
By
Randi Brenowitz and Tracy Gibbons, Ph.D.
This
article appeared in the Conference Proceedings of
the
Organization Development Network Annual Conference, October 1996.
Although
much team development work has been done in the U.S. in the past
decade, very little of it has been successful with engineering
organizations. We discovered and had to cope with some striking
paradoxes that affect the probability of success when working
with this population. The first is the difference between process
work and workers, on the one hand, and knowledge work and workers
on the other.
Doing
Teams with Knowledge Workers: The Practitioners' View
By
Tracy Gibbons, Ph.D. and Randi Brenowitz
This
article appeared in Vision/Action, the Journal of
the Bay Area
OD Network, Fall 1995.
The
San Francisco Bay Area is a virtual laboratory of knowledge worker
organizations. Increasingly, our field is recognizing that interventions
which succeed with process-intensive organizations that do repetitive
work are inadequate for those whose focus is knowledge work--which
requires creativity, inventiveness, speed, and collaboration.
We are two experienced practitioners, one internal and one external,
who have together implemented major change in a knowledge worker
environment.
The
"Peace Corps" Model of OD: A Values-Based Model for Building Collaborative
Work Environments in Engineering Organizations
By
Randi Brenowitz and Tracy Gibbons, Ph.D.
This
article appeared in Vision/Action, the Journal of
the Bay Area
OD Network, Fall 1997.
It's
easy to talk about values and ethics in our work when we feel
encouraged to bring our values to the client. What happens, however,
when the client system is built on a value base different from
the OD consultant's? We are not talking about being afraid to
leave your laptop in someone's office, or of unethical behavior,
but rather of the work-related value system of most Silicon Valley
engineers.
Developing
Transformational Leaders: A Life Span Approach
(Adobe Acrobat PDF)
by
Bruce J. Avolio, Ph.D. and Tracy C. Gibbons, Ph.D.
This
chapter was published in Charismatic Leadership: The Elusive
Factor in Organizational Effectiveness, edited by by Jay
A. Conger, Rabindra N. Kanungo and Associates, Jossey-Bass Publishers,
1988.
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