Team interactions matter. A lot. It's no accident that the Definition of Team Effectiveness listed "social processes and interactions among group members" as the very first influencing factor that would determine that capacity of a group of individuals to accomplish their own and their shared goals.
Maybe this has happened to you. You've been assigned to an elite team of high-performing individuals. These are smart, talented people. At the onset, it appears that this will be a "dream team" because each of you has so much to contribute.
Working with the dream team turns into a nightmare. Team interactions are competitive, unproductive, ego-driven, and downright unpleasant. Or there are no team interactions because team members withhold information, skip meetings, and dodge participation. The lack of cooperation makes it virtually impossible to achieve those shared goals.
Checklist: Improve Team Effectiveness by Increasing Engagement
It can even happen to the best of teams, the ones with a history of strong team interactions. Teams are inherently fragile. A new member can inadvertently upset the balance. A shift in focus can derail some members of the team who no longer feel the same sense of commitment. Competing priorities can creep in and divert team members. The reasons are too numerous to count, but the result is the same. Without ongoing, healthy and inclusive team interactions, there won't be a sense of team. Without team, you don't get team effectiveness or the desired outcomes.
Finger-pointing is the usual response when a lack of team interaction causes the team to be ineffective. He didn't come to the meetings. She vetoed every idea. They didn't do their fair share. When members of a team externalize the blame, they forget one important thing: Every member of the team is responsible for outcomes. Getting work done with others is not optional. If you are to be viewed as an effective, high potential employee on your own... well, you'll need to demonstrate you are an effective member of the team, too.
Starting with this foundational building block with strengthen any team. Here are some tips you can try. By the way, these tips are for any member of a team -- don't wait around for a senior manager. Step into the role of a leader to demonstrate what you can do.
Team interactions need not be laden with inflated expectations. Be assertive to get your needs met and cooperative to ensure others' needs are also being met. Don't give up too soon, and don't fall into the trap of pointing fingers at other team members. Go for unity and stand by your team. Interacting with them will make this a whole lot easier.