¶ … Educating Stakeholders on Multidisciplinary Teams
Implementing Multidisciplinary Teams: Educating the Stakeholders
Why Create Multidisciplinary Teams
Illustrate the linear project approach: the waterfall effect:
specialized disciplines would create specific deliverables pass them off to the next discipline
Web site creation example:
interface designers would hand off low fidelity schematics to visual designers,
Visual designers would design the look and feel before delivering to web developers.
Illustrate the Multidisciplinary approach:
team is created with members from different disciplines and expertise
The team collaborates on a goal-based project
The team takes ownership of the project
Pro and Con:
Linear approaches lead to:
slow feedback from stakeholders lack of ownership by the team no interest invested team members have no stake innovation is not encouraged no pride in work may result in lower quality
Multidisciplinary approaches lead to:
Team effort creates good atmosphere
Team members care about the project, because it is theirs
The goal base project is satisfying
Results in a complete product
Problems easier to track
Implementation:
Define the project
Include as many details as possible good exercise here is to give each outside stakeholder a simulated project to briefly describe
Then have a brainstorming session to critique each description
Brainstorm a separate simulated project together as a team
Share impressions of what was learned
Select the team
The definition should include description of tasks which will match types of team members needed
Meet with the team to share project definition
Immediate feedback is exchanged and team members become stakeholders also Define deliverables and timeframe
What will be the results?
What are the various stages?
How can we track progress?
Who will be responsible for what?
How will outside stakeholders be involved?
A regular meetings?
A always available?
A part of the team on a regular basis?
To make this work well, the stakeholders need to identify their own work and management style
An activity where stakeholders create a checklist to identify their work and management styles
Ask them questions to see if they listed everything
Troubleshooting
Identify all the participants and their expertise
Share communications information
Identify the responsibilities of each member
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