This article is an excerpt from the book “Digital Transformation and Product Culture: How to Put Technology at the Center of Your Company’s Strategy”.
Simply organizing people into the team structure described here is not sufficient for them to behave as a team. In order to perceive themselves as a team and start acting as such, they need common objectives.
A common issue I often see in product development teams, even when well-organized into tribes and squads with structural and product tribes, with the right people in the right roles in each team, is that objectives are defined by function. Product managers have a set of objectives different from product designers, which are different from the objectives of engineers. This simply doesn’t work because each person will focus on their own objectives.
If we define all objectives as common to all team members, everyone will work together to achieve them. Even if the objective seems more related to one aspect, such as more related to business (product manager) or user experience, or more related to engineering, all team members should have the same objectives. So, the short answer to the question “What makes a group of people behave like a team?” is common objectives.
This article is another excerpt from my newest book “Digital transformation and product culture: How to put technology at the center of your company’s strategy“, which I will also make available here on the blog. So far, I have already published here:
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I’ve been helping companies and their leaders (CPOs, heads of product, CTOs, CEOs, tech founders, and heads of digital transformation) bridge the gap between business and technology through workshops, coaching, and advisory services on product management and digital transformation.
At Gyaco, we believe in the power of conversations to spark reflection and learning. That’s why we’ve created “Produto em Pauta” podcast, with new episodes every Thursday.
The main series is called Mentorias: coaching conversations with product professionals, built on the idea that one person’s questions are often the questions of many others. We explore concrete challenges and turn experience into practical insights you can apply in your own context.
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Do you work with digital products? Do you want to know more about managing a digital product to increase its chances of success, solve its user’s problems, and achieve the company objectives? Check out my Digital Product Management books, where I share what I learned during my 30+ years of experience in creating and managing digital products:
