Team Wisdom: Definition, Dynamics, and Applications

34 Pages Posted: 22 Jun 2006

See all articles by Tjai M. Nielsen

Tjai M. Nielsen

High Point University - Earl N. Phillips School of Business

Amy C. Edmondson

Harvard University - Technology & Operations Management Unit

Eric Sundstrom

University of Tennessee, Knoxville

Date Written: June 2006

Abstract

This paper focuses on wisdom manifested in work teams, defined here as groups of interdependent individuals who share responsibility for specific outcomes for their organizations (Sundstrom, DeMeuse & Futrell, 1990). Understanding how wisdom applies in teams has particular urgency, considering their ubiquity in today's organizations - at every level, from executive teams to customer service and production teams, across disciplines from health care to engineering, in a seemingly endless variety of specific applications such as surgery, intercontinental flights, and emergency rescue (Edmondson, 2002, 2003; Nielsen, Sundstrom, & Halfhill, 2002).

In exploring how wisdom applies to work teams, we begin by offering a definition of team wisdom based on four inherent tensions of teamwork that must be managed to achieve effectiveness. We then offer a framework outlining and analyzing the dynamics of team wisdom. Subsequent sections apply the framework in four ways. First, we use it as a basis for organizing a review of current research and practice relevant to team wisdom. Second, we apply our framework to identify how the four inherent tensions of teamwork impact teams differently. Third, we apply it by identifying potential ways of developing team wisdom. We conclude with a discussion of potential implications for current theory and research about work teams.

Keywords: teams, groups, wisdom, effectiveness

JEL Classification: M1, M10, M12

Suggested Citation

Nielsen, Tjai M. and Edmondson, Amy C. and Sundstrom, Eric, Team Wisdom: Definition, Dynamics, and Applications (June 2006). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=910332 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.910332

Tjai M. Nielsen (Contact Author)

High Point University - Earl N. Phillips School of Business ( email )

933 Montlieu Avenue
High Point, NC 27262
United States

Amy C. Edmondson

Harvard University - Technology & Operations Management Unit ( email )

Boston, MA 02163
United States

Eric Sundstrom

University of Tennessee, Knoxville ( email )

The Boyd Center for Business and Economic Research
Knoxville, TN 37996
United States

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