When teams in organizations are assembled to perform contingent tasks, team members carry with them experiences of prior interaction with partners in different teams. Focal team members share collaborative experiences to the extent that they worked with common external prior partners. Extending current research on team effectiveness, we investigate how shared collaborative experience (SCE) affects team performance. Consistent with the established understanding of team processes as carrying both a teamwork and a taskwork component, we conceptualize SCE as having two distinct dimensions that we call SCE extent and SCE diversity. We posit that high SCE extent increases the ability of teams to refine their teamwork processes, increasing their performance through enhanced coordination and reflexivity. We argue that high SCE diversity hinders the ability of teams to form a shared understanding of task demands, thus undermining team performance. Furthermore, we investigate the contingent effect of task complexity on the relationship between SCE and performance. We argue that the benefits of implicit coordination and the drawbacks of experience diversity decrease as tasks become more complex and require more explicit coordination and wider repertoires of responses. These predictions find support in an analysis of 1343 robot-assisted surgery operations performed by 114 surgeons during a four-year period in a private university hospital. By explicitly recognizing how team members benefit from the network of their shared prior partners, our study contributes to developing a new approach to study the effectiveness of temporary teams in organizations.

The Partners of My Partners: Shared Collaborative Experience and Team Performance in Surgical Teams / Tonellato, Marco; Iacopino, Valentina; Mascia, Daniele; Lomi, Alessandro. - In: JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT. - ISSN 0149-2063. - (In corso di stampa), pp. 1-39. [10.1177/01492063241271197]

The Partners of My Partners: Shared Collaborative Experience and Team Performance in Surgical Teams

Iacopino, Valentina;Mascia, Daniele;
In corso di stampa

Abstract

When teams in organizations are assembled to perform contingent tasks, team members carry with them experiences of prior interaction with partners in different teams. Focal team members share collaborative experiences to the extent that they worked with common external prior partners. Extending current research on team effectiveness, we investigate how shared collaborative experience (SCE) affects team performance. Consistent with the established understanding of team processes as carrying both a teamwork and a taskwork component, we conceptualize SCE as having two distinct dimensions that we call SCE extent and SCE diversity. We posit that high SCE extent increases the ability of teams to refine their teamwork processes, increasing their performance through enhanced coordination and reflexivity. We argue that high SCE diversity hinders the ability of teams to form a shared understanding of task demands, thus undermining team performance. Furthermore, we investigate the contingent effect of task complexity on the relationship between SCE and performance. We argue that the benefits of implicit coordination and the drawbacks of experience diversity decrease as tasks become more complex and require more explicit coordination and wider repertoires of responses. These predictions find support in an analysis of 1343 robot-assisted surgery operations performed by 114 surgeons during a four-year period in a private university hospital. By explicitly recognizing how team members benefit from the network of their shared prior partners, our study contributes to developing a new approach to study the effectiveness of temporary teams in organizations.
In corso di stampa
teams, group processes, health care, social networks, team learning, team performance
The Partners of My Partners: Shared Collaborative Experience and Team Performance in Surgical Teams / Tonellato, Marco; Iacopino, Valentina; Mascia, Daniele; Lomi, Alessandro. - In: JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT. - ISSN 0149-2063. - (In corso di stampa), pp. 1-39. [10.1177/01492063241271197]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11385/243298
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