When I was in the midst of researching what caused cross-functional teams to succeed — and finding that many of them failed — I discovered a deeply dysfunctional development project in a huge multinational IT company. The company had invested $100 million in the project, which involved three divisions. Most of the team, and even some executives, knew the project was a dead-end two years before the company finally pulled the plug. As one middle manager told me, “No one was willing to go to management and say, ‘Let’s redeploy everyone, including myself, and do something else because this project isn’t working.'”
75% of Cross-Functional Teams Are Dysfunctional
Research shows that fixing them requires strong governance.
June 23, 2015
Read more on Collaboration and teams
or related topics
Cross-functional management,
Leading teams,
Process management
and Project management
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BT Behnam Tabrizi has been teaching “Leading Organizational Transformation” at Stanford University’s Department of Management Science and Engineering and executive programs for more than 25 years. An expert in organizational and leadership transformation, he has helped thousands of CEOs and leaders plan, mobilize, and implement innovative transformational initiatives. He has written ten books, most recently Going on Offense: A Leader’s Playbook for Perpetual Innovation (IdeaPress Publishing, August 2023).
Read more on Collaboration and teams
or related topics
Cross-functional management,
Leading teams,
Process management
and Project management