PRODUCTIVE STRATEGIES FOR
WORKING WITH COMMITTEES
(Published in the NACBA
Ledger, October-December, 1991)
Churches and other Christian organizations
are very dependent on the work of committees—much to the chagrin of harried
pastors and administrators! Although working with committees sometimes
makes us feel like we’re Jacob wrestling with the angel, committee work
can be both satisfying and productive—but only if we have some insight
into what makes committees tick. Understanding how people tend to work
together on committees is half the battle in getting them to be productive.
Test your committee IQ with the
following true or false questions.
(Answer each question with true
or false)
-
Most committees tend to lean heavily
towards consensus decision making.
-
Committee leaders generally make liberal
use of participative management techniques.
-
Committee members tend to take information
they receive during deliberations as accurate.
-
Committee goals and plans are usually
clearly identified and sharply defined.
-
Committees are more likely to focus
on process and means (rules, procedures, agendas, etc.) than on mission
and ends (goals, contributions, etc.)
-
Committees generally display a good
sense of timing in making decisions and implementing plans.
-
Most committee members are gun shy
about asking questions or taking actions that might slow the committee
down.
-
The formal leader of the committee
usually has more influence over the thoughts and feelings of members than
do informal leaders on the committee.
-
Most committee members are quick to
assume that others in the group are well-informed about the committee’s
work and sympathetic to its mission.
-
The terms group and team are basically
synonymous.
How did you do? The odd-numbered questions
are all true and the even-numbered are false. Let’s delve into the fundamental
realities of group dynamics reflected in the 10 questions.
Understanding Group Dynamics
Committees have a strong tendency—practically
a built-in gyroscope—to operate by consensus based on the shared perceptions,
experiences, and biases of the members. Even so, committee leaders are
commonly reluctant to utilize participative management techniques (brainstorming,
delegation, agenda-sharing, etc) in committee deliberations because these
tend to slow down the group’s momentum and complicate consensus-formation.
Committee members often end up with
a less-than-accurate perception of reality during deliberations because
then tend to accept comments made by members at face value. In reality,
committee-generated information is often incomplete, subjective, and sloppily
researched.
Committee deliberations are apt
to proceed efficiently and with apparent progress because they focus more
on short-term means (parliamentary procedure, recording minutes, keeping
rules and precedent) than on long-run ends (purpose, mission, contributions
made). This can lull members into a false sense of security and accomplishment:
"We met, therefore, we’re a success."
This tendency to confuse bureaucratic
busyness with effectiveness is further aggravated by the reality that the
goals and operating plans of most committees are stated in such a fuzzy
way that true committee success, over time, can’t be meaningfully measured.
Aggressive committee leaders love
to build momentum by barreling through the agenda, pressing for votes,
convening subcommittees, and ending meetings no more than a minute overtime.
Despite the many advantages of keeping things rolling, these steamroller
tactics can backfire can backfire. Members may feel reluctant to speak
out for fear of bogging things down; they will probably feel railroaded;
important details may be glossed over. Fast work isn’t necessarily a virtue
with committees.
Committees are apt to display poor
timing in their activities, sometimes moving prematurely (before conditions
in the organization are fertile for progress), other times procrastinating.
This stems from the tendency of committees to work in isolation of the
organization and to emphasize means over ends.
Another important reality about
group dynamics concerns the pivotal role of informal leaders—people who
are influential because of their popularity, competence, or seniority.
Committee members are often subconsciously swayed by informal leaders because
decisions influenced by them generally turn out to be popular ones.
Productive Strategies for
Working With Committees
Committees have a number of built-in
unproductive tendencies that must be counteracted. The process is akin
to driving a car: careful steering and regulating speed to get where you
want to go. Let’s explore 10 pragmatic strategies for managing committees
productively:
-
To counteract the consensus-at-any-cost
syndrome, committee leaders must make a conscious effort to solicit feedback
from individual members, perhaps on an informal basis away from the group.
-
Goals and purpose statements must be
nailed down before the committee begins its work. These should be carefully
operationalized: specific, measurable, and systematically communicated.
-
Committee leaders must do their homework
before and after meetings to insure that information exchanged is reliable
and accurate. Questions must be asked, assumptions challenged, and research
completed.
-
Committee leaders should create ways
for members to sound off during meetings, such as calling on them by name,
probing for feelings, encouraging debate, and not rushing into voting.
-
Leaders will pay attention not only
to the how and why of committee activities, but also to the when. A sixth
sense of good timing can be developed by staying in close touch with daily
operating realities ("man-agement by walking a-round").
-
Smart committee leaders will go out
of their way to develop rapport with informal leaders in order to cultivate
their behind-the-scenes support.
-
Leaders should keep the committee’s
purpose and mission before the group at all times and not assume that "we’re
all on the same page." Holding meetings and following "Robert’s Rules of
Order" must not be equated with success.
-
The leader will act at times as a governor,
or restrainer, on committee proceedings to hold runaway momentum in check
and make sure all members are heard from.
-
Leaders can accentuate individual accountability
by insisting that committee members who back a proposal pledge their enthusiastic
commitment to its implementation. At times, this calls for the leader to
gently poke and prod committee members to fully buy into the group’s central
mission.
-
Committee leaders must define themselves
as producers, not bureaucrats. While bureaucrats preside, producers lead;
while bureaucrats follow precedent, producers make precedent; while bureau-crats
focus on means, producers focus on ends. Clearly there is a fundamental
difference between a committee and a team: committees meet; teams produce!
Productive
Strategies for Working With Committees © by Phil Van Auken