Abstract
Many companies turn agile in response to the rapid changes in market, technology, and workforce. An agile organization consists of many amoeba teams – small teams responsible for their own operation decisions and performances. We identify the challenges in managing amoeba teams based on evidences from a leading online fast fashion company. One challenge lies in achieving a desirable team structure with each team member assigned to a unique role: a designer, a marketing-sales operator, a support. The fully staffed (3-person) teams significantly outperformed the understaffed (2-person) teams that required shared roles. Furthermore, the reduction in productivity not only came from human capital constraint, but also team incentive design. Specifically, a regressive team bonus plan created disincentive for a 2-person team to accept the third member. Another challenge is on the bonus allocation among the team members to balance pay leadership with concern for parity. Among the 3-person teams, those with sales leadership (the marketing-sales operator receiving the highest bonus) significantly outperformed those with design leadership. This reflects the importance of market orientation in the fast fashion industry. However, pay disparity within a team undermined some teams’ performance. Overall, these results underscore the importance of new management practices for agile organizations.
Original language | English |
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Publication status | Published - Jul 2020 |
Source
China Europe International Business School (CEIBS)Keywords
- Agile organization
- Amoeba teams
- Team management
- Incentive plan