|
A cursory glance at the employment section of any major newspaper will
reveal those two insipid, tedious buzzwords.
"This position requires a strong team player."
"Excellent team player skills a must."
"Must be a flexible team player."
"Proven experience as a team player."
"Absolutely necessary to be a team player."
Every imaginable organisation requires some sort of "team player".
Even one popular Beverly Hills spa requires a "true team player to
complement our Hair Studio." Gee, has coiffuring become such a complicated
affair that it requires a tag-team effort?
Human resources managers are falling all over themselves trying to recruit
team players of every conceivable incarnation. Enthusiastic, proactive,
dynamic, innovative, ambitious, collaborative, strategic-thinking, cross
functional, self-motivated, detail-oriented, results-oriented, andmy
personal favourites"consummate" and "unflappable"
(being sought by a Detroit-based book publisher and a Toronto marketing
firm).
Applying for nearly any position requires mercilessly and aggressively
marketing one's "team player skills". Endlessly glorified in
want ads, career magazines and employment firms the world over, being
a team player has become the immutable gold standard for professional
behaviour.
And, of course, the greater the number of brilliant team players there
are in an organisation, the better.
Or is it? As Carl Jung once counselled, "The heaping together of
paintings by Old Masters in museums is a catastrophe; likewise, a collection
of a hundred Great Brains makes one big fathead."
Does there not come a point at which this insatiable hunger for team players
starts to rub off as a collective, corporate...farce? Is there
something shameful in not being a team player? I myself think not. But
I am clearly in the minorityand thankfully so.
Barbara Reinhold of monster.comthe
Internet's largest career resources portalrecently crafted an "Are
you cut out for teamwork?" quiz. I scored a "6". "Oops!
You're a lone ranger," which means, "If you want to make it
on a team, you'll need to adjust your attitude."
Adjust my attitude? The word says it all. There is something nefarious
in being a lone ranger on the job. Those who prefer to work in solitude
are branded a corporate liability. But doesn't Reinhold realise that countless
of the world's greatest achievers would sooner have been gin-sodden dipsomaniacs
in Thoreau's Walden Pond than immerse themselves in the invariably prosaic
"team spirit" that today's corporate managers are so blindly
peddling?
Look at Vincent van Gogh. William Randolph Hearst. Thomas Jefferson. Glenn
Gould. J.D. Salinger (notwithstanding that he reportedly drank his own
urine). None of these visionaries was part of any touchy-feely team. There
are, of course, those who believe that creative genius is due as much
to social influences as to individual forces. Alfonso Mortuori and Ronald
Purser, for example, argue strongly for the social dimensions of creativity
in their essay "Deconstructing the Lone Genius Myth"*. However,
I still feel safe in assuming that none of the visionaries I just mentioned
would have been caught dead in a "professional development"
mountain retreat with his fellow "team members".
Not that these men disliked people, or even working with
them. But they simply preferred working on their own. And the results
spoke for themselves. (As Ferdinand mused in the Duchess of Malfi,
"Eagles fly alone. They are crows, daws, and starlings that flock
together." I personally, however, needn't have anything against the
latter.)
The requirement that every potential employee be a team player is now
so commonplace that many would-be employers make mundane, almost lackadaisical
reference to it, even if they clearly have no clue what good "teamwork"
really is. For instance, one biotechnology firm is currently seeking employees
who are "the usuala team player, with people skills."
One San Francisco Internet service provider wants a team of employees
who are "happy, happy, happy" and "motivated to grow, grow,
grow." Surely the human resources director at that firm would have
a slightly more profound understanding of teamwork. My inclination is
to believe that such firms are promoting teamwork not so much as enrichment
to the work environment but as a way of manipulating and controlling their
workers.
Is it not uncommon, for example, that advertising agencies force their
employees to work countless, unpaid overtime in order to meet increasingly
strict deadlines? Anyone who dares question such a practice is immediately
branded a "poor team player" and is eventually shuffled back
down to mailroom duty. This is a glaring example of the vulgarization
of teamwork.
I recently had the gross misfortune of being forced to complete a group
presentation. Throughout the entire ordeal, I quietly reminded my peers
that I am not a team player, and that they would do best to always
keep this in mind. I didn't mean to say that I didn't like these
people as individualsthey were all very nice people, well, except
for one but I knew from my own past experiences that basically,
if it's not my way, then it's no way. Egotistical, yes. Dishonest, no.
Because I wanted to get the project done, and done well, I did
accommodate to the best of my abilities. But part of this accommodation
required that I warn everyone ahead of time that a disinclination for
teamwork is part of my genes and personality. Naturally, I was met with
the oft-heard admonition that "part of your education is learning
how to deal with groups", presumably because "in real life we
must all work well with others".
Horse puckey.
No, in "real life", we don't all have to work well with
others. We all have our own ways of doing things. Some of us are more
team-oriented than others. This has nothing to do with being a misanthropist.
But it does have everything to do with knowing who you are and how you
work bestand not feeling ashamed of that.
When our presentation was finally completed, my colleagues congratulated
one another on "a job well done," and, not unexpectedly, rebuked
me for not being a "team player". Even though I had done just
as much workif not morethan the others, not being a team player
somehow translated into "not pulling my weight". Well, if that's
the case, then thank goodness I didn't pull my proverbial weightelse
I would have wasted a good eight hours trying to decide what colour paper
would be most appropriate for our presentation handouts. But I digress.
My main point is that being a "team player" is, at best, a
lofty, ill-defined ideal that, in the wrong hands, may do more harm than
good to industry, efficiency, and creativity. Especially if it is seen
by society as some sort of celestial trait that will enrich every group
or solve every organisational concernand if it is unilaterally forced
upon individuals by groups of their peersit will drive people not
closer together, but further apart.
Alas, as Lord Byron wrote in Childe Harold's Pilgrimage,
To fly from, need not be to hate, mankind:
All are not fit with them to sir and toil,
Nor is it discontent to keep the mind
Deep in its fountain, lest it over boil.
* "Deconstructing the lone genius myth: Toward a
contextual view of creativity", by Alfonso Mortuori and Ronald E.
Purser. Journal of Humanistic Psychology, Summer 1995.
Copyright © 2002 Eddy Elmer. All Rights Reserved.
Eddy Elmer is a psychology student at Simon Fraser University
in Vancouver, British Columbia, and is most certainly not a team player.
|