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The
following profile is provided to assist Centres in advising
and recruiting participants on to programmes of an appropriate
level.
- Team leaders are best perceived as being part of a team;
first and foremost they are practitioners or operators working
alongside other team members. Being leaders of teams augments
this role, but does not significantly affect their general
responsibility to engage in the same or complementary job
tasks as the other team members. Given that teams are likely
to contain relatively small numbers of people (probably
in the range 6 - 12), the team leader's span of control
is quite small.
- The team leader role is distinct from that of the first
line manager in its tendency to focus on the shorter term,
on the day-to-day performance of the team and its members.
This means a responsibility for allocating tasks between
team members, for ensuring that individuals are supported
in the performance of their job role, and that output conforms
to the requirements of the organisation and its customers.
Communication between the team and its managers is a significant
part of the team leader role.
- Team leaders can be expected to be aware of the need to
satisfy customer or supplier requirements as agreed by the
organisation, and to be alert to these as they are notified
to the team. Team leaders are expected to encourage team
members to respond appropriately to these requirements within
the parameters laid down by the organisation. They will
have no power to amend standard practices but may have to
decide on more complex decisions within tightly defined
boundaries (eg whether a product meets the quality standards
or a customer fits into a particular pricing category).
This decision-making primarily reflects the team leader's
perceived superior technical competence or experience rather
than being a managerial quality.
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