Luxist Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cross-functional team - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-functional_team

    A cross-functional team (XFN), also known as a multidisciplinary team or interdisciplinary team, [1] [2] [3] is a group of people with different functional expertise working toward a common goal. [4] It may include people from finance, marketing, operations, and human resources departments. Typically, it includes employees from all levels of an ...

  3. Matrix management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matrix_management

    Matrix management is an organizational structure in which some individuals report to more than one supervisor or leader—relationships described as solid line or dotted line reporting. More broadly, it may also describe the management of cross-functional, cross-business groups and other work models that do not maintain strict vertical business ...

  4. Secretary of Defense-Empowered Cross-Functional Teams

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secretary_of_Defense...

    The purpose of the cross-functional teams was: to provide for effective collaboration and integration across organizational and functional boundaries in the Department of Defense; to develop, at the direction of the Secretary, recommendations for comprehensive and fully integrated policies, strategies, plans, and resourcing decisions;

  5. Agile software development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agile_software_development

    Agile testing involves all members of a cross-functional agile team, with special expertise contributed by testers, to ensure delivering the business value desired by the customer at frequent intervals, working at a sustainable pace. Specification by example is used to capture examples of desired and undesired behavior and guide coding.

  6. Multiteam system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiteam_system

    Multiteam systems ( MTSs) are "two or more teams that interface directly and interdependently in response to environmental contingencies toward the accomplishment of collective goals. MTS boundaries are defined by virtue of the fact that all teams within the system, while pursuing different proximal goals, share at least one common distal goal ...

  7. Team effectiveness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Team_effectiveness

    Team effectiveness (also referred to as group effectiveness) is the capacity a team has to accomplish the goals or objectives administered by an authorized personnel or the organization. [1] A team is a collection of individuals who are interdependent in their tasks, share responsibility for outcomes, and view themselves as a unit embedded in ...

  8. Collaboration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collaboration

    Collaboration (from Latin com- "with" + laborare "to labor", "to work") is the process of two or more people, entities or organizations working together to complete a task or achieve a goal. [1] Collaboration is similar to cooperation. Most collaboration requires leadership, [vague] although the form of leadership can be social within a ...

  9. Air Force Installation and Mission Support Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_Force_Installation_and...

    The AFIMSC cross-functional team provides globally integrated management, resourcing and combat support operations for Airmen and family services, base communications, chaplain, civil engineering, contracting, logistics readiness, public affairs, security forces and financial management programs.