Synergy
(noun)
The concept that a whole can derive more value than the combination of the individual parts.
(noun)
Benefits resulting from combining two different groups, people, objects, or processes.
Examples of Synergy in the following topics:
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The Importance of Leverage
- Although there are different ways of understanding the concept of gaining leverage as a manager, the underlying principle should be one of synergy.
- The concept of synergy emphasizes that one additional employee's output is greater than an arithmetic expectation.
- More simply put, synergy means that 1 + 1 > 2 (a common adage in business for synergy is 1 + 1 = 3).
- Delegation therefore allows managers to optimize team structures and skill-set distributions to allow for synergy in operations.
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Building a Culture of High Performance
- Valued diversity – Team synergy is lost when groupthink dominates the discussion.
- Mutual trust – Reliance upon one another, and trust in each other's skills and capabilities, allows for less duplication of work and more overall synergy.
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Advantages and Disadvantages of Group Decision Making
- Group decision making provides two advantages over decisions made by individuals: synergy and sharing of information.
- Synergy is the idea that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
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Cultural Intelligence
- Diversity in a rapidly globalizing economy is a central field within organizational behavior and managerial development, underlining the critical importance of deriving synergy through cultural intelligence.
- An interesting perspective on cultural intelligence is well represented in the intercultural-competence diagram, which highlights the way that each segment of cultural knowledge can create synergy when applied to the whole of cultural intelligence, where overlapping generates the highest potential CQ.
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The Role of Teams in Organizations
- Operating globally also creates opportunities to combine the efforts of employees working on similar projects to avoid duplication and create synergies.
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Culture-Specific Nuances of Human Resources Management
- The localization of HRM strategies and materials allows multinationals to achieve synergy across various geographic and cultural contexts.
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Defining Values
- Values help determine whether an employee is passionate about work and the workplace, which in turn can lead to above-average returns, high employee satisfaction, strong team dynamics, and synergy.
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Group Conflict as a Barrier to Decision Making
- Group dynamics require all fifteen players to work together, often demanding tremendous synergy to outlast an opponent.
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Consequences of Workplace Stress
- If stress is not noted and addressed by management early on, team dynamics can erode, hurting the social and cultural synergies present in the organization.
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The Systems Viewpoint
- The end product of effective systems management is synergy, in which the end product has more value than the individual sum of its parts.