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Title: High Performance Teams Enable Mission Success for SRNL - 16363

Conference ·
OSTI ID:22838186
; ;  [1]
  1. Savannah River National Laboratory (United States)

The accomplishment of the DOE EM mission of cleaning up the radioactive waste generated as a byproduct of the development and maintenance of nuclear materials over the last 60 years is a daunting task. SRNL specializes in working directly with the 'owners' of the cleanup challenges to identify the desired outcome and develop a solution that can be put into practice. 'We put science to work' is not just a 'tag line' rather it is a concise statement of our values and approach to applying science and engineering to the cleanup objectives. The management of radioactive waste poses multi-decade challenges to DOE EM and the Nation. The ability to harness the depth of knowledge, experience, expertise and passion for safely and effectively solving the technical challenges has reached a critical junction. Perhaps too late to be a natural and organic transition the industry finds itself critically devoid of resources to effectively and efficiently keep focused on the highest order task: cleanup. When project managers plan the resources necessary to perform the planned scope they typically are focused on financial, human, and industrial resources that would be beneficial to project execution. The critical shortage we will be evaluating is experienced and skilled leaders, mentors and coaches in the workforce. The production of educated scientists and engineers is a primary focus at all levels of educational institutions with Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) focused curricula beginning in elementary school. The need for leaders who are skilled in inspiring organizational creativity, adept in harnessing and focusing individual energy while effectively communicating to the work force and the clientele equally compelling messages, has never been greater, or their absence in the workforce more ominous. Managers trained in the classical management theory (insert references here) are aging out of the workforce. In many cases these managers have not retained close connection to advancements in their primary field of study but rather have succumbed to the administrivia burdens that typify highly regulated work. The current technically trained workforce while interested in the 'perks' of management (i.e. visibility, pay increases, advancing status) are driven to keep close connection to their technical 'roots' as a fall-back plan should they need to change their career path either by choice or necessity. The challenge is how to achieve the productive hum of a finely tuned organizational model that blends executive vision and drive with technical leadership and excellence in execution. If any of these three tenets of a high performance team falters the ability to recover erodes the performance of the team and begins to weaken the cultural foundation essential to sustaining high performance work teams. At SRNL, recognition of the need to adapt the management dynamics and the business model and to harness the energy of the workforce to sustain - and in fact increase - the level of performance is a driving force in the transformation of the organization. Examples of changes in organizations structure, business systems and employee engagement are discussed as they relate to the impact on accomplishing the cleanup mission and fostering the next generation of great leaders and innovators. (authors)

Research Organization:
WM Symposia, Inc., PO Box 27646, 85285-7646 Tempe, AZ (United States)
OSTI ID:
22838186
Report Number(s):
INIS-US-19-WM-16363; TRN: US19V1379083541
Resource Relation:
Conference: WM2016: 42. Annual Waste Management Symposium, Phoenix, AZ (United States), 6-10 Mar 2016; Other Information: Country of input: France; available online at: http://archive.wmsym.org/2016/index.html
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English