I was the leader of programming teams for several years. My experience was that at the beggining beginning you have just a group of persons (not a team). This is a very loooong subject to discuss about (but no complex). I'll try to summarise summarize the most important issues in the process:
- You are managing PERSONS not machiners machines nor slaves.
- It's your responsability responsibility to start transforming this group in a team.
- At the begining beginning you should give the first steps (See The Pragmatic Programmer, Chapter 1, Section 3: "Stone Soup and Boiled Frogs")
- You ARE the example for them.
- Members respect is a MUST TO HAVE, and it starts on you. You must respect everyone in your team, and make sure that everyone respect each other.
- Every team member makes mistakes (including you).
- If you made a fault, you MUST recognize it publicy publicly with your team, and tell how you will fix it.
- If you have to blame some one, do this privately. If you have to congratulate some one DO THIS publicy publicly in company with the others team members.
- Remember that when you are talking with your Boss that the job was done by you AND your team. You shouldn't assume all the credits.
- Don't bother your team members with project problems. You must always protect them from outside problems. It's your responsability responsibility to manage it.
- If you have to blame the team, do it with respect! May be the team fails due your fault, you must analyse analyze it carefuly carefully (may be with them).
- You aren't their mother.
- After a hard work due to very high pressure to delivery something, give a break to the team members most affected.
- And the most importat important from my point of view: Try to know very well each team member: their personality, problems, fears, hobbies, etc. That will help you make decisions. Example: A team member engadged engaged with one or more son is different to manage than the Single whom lives alone in a small apartment without to much moth expenses.
- It takes time to build a team, don't expect to have one in a couple of weeks.
There are more points to describe, but i think the listed above are enought enough to you to start transforming your group into a team.
Good luck!
