synergy

(noun)

The ability for a group to accomplish more together than they could accomplish individually.

Related Terms

  • virtual teams
  • cross-functional teams

Examples of synergy in the following topics:

  • The Role of Teams in Organizations

    • By combining various employees into strategic groups, a team-based organization can create synergies through team processes.
    • In order to maintain synergy between employees and organize resources, teams are increasingly common across industries and organizational types.
    • The underlying assumption of a well-functioning team is one of synergy, which is to say that the output of a team will be greater than the sum of each individual's contribution without a team architecture in place.
  • Valuing the Target and Setting the Price

    • As synergy plays a large role in the valuation of acquisitions, it is paramount to get the value of synergies right.
    • Synergies are different from the "sales price" valuation of the firm, as they will accrue to the buyer.
    • Synergy creating investments are started by the choice of the acquirer and, therefore, they are not obligatory, making them real options in essence.
  • 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.
  • Reasons for Combining Businesses

    • Synergy: Synergy is two or more things functioning together to produce a result not independently obtainable.
    • If used in a business application, synergy means that teamwork will produce an overall better result than if each person within the group was working toward the same goal individually.
    • Synergy can take the form of higher revenues, lower expenses, or a lower overall cost of capital.
    • Manager's hubris: A manager's overconfidence about expected synergies from a merger may result in overpayment for the target company.
  • Growth through buying out other companies

    • First of all, just like large firms, small firms can try to obtain synergies by means of complementary resources from bought-out firms.
    • Synergy effects and reduced or shared overheads can also be gained here.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • Interactions of Hormones at Target Cells

    • Differentiate among the interactions (permissiveness, antagonism, and synergy) of hormones at target cells
  • Overview of the International Business Environment

    • Global Synergies – Some organizations have highly developed competencies that are easily scaled.
    • In these situations, global expansion means natural synergy.
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