Daily Stand-up Meetings: Impacts on Psychological Safety and Well-Being in Teams (77866)

Session Information: Industrial Organization and Organization Theory
Session Chair: Valendra Granitha Shandika Puri

Friday, 29 March 2024 09:25
Session: Session 1
Room: Room E (Live Stream)
Presentation Type: Live-Stream Presentation

All presentation times are UTC + 9 (Asia/Tokyo)

Daily stand-up meetings are the most commonly used method in agile teams. In daily stand-ups, team members gather to coordinate and align their efforts, typically for a predefined period of no more than 15 minutes. The primary purpose is to ask and answer the following three questions: What did I accomplish yesterday? What will I do today? What obstacles are impeding my progress? Daily stand-ups aim to enhance communication, mutual understanding, and support within the team, as well as promote collective learning from mistakes through daily synchronization and transparency. The use of daily stand-ups is intended to positively influence psychological safety within teams, which is the belief that it is safe to show oneself and take personal risks. Our studies explore the relationships between daily stand-ups, psychological safety, and psychological well-being. In a first study, based on survey results (n = 318), we demonstrated that daily stand-ups have a positive indirect effect on job satisfaction and a negative indirect effect on turnover intention through their impact on psychological safety. In a second study, we investigate, using an experimental design, how the use of daily stand-ups in teams enhances psychological safety and well-being compared to a control group that does not use daily stand-ups. Psychological safety is considered one of the most crucial cultural factors for a sustainable, agile organization. Agile approaches, such as daily stand-ups, are a critical part of the evolving work environment and offer a proactive means to shape and foster psychological safety within teams.

Authors:
Sarah Rietze, University of Leipzig, Germany
Hannes Zacher, University of Leipzig, Germany


About the Presenter(s)
Ms Sarah Rietze is a University Doctoral Student at University of Leipzig in Germany

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Posted by Clive Staples Lewis

Last updated: 2023-02-23 23:45:00