Idea in Brief

The Problem

Teams under pressure often regress to unhealthy coping mechanisms, instinctively looking for ways to allay their members’ collective anxiety. They may become stuck in pathological patterns that sabotage their mission and work.

The Forms It Takes

Such teams may unconsciously appoint one member to solve their problems—a sole savior—or cast two people in that role, becoming dependent on a dynamic duo. Or they may expend their energy in a fight against or a flight from a common enemy, real or perceived.

How to Overcome It

Sociograms—simple drawings showing how each member perceives the group’s interactions—can help teams surface and break out of dysfunctional patterns of behavior.

The CEO of a European city’s public transit authority recently called us in to coach the organization’s new head of HR. Having joined the executive committee six months earlier, Jocelyn (not her real name) was having difficulty integrating with the team. According to the CEO, her attitude was holding back its efforts to develop a strategy for meeting the city’s growing transportation needs in a more sustainable way.

A version of this article appeared in the March–April 2023 issue of Harvard Business Review.