Raymond Meredith Belbin (4 June 1926 – 6 March 2025) was a British researcher and
management consultant
Management consulting is the practice of providing consulting services to organizations to improve their performance or in any way to assist in achieving organizational objectives. Organizations may draw upon the services of management consultant ...
best known for his work on management teams. He was a visiting professor and Honorary Fellow of
Henley Management College in Oxfordshire, England.
Life and work
Belbin was born in
Sevenoaks
Sevenoaks is a town in Kent with a population of 29,506, situated south-east of London, England. Also classified as a civil parishes in England, civil parish, Sevenoaks is served by a commuter South Eastern Main Line, main line railway into Lo ...
, Kent, England on 4 June 1926.
At
Clare College, Cambridge
Clare College is a Colleges of the University of Cambridge, constituent college of the University of Cambridge in Cambridge, England. The college was founded in 1326 as University Hall, making it the second-oldest surviving college of the Unive ...
he started on a degree course in
Classics
Classics, also classical studies or Ancient Greek and Roman studies, is the study of classical antiquity. In the Western world, ''classics'' traditionally refers to the study of Ancient Greek literature, Ancient Greek and Roman literature and ...
but, after tiring of the subject, switched to a two-year course in Psychology, which he completed in half the time. In 1947, shortly after his marriage to Eunice, he embarked on a doctorate, centred on the Psychology of Ageing in Industry, also at Cambridge.
At university he was a rowing partner with
David Attenborough
Sir David Frederick Attenborough (; born 8 May 1926) is an English broadcaster, biologist, natural historian and writer. He is best known for writing and presenting, in conjunction with the BBC Studios Natural History Unit, the nine nature d ...
.
[https://www.belbin.com/media/1794/tj-07-july-2017-belbin-interview.pdf]
His first appointment after his doctorate was as a
research fellow
A research fellow is an academic research position at a university or a similar research institution, usually for academic staff or faculty members. A research fellow may act either as an independent investigator or under the supervision of a p ...
at Cranfield College (now
Cranfield School of Management
Cranfield School of Management, established in 1967, is a business school that is part of Cranfield University in Bedfordshire, United Kingdom. Cranfield School of Management is triple accredited by the Association of MBAs (AMBA), EQUIS and AAC ...
at
Cranfield University
Cranfield University is a postgraduate-only public research university in the United Kingdom that specialises in science, engineering, design, technology and management. Cranfield was founded as the College of Aeronautics (CoA) in 1946. Throug ...
). His early research focused mainly on older workers in industry. He returned to Cambridge and joined the
Industrial Training Research Unit (ITRU) where his wife, Eunice Belbin
OBE (née Fellows, 1915–2006), was director and he subsequently became chairman. Belbin combined this job with acting as
OECD
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD; , OCDE) is an international organization, intergovernmental organization with 38 member countries, founded in 1961 to stimulate economic progress and international trade, wor ...
consultant running successful demonstration projects in Sweden, Austria, the United Kingdom and the United States.
It was while at ITRU, in the late 1960s, that Belbin was invited to carry out research at what was then called the Administrative Staff College at
Henley-on-Thames
Henley-on-Thames ( ) is a town status in the United Kingdom, town and Civil parishes in England, civil parish on the River Thames, in the South Oxfordshire district, in Oxfordshire, England, northeast of Reading, Berkshire, Reading, west of M ...
. Belbin was interested not just in individual behaviour but also in group behaviour. However, he had no particular theories about teams and so recruited three other specialists to help him. These were mathematician and international
chess master
A chess title is a title regulated by a chess governing body and bestowed upon players based on their performance and rank. Such titles are usually granted for life. The international chess governing body FIDE grants several titles, the most pres ...
Bill Hartston, an anthropologist of the
peoples of Kenya Jeanne Fisher, and
occupational psychologist Roger Mottram. Over the next seven years they conducted three business games a year, with eight teams in each game. Across all of the many meetings they observed, categorised, and recorded all of the contributions of the team members. The research, which took nine years in total, formed the basis of his 1981 classic book, ''Management Teams: Why They Succeed or Fail''.
Belbin published a second book, ''Team Roles at Work'', in 1993.
Owing to the successful application of his research in industry, by the late 1980s, Belbin was writing reports on recruitment and selection by hand. In 1987 Belbin, his wife Eunice, and their son Nigel, formed Belbin Associates, to offer Team Role advice globally via a software platform called Interplace. The company transitioned to Belbin Limited (an
Employee Ownership Trust) in 2022.
Belbin lived at
Barton, Cambridgeshire
Barton is a village and civil parish in the South Cambridgeshire district of Cambridgeshire, England. It is about south-west of Cambridge, near junction 12 of the M11 motorway.
History
The Roman road Akeman Street may have passed through ...
and was a keen gardener, opening his garden for many years for charity, as part of the
National Garden Scheme.
He married his second wife, Sheila, in 2008.
He died, peacefully at home, on 6 March 2025, at the age of 98.
Belbin's research
Belbin's 1981 book, ''Management Teams: Why They Succeed or Fail'' presented conclusions from his work studying how members of teams interacted during
business games run at
Henley Management College. Amongst his key findings was that the most successful teams were made up of a diverse mix of behaviours. He found that high-performing teams were able to represent each of the nine Belbin team role behaviours at the appropriate time, commensurate with the team's purpose and objectives.
Each team member is likely to have strengths in two or three team roles, so that a team need not be as many as nine people, but perhaps should be at least three or four.
Whilst comparisons can be drawn between Belbin's behavioural team roles and personality types, Belbin defines a team role as one of nine clusters of behavioural attributes identified by his research at Henley as being effective in order to facilitate team progress.
He claimed that the
Belbin Team Inventory does not have psychometric properties. The
Belbin Team Inventory is the only sanctioned method for deriving Belbin team roles.
Apollo Team Syndrome
Contrary to his initial predictions, Belbin discovered that teams made of high-intellect individuals often tended to fail. They were difficult to manage, prone to destructive debate and encountered significant difficulties with decision-making. The researchers called the phenomenon Apollo Team Syndrome after the first of these teams who, despite a promising membership with strong analytical skills and impressive academic credentials, foundered at every turn, resulting in poor team performance.
Works
*
* with Victoria Brown
See also
*
Team effectiveness
*
Team management
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Belbin, Meredith
1926 births
2025 deaths
People from Sevenoaks
Alumni of Clare College, Cambridge
Alumni of Cranfield University
British management consultants