Title: IS5600
1IS5600
- Virtual Organisations, Work Teams
2The Virtual Organisation
- Depends on a seamlessly integrated federation of
alliances partnerships with other organisations - Extract value from partners, with minimal
investment in staff, assets and capital - Outsource (often offshore) as much as possible
- Use technology to overcome barriers of time
space - May mix n match virtual and face-to-face work.
3Virtual Teams
- Involve
- Temporary membership
- Distributed members (city, region, country)
- Longitudinal tasks (days to months)
- Collaboration cooperation control
- The cross-fertilisation of ideas
- A high degree of dependence on technology
- Telework a new style of work, even a new culture
- The potential for destructive conflict
- Plenty of risks!
4BUT, Humans Prefer Proximity
- Biologically we are coded for it
- Food tastes better when eaten with others
- Our blood pressure rises and heart beat quickens
when close to others - We conform more when with others than when alone
- Social habits are often group related cohesive
groups sit together, socialise,
5Communication is not only words
- Unsurprisingly, we communicate best when in
proximity with others - Up to 80 of communication is non-textual/verbal
- Paralinguistic features like tone, pauses,
gestures, nods, winks all add value - More complex tasks are even more dependent on FTF
interaction - So, is it possible to communicate successfully
virtually?
6MROs Regional Software Sales
- Sales Managers Executives spread around the SE
Asia / Greater China Region - Living in one place, but responsible for a broad
area (e.g. TWHKMOHI or SGMY or GD) - No office space provided work from home, road,
i-café, hotel, airport, - Boss for all is in Shanghai see him once a
year, or less. - Colleagues, data, information are virtually
there with Lotus SameTime or MS Groove.
7MRO It works, but
- Success depends on
- The right technology, people, attitude
- Success involves
- A new style of work, thinking, sense of
responsibility - Success is measured with
- Results, sales not hours or seniority
- A successful culture has to be created and
maintained
8HICSS Conference Support
- Enhancing the quality of feedback during
conference presentations - Simultaneous audience participation online
- Everyone gets a chance to respond
- The audience can share good ideas with itself, as
well as with the presenter - See Davison Briggs, 2000, for details
9(No Transcript)
10Boeing-Rocketdyne
- Task To build rockets 100 times cheaper and get
them to market 10 times faster. - The experts It cannot be done!
- The team 8 people who had never worked together
10 months max 15 of each members time on this
task. - Outcome success on all accounts
11How?
- By managing their knowledge virtually via a set
of protocols - By restructuring their work to fit the virtual
environment without reducing their ability to be
creative - Shared understanding of the problem
- Frequent (virtual) interaction discussion
- Rapid creation (and discarding) of information
- All info shared online with all members all the
time
12Realisation that
- Collaborative Technologies are Knowledge
Management Technologies - But
- They can also be Knowledge Overload Technologies!
13So, the role of IT was to bring order to the
chaos overload
- 89 Virtual Meetings using Internet Notebook a
custom designed collaborative technology to
support discussions 651 entries supplemented
with audiotele-conferencing - Anytime, anywhere access
- Create, comment, reference-link, search, sort all
entries - Sketches, snapshots, hyperlinks, text, templates,
e-whiteboard - Coordination protocols to govern CT use
- Project Vault file repository, with shared
access for team members
14Intel
- Globally, a highly dispersed company
- RD in 10 countries IE, IL, US, RU. IN, MY, PH,
CN, UK, ES - Fabrication in 11 locations, assembly in 4.
- 236 offices globally.
- 8300 web-based collaborations weekly
- 71 of employees work with colleagues whose
mother tongue is different - 60 of employees are members of 3 teams.
- Distance does not impede team performance, but
the wide range of collaboration tools does.
15Financial Returns
- ATT increased the number of sales people working
from home 15-20 more time with customers. - ATT saved US550M from 1991-1998 by eliminating
unused office space. - IBM saved US100M in one US unit through
telecommuting. - Perkin-Elmer encouraged telecommuting and shut 35
branch offices altogether. - Texaco sees telecommuting as a key to increasing
competitiveness
16Collaborative Virtual Teams
- In a global society, where timely information is
the most important commodity, collaboration is
not simply desirable, it is inevitable
17should be designed carefully
- Who is going to contribute usefully?
- Who will pull their weight?
- Who is just another body?
- Who are the natural leaders, or laggards?
- Do all team members 'fit' together?
18Selecting the Right People for Virtual Work
- It is not just ability to use the technology, but
also to communicate effectively, sensitively,
empathetically. - Heightened cultural awareness is very valuable
what does silence mean, or polite agreement? - Which managers can adapt to the virtual world?
19Designing Effective Teams
- Determine Team Structure
- Define team composition
- Members from different backgrounds and
organisational units - Specialised expertise
- Necessary competencies
- Different members at different times
- Core members
- Temporary/Full-time/Part-time/ad hoc
20Designing Effective Teams
- Determine Team Structure
- Define team composition
- Define and fill leadership roles
- Emergent or appointed? Credibility?
- Permanent or temporary?
- Facilitates, coaches, and consults
- Undertakes project scope management
- Manages team life cycle
- Encourages (structured) decision making
21Designing Effective Teams
- Determine Team Structure
- Define team composition
- Define and fill leadership roles
- Develop external connections (link to the rest of
the organisation and beyond) - Develop Team Capabilities
- Facilitate access to information resources
- Facilitate appropriate technological support
- Facilitate training
22Roles in Virtual Teams
- A multitude are possible, but which are
essential? -
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23Task Types?
- Generative, no correct answer tasks
- Tasks that need distributed resources
- Design development tasks
- Products
- Software
- Services
- Coordination tasks
24Technology and Teams
- Great teams dont fear technology, they love it.
- This is equally true for face-to-face teams as
distributed or virtual teams.
25Technology Support
- Web-based resources such as portals
- Collaborative Groupware Systems
- Audio Video Conferencing
- Email EDI Electronic Data Interchange
- IOS Interorganisational Systems e.g. TradeLink
connecting trading clients with - Banks, insurance, govt depts, trade agents, port
authorities, customs excise, shipping
companies, etc - Creative applications / structurations of
technology (e.g. TALs integrated SCM systems
extranets) - Who pays for all of this?
26Web-Based Resources
- Web-Conferencing systems Blackboard, eRoom,
SameTime, Groove - Globally accessible repository for
team-documents, discussions, ideas, library, - Enables round-the-clock work
- User friendliness varies
- User creativeness and adaptability is essential
- Group Support Systems for
- Un/structured brainstorming, consensus building,
voting
27Audio- Video-conferencing
- Audioconferencing
- Widely available, reliable and cost effective
- Especially useful when team members know each
other and focus is on content - Often used to complement poor audio quality on
videoconferencing - Videoconferencing
- Widely available, but reliability cost vary
- Air-time needs to be planned carefully in advance
- Do you really want to know what they look like?
28Critical Success Factors (CSFs)
- What has to go right in order that the virtual
project is successful, or that the team can
function effectively? - CSFs relate to technology, work style and some
social and cultural issues. - Does the technology work as desired?
- Can the team members adjust their work style to
fit the online, virtual medium? - Does the team have a social life? A culture?
29Technology CSFs
- Speed of connection (inc. bandwidth)
- Freedom of access to information
- Functionality and Ease of Use
- Security, Privacy and Integrity
- Structuration of the technology to fit the teams
needs - Are we using the technology as planned by its
designers, or are we adapting it, and how
effective is it in consequence?
30Work CSFs
- 'Fit' with existing work practice
- Task orientation/goals
- Coordination, cooperation, control
- Individual initiative/accountability
- Conflict management
- Feedback mechanisms/satisfaction
- Performance measurement
31Social / Cultural CSFs
- Trust and Cohesion
- Is there a sense of belonging in the team?
- Behavioural Norms
- Are we discovering new ways of interacting?
- Are we experiencing resistance to change?
- Humour and Identity
- Do we have a virtual coffee machine or bar?
- Cultural considerations
- Are cultural differences a wall between us, or
some of us?
32Leadership Participation
- We should focus entirely on the task
- No more nonsense get to the point
- I will only tolerate differences in opinion if
they contribute to the task - My role is to get the best results and I define
the best process
- Let us get to know each other better
- Our own goals are important and should be
addressed - Differences in opinion should be heard
- This is a forum for activity
- My role is to facilitate this collective
experience
What is your leadership style?
33Control, Coordination, Collaboration
- How can we
- manage virtual teams effectively?
- keep virtual teams on track?
- coordinate their work?
- get team members to collaborate with one another?
- measure their performance and work quality?
- and ensure that there is a reasonable level of
satisfaction at the end of the project?
34The 1 Challenge for Virtuality
- Coordination
- Coordination costs can be huge, because of the
reliance on technology - Many internal and external relationships, all of
which have to be managed across time and space - Coordination also involves culture cultural
differences between team members can lead to
chaos.
35Cultural Differences
- Style of working
- Last minute or well in advance
- Follow the rules or break the rules
- Selfish/individualistic or for the benefit of the
team - Initiative taking or blind following
- Control can be achieved through setting interim
deadlines, being firm about procedures in
advance, enforced mutual dependence, - Coordination is then usually enhanced
36What are the key characteristics of your cultural
values?
37Language Issues
- First language? Usually not English.
- Local language for sub-groups.
- Proofreading of reports
- When is a native speaker not a native speaker?!
- Slang jokes
- Dont translate well.
- Frustrations gtgt impoverished coordination
collaboration
38What do they mean?
- I hear what you say
- Not bad
- Quite good
- By the way
- Very interesting
- I will think about it
- It is my fault
- What an original idea!
- I disagree
- Very good
- Disappointing
- Most importantly
- Rubbish!
- I will forget it as fast as possible!
- It is your fault!
- You must be crazy!
39Motivation Involvement
- Assumptions are dangerous
- Cultural and personal differences abound
- Control activities to enforce involvement and
stimulate motivation - Videoconference sessions to create sense of
presence - Self-assessment mutual dependence
- Prizes for the best teams
- Free collaboration or controlled interaction?
40Trust Dependence
- Absence of trust makes collaboration impossible
- Trust can stimulate participation
- Violated trust (e.g. free-riding) leads to
frustration and destructive conflict - Too much trust can also be counter productive!
41Trust Leadership
- Trust is critical, yet extremely hard to build
effectively (with lots of distrust). - This is particularly true in the more
individualistic cultures - where there is also a tendency to blame others,
and - the lack of face-to-face interaction
facilitates explosions! - Should leaders emerge from the team, or be
appointed?
42Temporal Rhythms The Shaping of Space and Time
- Face-to-face (and also virtual) meetings are
characterised by peaks of intense activity,
whereas other times are marked by troughs. - Sequences of peaks and troughs.
- Decision processes match the rhythm.
- Performance best measured by decision quality,
action quality, member commitment cohesion - Leaders set the pace for the rhythm
43Harmony or Conflict?
- Some harmony is essential in Distributed Teams
- For team effectiveness and efficiency
- For self-control self-coordination
- Harmony depends on many things
- Trust, motivation, mutual-dependence, respect for
cultural differences, - Language can be a major barrier especially if
some team members use 1st language, others 2nd or
3rd. - Productive conflict can be an excellent catalyst
for the development of new ideas
44The Role of Subgroups
- Local subgroups within a global context often
emerge - Most of us prefer FTF work, which a subgroup
arrangement permits. - Allocation of work to the HK-team.
- Coordination of subgroups at the end.
- Potential problems?
- Is this what virtual means?
45Eight Solutions
- Rhythmic interactions meetings are useful
- Synchronisation time zones
- Standardisation of communication protocols
- Build an awareness infrastructure work hours,
breaks, holidays, weekends - Netiquette acknowledgements and urgency
- A cohesive team culture is very beneficial
- Real-time communication is still important
- Put warmth into cold email
46Strategic Considerations?What might go wrong?
- Team dynamics
- Conflicts (culture, interpersonal)
- Leadership Trust
- Consensus, Satisfaction,
- Technology (will go wrong!)
- VTs can swallow a huge amount of time for few
useful outcomes, as well as plenty of
dissatisfaction - Executive oversight is essential
47And to Discuss
- Virtual Work in Hong Kong
- Does it happen? How? Why? Where?
- Telecommuting? Multi-site teams?
- Video/audio conferencing? Skype? NetMeeting?
- HK-China teams? Regional or Global Teams?
- Virtual Knowledge Management?
48References
- Davison, R.M. and Briggs, R.O. (2000) GSS for
Presentation Support Supercharging the Audience
through Simultaneous Discussions during
Presentations, Communications of the ACM, 43, 9,
91-97. - Malhotra, A., Majchrzak, A., Carman, R. and Lott,
V. (2001) Radical Innovation without Collocation
A Case Study at Boeing-Rocketdyne, Management
Information Systems Quarterly, 25, 2, 229-249.