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Title: Facilitating Virtual Team Relationships via Internet and Conventional Communication Channels
All correspondences to the 1st author
David Pauleen is a lecturer at the School of Information Management at Victoria University of Wellington. Current research interests include virtual teams and related issues, particularly information and communication technologies, intercultural communication and cultural biases in the development of communications technologies, team leadership and facilitation, and knowledge management of team processes and outcomes. e-mail: [email protected] Pak Yoong (PhD, Victoria University of Wellington) is a senior lecturer and foundation director of the masters programme in information systems at the School of Information Management, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. His current research interests are in computer support for groups and teams, the facilitation of distributed meetings, telework, virtual teams and end user support. His work has appeared in Journal of Information Technology and People, Informing Science and Internet Research - Electronic Networking Applications and Policy Citation PAULEEN, D. & YOONG, P. (2001). “FACIL ITATING VIRTUAL TEAM RELATIONSHIPS V IA INTERNET AND CONVENTIONAL COMMUNICATION CHANNELS.” INTERNET RESEARCH: ELECTRONIC NETWORKING APPLICATIONS AND POLICIES 11(3 ) , 190-202.
AWARDED MOST “OUTST ANDING PAPER” IN 2001 VOLUME.
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Facilitating Virtual Team Relationships via Internet and Conventional Communication Channels
Key Words Virtual teams, facilitation, Internet communication, relationship-building
Abstract
The development of personal relationships between team members is
recognised as an important factor in enhancing effective working relationships among
members of both co-located and virtual teams. However, little has been written on
how to build these online relationships among virtual team members. This paper
reports part of a qualitative research study on how facilitators of virtual teams build
and maintain online relationships. In particular, the paper examines how virtual team
facilitators use Internet-based and conventional electronic communication channels to
build relationships with their virtual team members. The findings suggest that some
electronic communication channels are more effective than others in building online
relationships. The paper concludes by suggesting that facilitators need to strategically
use the channels available to them to effectively build online relationships
Introduction
This paper seeks to contribute to the general field of virtual teams by looking
at how virtual team facilitators use Internet-based and conventional electronic
communication channels to build and manage relationships with their team members.
Virtual teams are a relatively new phenomenon and Jarvenpaa and Leidner (1999)
define them as temporary, culturally diverse, geographically dispersed, electronically
communicating workgroups. Virtual teams may communicate and work
synchronously or asynchronously through such technologies as electronic mail,
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bulletin boards, audio/video/data conferencing, automated workflow, electronic
voting and collaborative writing (Coleman, 1997). Virtual teams are playing an
increasingly important role in organisational life and offer organisations the flexibility
to remain competitive (Mowshowitz, 1997). According to Grenier and Metes (1995),
virtual teams will form the nuclei of 21st century organisations.
Successful virtual team facilitators must be able to manage the whole spectrum
of communication strategies via new technologies, as well as human and social
processes, and often do it across cultures. O’Hara-Devereaux and Johanson (1994)
place process facilitation skills as some of the most crucial for managing and leading
global teams. Facilitation aims at clarifying all aspects of communication including
the unspoken interpersonal issues. O’Hara-Devereaux and Johanson (1994) define
facilitation as…
… the art of helping people navigate the processes that lead to agreed-upon
objectives in a way that encourages universal participation and productivity.
Most of the extant research on virtual teams has been anecdotal and
descriptive with little in the way of systematic, empirical research (Furst et al, 1999).
This is particularly true when virtual team facilitators are the main focus of study.
Although the importance of facilitators in virtual teams is noted in the literature
(Davenport and Pearlson 1998; Kimball, 2000; O’Hara-Devereaux and Johanson,
1994), and suggestions for facilitating virtual teams are enumerated, no systematic
research where the facilitator of virtual teams is the primary focus of study has been
located. Nunamaker et al (1999, p. 27) state that, "little research has yet been
undertaken to understand and improve the process of distributed facilitation."
Warkentin and Beranek (1999) in the conclusion to their study on virtual team
communication call for a further evaluation of the role of leadership in effective
virtual teams that perform tasks well. This paper seeks to address some of these gaps.
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Communication Channels in Virtual Teams
Electronic communication channels available to virtual team facilitators are
varied, and include a variety of synchronous and asynchronous channels. Often these
technologies are formally linked together to form groupware, an umbrella term used
to describe "electronic technology and group processes that support teams and
organisations as they work together" (O’Hara-Devereaux and Johanson, 1994, p. 78).
Electronic communication channels are used by organisations to cope in the current
dynamic environment of diverse business pressures that are caused by ever changing
technologies and the globalisation of business. Many organisations have attempted to
meet the challenges of distributed offices using groupware tools (Davenport and
Pearlson, 1998). Electronic communication channels make it possible to meet across
geographic and cultural boundaries without the massive stress and cost of travel, but
also require a more considered approach to selection and use (Schwartz, 1999).
Technological infrastructure can strongly impact virtual team effectiveness in
ways that a facilitator may or may not be able to effectively manage. For example,
software and hardware compatibility among team members can affect the choice of
communication channels. For the smaller organisations, financial limitations often
play a significant part in the communication resources virtual teams have at their
disposal (Boutieller et al, 1998). In some developing countries, their global virtual
teams may experience significant problems with access to technology due to
underdeveloped national infrastructure or the high cost of broadband internet
connections.
However, while electronic communication channels support the networked
organisation by providing tools to solve collaboration oriented problems, Coleman
(1997) warns that focussing only on technical issues can lead to expensive failures,
while focussing on the people and organisational issues dramatically increases the
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probability of success. Organisational policies or the lack of them can impact the
effectiveness of virtual teams. Many companies have no formal company or HR
policies on virtual teams. Virtual teams are often formed on an as-needed, ad-hoc
basis. Another issue that can be a factor is team member competence in using various
technologies. This may be an organisational training issue, but in some cases it may
be a member-selection issue (Jarvenpaa et al, 1998) as some people may have a
psychological dislike for certain communication channels. Another one of these
important "people" issues is relationship building (Warkentin et al; 1997).
The link between team effectiveness and team member relationships is an
important area of study in virtual teams. Stronger relational links have been associated
with higher task performance (Warkentin and Beranek, 1999) and the effectiveness of
information exchange (Warkentin et al., 1997). According to Lau et al. (2000),
effective communication is the key to successful virtual teams, and one of the keys to
effective communication is how well team members are able to build and maintain
their personal relationships. Kimball (2000) states, "the purpose of building and
maintaining relationships in teams is to ensure that individuals develop at least
enough harmony to be able to get their group work done" (p. 4). Building
relationships with virtual team members is clearly of fundamental importance to a
virtual team facilitator.
According to Walther and Burgoon (1992), strong relational links are
associated with enhanced creativity, motivation, increased morale, better decisions
and fewer process losses. Research shows it is easier to complete relationship-
building activities in a face-to-face context than in a strictly virtual one (Warkentin et
al., 1997). This may in part be explained by media richness theory, which explains
that the lack of contextual cues and timeliness of feedback inherent in computer-
mediated communication can negatively affect the building of relationship links (Daft
et al., 1987).
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While face to face meetings are the preferred way to build relationships and in
general deal with sensitive and complex situations, it is possible with the skillful and
thoughtful application of virtual communication channels to facilitate a completely
virtual team. Research has found that computer-mediated teams do share relational
information and are likely to develop relational links over time (Walther, 1997;
Chidambaram, 1966; Warkentin et al. 1997). However, since many virtual teams are
project or deadline driven, there may not be the opportunity to allow relationships to
develop over time. The idea of "swift trust" was put forth by Jarvenpaa et al. (1998) to
describe how virtual team members may be able to accomplish tasks without first
having developed relationships. This rational perspective centers on the view of
"calculus of self interest", which weigh the cost and benefits of certain courses of
action between team members. If a team member feels confident there will be a
"payoff" for co-operating with and trusting virtual team member than they will do so.
However, such trust appears to be very fragile and temporary.
The role of the team facilitator is to move the team towards its objectives by
encouraging collaboration. This is done through a sustained process of relationship
building, idea generation, prioritisation and selection. The particular challenge to
virtual team facilitators is to manage this process through electronically-mediated
interactions (Kimball, 2000)
In the following section, a methodology that generated data relevant to the
question of how virtual team facilitators develop relationships with their team
members is discussed.
Methodology
This research looks at one of the central issues confronting facilitators as they
initiate and facilitate virtual teams - how to use electronic communication channels to
build relationships with team members. Because virtual teams are a new form of
highly dynamic and ambiguous collaborative interactions, a major challenge of this
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study was the need to generate relevant data and analyse it in an appropriate manner.
To achieve this, a research framework involving a training program format was
instituted loosely based on methods already developed in Participatory Action
Research (PAR), with data collection and analysis based on grounded theory
methodology (Glaser and Strauss, 1967; Strauss and Corbin, 1990). PAR is
particularly suited for research in areas that require participant-driven discoveries in
creating insight, understanding and new possibilities about their social world (Yoong
and Gallupe, 2001), while grounded theory allows for the collection and analysis of
data in such a new, dynamic and ambiguous environment (Lau et al.; 2000). This
linking of these two research methodologies has been called grounded action research
(Baskerville and Pries-Heje, 1999). The next three subsections provide a brief
description of PAR, grounded theory and grounded action research respectively.
Participatory action research
The participatory nature of the development of the training sessions, the
ongoing consultations between researcher and participant and the opportunity for data
collection lend themselves to the methods already developed in Participative Action
Research (PAR). PAR is a context-bound research methodology that supports the
creation of new knowledge in active collaboration with the people working within a
specific context. These "collaborators" (researchers and participants) become co-
learners in a process that seeks to produce solutions to local problems (Elden and
Levin, 1991). PAR, a variation of Action Research (AR) provided the framework for
engaging participants in a program with which they have little experience and then
using their experience to generate data.
PAR evolved out of three streams of intellectual development and action: 1)
social research methodology, 2) participation in decision making by low-ranking
people in organisations and communities and 3) sociotechnical systems (STS)
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thinking regarding organisational behaviour (Whyte, 1991). Of particular relevance to
this study of virtual teams is PAR's inclusion of both teams and technology in its
methodology. Historically associated with political and liberation movements, PAR
methodology has been applied by other practitioners to Western organisations and is
now used in wide ranging contexts including organisational research such as declining
organisational competitiveness (Pace and Argona, 1991), and organisational change
(Santos, 1991). Koch (1997) points out, that AR and PAR are being increasingly used
in the IS field in recognition that a social system can be more deeply understood if the
researcher is part of the sociotechnical system being studied. And by applying
positivist intervention on the system, cooperation between the participants and the
researcher is fostered improving information exchange and research quality (Koch,
1997).
Grounded theory
The grounded theory approach used in this study is based on the work of
Glaser and Strauss (1967). The authors provide an overall grounded theory strategy
for examining the human experience of participants in an intensive study which
involved developmental processes of change over a sustained period of time and
requires the researcher to be close to the participants to capture these experiences as
they happened. As Sarker et al. (1999) suggested that given the current lack of
knowledge regarding virtual teams, an inductive methodology such as grounded
theory is an appropriate approach to developing theories on the facilitation of virtual
teams.
Essentially, the grounded theory method assumes that the processes of data
collection, coding, analysis, and theorising to be simultaneous, iterative, and
progressive. For example, as data are collected, they are coded into categories (as
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many as possible) so that subsequent coding either confirms these categories or will
refine, extend, and modify them to fit the new data. New categories may also emerge
at this stage. This data collection procedure is governed by a process known as
'theoretical sampling' where the coding and analysis done at the initial stages
determines the subsequent data to be collected. As the research study progresses, data
collection and coding subside and analysis and theory building become more
dominant. Concepts that emerge from the data and from literature are compared and
contrasted to establish hypotheses, which are then refined and elaborated to develop
theory.
Grounded action research
Baskerville and Pries-Heje (1999) argue that the ‘theory development’
component of action research can be made more rigorous by using theory
development methodologies such as grounded theory. This combination of the two
methods, known as grounded action research, is essentially an integration of certain
grounded theory techniques in the different stages of action research. The authors
suggest that this integration could be done in two ways: (1) using grounded theory
notations, such as memos and diagrams, to illustrate the relationship between
emergent theory and the raw data and (2) utilising grounded theory coding techniques
“for the evaluating, learning and diagnosis phases of action research” (p. 8).
Data collection and analysis
The PAR-based ‘virtual team facilitation’ training program used in this study
was designed to achieve the following three goals: to generate interest and incentive
for would-be participants, to give participants information and skills to initiate and
facilitate their own virtual teams, and to generate data for analysis. After being
recruited, participants were broadly interviewed to determine their prior experience
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with virtual teams and their perceived needs and concerns in implementing and
facilitating their own virtual team. The researcher then developed a ten-week training
program (see Appendix 1 for an outline of the training program) to meet these needs.
A pilot program and two subsequent training programs were held.
During the training programs, each participant planned for, or actually
initiated and facilitated a virtual team within their own organisational context. Every
two weeks the participants met with the researcher to investigate issues related to
initiating and facilitating virtual teams and to discuss issues that were arising in their
own virtual teams.
In all seven participants from a variety of New Zealand organisations took part
in the study. The seven participants form a diverse group, from the managing director
of a one-man, global virtual organisation who worked exclusively in global virtual
team settings to a self-employed consultant managing a local virtual work team (see
Table 1). The participants were in various stages of their virtual team lifecycle, from
planning through initiation to full-scale facilitation and evaluation of a just-completed
virtual team project. The participants' virtual team project tasks ranged from
managing a political campaign on the other side of the world to developing and
running a national web-based academic assessment center.
take in Table 1
A unique feature of this study is that it involves organisational professionals as
opposed to students. Bordia (1997) pointed out that although most computer-
mediated communication research focuses on its application to organisational and
social functions, the applicability of results is "jeopardised" because most of the
research is done on student subjects. The findings below should provide rich data in
the area of facilitating virtual teams relevant to the "real world".
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Data was collected from face to face and telephone interviews, group
discussions and e-mail correspondences. Data collection extended to several months
beyond the end of the training sessions. Using grounded theory techniques, the data
was analyzed using "a general method of (constant) comparative analysis" (Glaser and
Strauss, 1967, p. vii). Data was collected and coded simultaneously over the course of
the training sessions, with subsequent coding confirming, refining, extending and
modify the data. Some of the most significant concepts and their relationships to
emerge from the data revolve around how facilitators use electronic communication
channels to build relationships with their virtual team members. Some of these
findings are reported in the next section.
The Research Findings
Although the range of participants, their organisational contexts, virtual team
lifecycles and virtual team tasks were varied, the data revealed a common concern
among the facilitators as they went about the initiation and facilitation of their virtual
teams. This concern has to do with building and managing virtual team relationships
using Internet-based and conventional electronic communication channels. According
to the facilitators, the development of personal relationships between themselves and
team members is an important prerequisite in establishing and maintaining virtual
working relationships. Below are descriptions of how the facilitators used the
communication channels available to them to build relationships with their virtual
team members. The communication channels are grouped as (a) face-to-face, (b)
conventional and (c) Internet-based.
(a) Face-to-face communication channels
Although face-to-face communication is clearly not an electronic
communication channel, most of the facilitators in this study believe that face to face
meetings, preferably at the formation of the virtual team, are the most effective way to
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build personal relationships. Why they feel this way is instructive, because in many
cases they are seeking to emulate the relationship building processes and results of
face to face meetings in their electronic communications. According to the
participants, face to face meetings give facilitators the opportunity to understand
individual team member communication styles and personal and professional
motivations, making it easier to then move into virtual working relationships. Here is
an example of what one participant said:
You can find out what motivates them, what makes them tick. That's what I think forms part of my thoughts on why you need to meet face to face. You may get a much richer sense of what is important to the person. I would find it much easier to say over a beer what is important to me then in a chat room.
Face to face meetings also allow a deeper kind of rapport, or trust to develop.
Another participant, who was facilitating across organisations and ethnic cultures,
explained how rapport was developed between team members:
They actually came down and had a face-to-face meetings with us one after the other when really none was required. I guess they just wanted to meet with us. They reported on what they had been up to and asked a few questions and things. It was more than was required and more than what any other groups had done. But it built up some sort of rapport, which provided the foundation for later dealing with difficult last-minute issues by telephone and conference calls.
For some of the facilitators, relationship building is a prerequisite to a working
relationship, and face-to-face contact is an essential part of relationship building. In
these cases facilitators can only use electronic communication channels after they
have developed personal relationships. However, the facilitators working exclusively
through electronic communication channels had to strategize ways to build
relationships through the electronic channels they had available to them. An example
of these strategies is provided in a latter section.
(b) Conventional electronic communication channels
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Telephone
According to the facilitators who could not meet face-to-face, telephones are
probably the most important relationship-building communication channel they have
at their disposal. Because it has been around so long and people are very familiar with
it, its use is second nature, so in a sense it doesn't carry the "aura or the baggage of
new technology." Phone calls are often used at the formation of a virtual team in
order to get know some one quickly. One facilitator found these initial phone calls
useful for "groundbreaking types of conversations". She explained:
I have found that there are sticking points when I am not tuned into a person. At least with a phone call I can get a feeling for them and they can get a feeling for me.
This same facilitator was one of the more experienced virtual team facilitators
in this study. She was facilitating a highly deadline-driven global virtual team with
members in Southeast Asia, New Zealand and Australia and she made a conscious
and determined effort to get to know all her key team members at the beginning of the
project cycle. In this case she picked up the phone, called the team members and told
them:
I'm probably going to pester you, but initially it's really important for me to understand how you work as individuals so I can like think inside your head.
The facilitator explained how this strategy made facilitating her working
relationships via virtual communication channels more effective:
This made it easier for me to e-mail the people. It's quite interesting, I have looked at my e-mails that I have sent to the different people in that project and I actually adopted quite different styles for different people.
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Picking up the phone may seem the obvious solution in getting to know team
members when working virtually, but for some of the facilitators it is problematic.
Another facilitator, who owns a global consulting company, has found international
telephone calls a major expense. He has resisted using them as a means to build
relationships with clients and consultants, although he realised that he needs to do
something to strengthen team relationships. He generally used phone calls to initiate
business relationships. But as he explained, taking the time and expense to use phone
calls to build relationships is not practical:
The business is so small that international phone calls to have telephone conversations to have "water cooler" type of discussions are a bit out of the question with 40 people. I tend to call them to initiate projects and to discuss all the fine detail, which would take me too long to do by e-mail.
The same facilitator feels quite awkward calling people he is involved with
professionally to "chat about life the universe and everything." He explained these are
busy people and when you use virtual communication it is expected that you will "get
down to business":
They tend to be very focused discussions and I still don't get a very real sense of the person at the other end. It's all very businesslike.
However, this particular facilitator, who relied heavily on e-mail and
synchronous text chat programs to communicate with his team, experienced a number
of miscommunications with a team member that he attributed to a lack of prior
relationship building. He realized he is going to have to make a serious effort in the
future to get to get to know his team members better before settling into work
relationships. Although his organisation is in tight financial circumstances he is now
willing to invest in some ‘upfront’ phone calls as an 'investment’ in relationship
building. He explained:
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I'm going to have to try, I guess, to budget in some general team talk kind of stuff I suppose.
(c) Internet-based communication channels
In this study, e-mail is found to be the most commonly used virtual
communication channel. In some cases, due to financial limitations, it is the only
channel available. As Fulk and DeSanctis (1995, cited in Schwartz, 1999) suggest
the use of e-mail can have both positive and negative results, and in this study a
number of its advantages and disadvantages in building online relationships emerged
from the data. According to the facilitators it is a universal platform, cost effective,
generally accessible, and easily learned and used by most team members. Its
advantages include fast, succinct messaging with the added benefit of being able to
send attachments quickly and efficiently.
However, according to the facilitators, many of these apparent benefits often
carry a down side that on several occasions threatened to derail the facilitation of
these virtual teams. One facilitator, who did not make any special effort to build a
personal relationship with his team members before commencing virtual teamwork,
relied almost totally on e-mail in his communications with team members. Because
this facilitator is very comfortable using e-mail, he made the assumption that his team
members were as well. This led to some serious miscommunications. In one instance
he made an ironic comment (complete with a supportive emoticon) in an e-mail that
gave great offense to the team member (who was also the client).
In another e-mail the team member "buried" a serious concern in the message
with a dozen other points. The facilitator overlooked the point, the significance of
which became apparent only at the end of the team project. This led the facilitator to
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conclude that some e-mail protocols may need to be introduced into his future teams,
along the lines of "one –email message, one appropriate subject heading, one
message." The problem also concerns the low context text-based nature of e-mail,
which requires the writer to clearly articulate the intended message (Barnes and
Greller, 1994). If the client had mentioned his concern in a face to face meeting, the
facilitator would have picked it up. The facilitator explained:
He did mention his misgivings in the first instance, but he did not put it out there very strongly and I dismissed it. If he had said that in a face-to-face situation I would have picked up the nonverbal cues how stressed he was about the whole thing. But as a throwaway line in an e-mail on 10 different subjects….
An important issue in virtual teams is the timely response of team members to
internal communications. Kettinger and Grover (1997) noted that a significant feature
of e-mail is that both the sender and recipient can control the timing of their portion of
the communication. The facilitators in this study have clear expectations that e-mail,
as well as other communication messages such as voice mail, will be replied to in a
prompt manner. They believe that a lack of timeliness can lead to poor
communication, the creation of ill will, and an undermining of relationships. Two
facilitators sometimes felt a loss of control when using e-mail. They felt they were at
the "mercy" of the recipient. When e-mail went unanswered for some time, they had
to fall back on telephone calls to try and establish a direct link. The facilitator in the
previous example vividly recalled what it is like when virtual team communications
stop:
When you're working virtually, you are really flying blind. You are dependent on other people for keeping you up to date with what's happening on their side. Because we're without all the sensory cues in face-to-face communication, you really have to let people know what's going on. And when you are actually on the other side of the world it's not part of your environment, so all you can go on is what was agreed on. So you have to be
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much more aware of the others I think. You need to be pro-active, because if something changes you have to let the people know.
This facilitator believed that careful team member selection and virtual team
training could be an effective way to minimise this sort of problem. Warkentin, et al.
(1997, p. 989) point out that an important factor in creating effective virtual teams is
“the psychological profile and personal characteristics of team members”. Different
skill sets are required by virtual teams to maintain a strong sense of "teamness" and
effective communication, socialization and collaboration (Jarvenpaa et al, 1998).
Training to develop familiarity and proficiency with virtual communication channels
to assist in task and social interactions is a necessary condition for effective virtual
teamwork (Warkentin et al., 1997). According to a facilitator in this study, one goal
of training should be to learn how to "replace nods and smiles" with protocols.
Another facilitator explained how timely virtual responses contribute to
developing and maintaining virtual relationships:
When we sent an e-mail to her she always send back a response, even just one line, saying got it thanks. Small things like that really help in a virtual environment. That's part of building a virtual relationship.
Synchronous Chat and Messaging Programs
One facilitator, also because of a lack of financial resources, relied very
heavily on synchronous text-based chat programs to hold meetings with virtual team
members. Besides often being freely available, another benefit of these programs is
they provide a transcript of the meeting, which can be stored for later reference.
However, using them to run a virtual team meeting can be a trying experience,
particularly with a lot of participants. The facilitator explained:
The difficulty I find increases exponentially with the number of participants. It is extremely difficult not to have side issues going on. And many times
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you'll see two people having a conversation and the screen will clear before you see a reply or the response come, so then people try to use different color text. I don't know how they cope quite honestly.
Although synchronous text-based chat programs may not always be suitable
for formal meetings, two facilitators looked to ICQ to build personal relationships in
their teams. ICQ is a free software that allows its users to know when (in this case)
virtual team members anywhere in the world are connected to the internet. It then
allows one member to contact another directly and to open up a chat box to hold
synchronous typed conversations. By its nature, ICQ can lead to spontaneous,
informal conversations between team members that the facilitators believed can help
to strengthen relationships. One facilitator actively encouraged the downloading of
ICQ as one of his first actions in the initiation of his virtual team. He explained his
motives:
The idea of ICQ was not as a group meeting thing, but to get some conversations going between the people in the group. And if they were using ICQ properly they would know when anybody else in the group was online. In fact the few conversations with people I had who were on line at the time were more time of day conversations, how are you type, not about anything substantial. But the thought was and it may well bear fruit in the longer term, was that if everybody was on ICQ and if we kept going with this process than the opportunity was there for people to talk privately. And I felt the ICQ thing could provide the corridor type of relationship where tasks can progress without the use of planned meetings.
The facilitator saw ICQ as a valuable free flowing adjunct channel to the
moderated, more "reactive" e-mail channel. He explained:
ICQ is providing a crosslink. It's a way for people to have a cross conversation, the corridor conversation model, the chance conversation.
For this facilitator, with no opportunity for face-to-face meetings, the
informality and spontaneity engendered by the use of ICQ was an important
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relationship building channel, which complemented the more task-oriented e-mail
channel.
Desktop Video Conferencing
Videoconferencing has been in use since the early 1960's (Perey, 1997). In the
past it was expensive and the quality was not very good. For the most part only large
companies could afford it. Certainly it is a valuable adjunct to other communication
channels. These days new technology has improved the quality of transmission, but
the cost of a dedicated videoconferencing facility is still high. However new internet-
based desktop videoconferencing technology is bringing the cost down. The down
side is that the quality is, especially without broadband, often very poor and
unreliable. Netmeeting, a free software program by Microsoft, is one of the most
common desktop applications.
Most of the facilitators were very interested in incorporating Netmeeting into
their virtual teams and some experimented with it during the training program
sessions. In desktop videoconferencing, they saw a low-cost virtual communication
channel that could provide a workable alternative to face to face meetings.
Netmeeting, for example, allows two people anywhere in the world to see and hear
each other. It also allows team members to work on shared documents. For those
facilitators working with global teams and tight financial budgets, a free desktop
video conferencing software program like Netmeeting holds a lot of promise as a
relationship building communication channel.
At least two facilitators felt this technology would have definite advantages for
virtual teamwork, believing team members need to see each other to build
relationships and to work together effectively. One facilitator believed that setting up
an internet-based video conferencing communication channel with an overseas branch
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office would build personal relationships resulting in greater personal trust between
geographically separated organisational members thus strengthening the organisation
as a whole. As he explained:
I don't mean trust in a professional level of trust, but just getting to know the person, building a relationship with Graham in Melbourne. To my mind, that's the key output or objective of a lot of this.
Another advantage of desktop videoconferencing is that it can help make this
manager and the branch office feel a part of the organisation and help keep the "flavor
of the culture" of the parent organisation and preventing him from going off on his
own tangent.
In summary, the selective use of communication channels is found to be one
strategy used by the facilitators to build and enhance online relationships among
virtual team members. What is not clear is the set of criteria they have used in the
selection of the type of communication channels and under which circumstances. The
authors are conducting further research in this area.
Discussion
Successful virtual teams often use different technologies to enhance the
breadth and depth of their communication (Lau et al., 2000). Nunamaker et al. (1991)
described the benefits and barriers of electronic communication as 'process gains and
losses'. Facilitators in this study realised that for the most part they would have been
unable to operate virtual teams and accomplish their project tasks without electronic
communication channels. At the same time they understood that the use of these
channels as the main working communication channels in their virtual teams would be
problematic, without having first established personal relationships with team
members. The development of personal relationships, according to one facilitator,
21
would make the building of a team "culture of cooperation" more likely. In order to
build relationships, facilitators need to strategically use the communication channels
they have available to them.
The facilitators considered e-mail as the basis of their virtual teams,
effectively linking their distributed teams (Kettinger and Grover, 1997). However,
they are unlikely to agree with Finholt's and Sproull's (1990) contention that e-mail
can enable a team to create and sustain its identity without a shared physical setting, at
least not by itself. Although, e-mail is one of the basic communication channels in
their virtual teams, the facilitators saw it as a channel more suitable for
communicating information and coordinating projects than for building relationships.
This view seems to support those held by some researchers who have theorised that e-
mail is less likely to be effective in communication tasks that require greater social
interaction or social presence, such as getting to know someone (Kettinger and
Grover, 1997). Perhaps, new systems such as kMail (Schwartz and Te'eni, 2000),
which seek to contextualize e-mail messages with personal information will be helpful
in this regard.
The telephone seems to be the old reliable standby for facilitators when it
comes to building relationships with virtual team members. It is apparently more
comfortable to use this channel when getting to know people. With the use of the
phone being second nature, the facilitators feel that they can pick up paralinguistic
clues from their team members, which can assist in relationship building (Perey,
1997). The telephone is also the backup channel of choice when other channels such
as e-mail fail or when sensitive issues need to be discussed
The facilitators in this study saw great promise in desktop videoconferencing
as an affordable alternative to face-to-face meetings. They believed that "eyeing"
people is an important part of relationship building, particularly when the only
alternative is e-mail or synchronous text-based meetings. Lau et al. (2000) argue
22
videoconferencing can enhance social relationships by putting a face to the name.
Perey (1997) states conscious and unconscious communications supported by two-
way video can build and nurture relationships.
However, a recent study looking of the effects of desktop videoconferencing
on improving trust relations in virtual teamworking projects suggest information and
communication technologies, such as Netmeeting, appear to be inadequate for
building "trust relations", primarily because they do not support 'backstage' access,
normally found in face-to-face environments (Nandakuhmar, 2000). In any case, the
use of internet-based video conferencing communication is still problematic as access
to sufficient and reliable bandwidth is a significant barrier to many potential users.
One of the most interesting findings in this study was the way facilitators used
internet-based messaging and chat programs such as ICQ to set up opportunities for
informal, spontaneous communication between facilitators and team members. This
use of ICQ mirrors suggestions made by Kraut et al. (1993) that informal encounters
create a common context and perspective that support group work. They explain
informal communication often occurs spontaneously between random participants and
results in richer content. Without informal exchanges, "collaboration is less likely to
start and (be) less productive if it does occur" (Kraut et al., 1993; p.313). ICQ may
facilitate socialization processes that allow team members and facilitators to
participate in activities happening at the 'backstage' where they can exchange feelings
and emotions (Goffman, 1990). This approach facilitates building and maintaining
relationships and minimizing feelings of isolation that can lead to reduced intrinsic
involvement in the team (Finholt and Sproull, 1990).
23
Conclusion
This study finds that when face-to-face meetings are not an option, virtual
team facilitators can effectively use electronic communication channels, particularly
some of the more familiar, or higher-context virtual channels such as the telephone or
desktop video conferencing to build relationships with team members. ICQ also
seems to hold some promise as an "backdoor" channel that may encourage informal
communication and relationship building. The key challenge for virtual team
facilitators is to make a conscious and concerted effort, which can be termed
facilitator strategies, to develop personal relationships with team members through the
use of available communication channels.
Facilitator strategies will include the selection and use of appropriate
communication channels and appropriate message content. The level of relationship
between the facilitator and team members necessary to accomplish the team's task is
one of the key determining factors in creating a facilitator's strategy. Other important
factors in determining facilitator strategies, some of which are alluded to in this paper,
include issues concerning team member selection and training, organisational and HR
policies, as well as the team's desired task outcomes and biases toward
communication channels particularly in global virtual teams.
Notes
(1) Examples of Internet-based communication channels include e-mail, synchronous chat programs, ICQ and desktop video-conferencing systems. Examples of conventional electronic communication channels include the desktop telephone, mobile phone and fax machines.
(2) The first author is the participant researcher for this study and he conducted the training programs, collected and analysed the data. The second author provided advice and support during the study.
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Participant/Positions
Organisation Previous experience
Project Team Participant's role
Team stage
DW Managing Director
New Zealand-based advertising company - part of an international partnership
very familiar with use of virtual communication channels
initiate a project within the international partnership
global, CEO membership, volunteer
team initiator and facilitator
initiation
BC Senior Policy Analyst
New Zealand Government Department
familiar with use of virtual communication channels
treaty negotiation between government and indigenous group
representatives from government departments and claimant group
facilitator on-going to conclusion
SC Independent contractor
New Zealand educational consulting company
familiar with use of virtual communication channels
construct web page, followed by management of web-based assessment center
local, Wellington (NZ) based, independent contractors
facilitator ongoing
RB General Manager
New Zealand software and business development consulting company
familiar with use of virtual communication channels and underlying technology
initiate virtual communication channels with branch office
members in New Zealand and Australia-
project initiator
initiation
RW Managing Director
New Zealand-based political consultancy operating worldwide as a virtual organisation
very familiar with use of virtual communication channels and experience facilitating virtual teams
manage a political campaign in California
members in New Zealand and California
facilititator initiation through conclusion
AR Project Manager
New Zealand office of international consulting company
very familiar with use of virtual communication channels and experience facilitating virtual teams
develop and write a strategic plan for Southeast Asian government ministry
members in Southeast Asia. Australia and New Zealand
facilitator evaluation of completed project
JJ Project Analyst
Austral Asian trading company
some experience as a student with use of virtual communication channels
open and organize a branch office in Vietnam
members in China, New Zealand and Australia
facilitator initiation
Table 1: Summary of the study's participants, organisations, project and teams
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Appendix 1 Virtual Team Action Training Program Session One Virtual Team Implementation and Project Planning Session Two Developing Virtual Team Purpose, Communication Strategies and Protocols, and Technology Session Three Developing Team Identity, Building Relationships and Intercultural Communication Issues Session Four Preparing for and Facilitating Virtual Meetings Session Five Concluding a Virtual Team and Other Training Issues. Virtual Teams in the Organisation