Font Size: a A A

A study of best practices in designing and supporting effective virtual teams

Posted on:1999-09-14Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:California School of Professional Psychology - Los AngelesCandidate:Lurey, Jeremy SFull Text:PDF
GTID:1469390014473813Subject:Occupational psychology
Abstract/Summary:
This study explores the issue of effectiveness within virtual teams--groups of people who work together although they are often dispersed across space, time, and/or organizational boundaries. Due to the recent trend towards corporate restructuring, which can, in part, be attributed to an increase in corporate layoffs, mergers and acquisitions, competition, and globalization, virtual teams have become critical for companies to survive. Globalization of the marketplace alone, for that matter, makes such distributed work groups the primary operating units needed to achieve a competitive advantage in this ever-changing business environment.;In an effort to determine what factors lead to, as well as those which inhibit, the success of a virtual team, the Virtual Teams Survey questionnaire was designed. This survey was distributed to a total of eight companies in the high technology, professional services, and agriculture industries. Data was then collected from sixty-seven individuals (n = 67) who comprised a total of twelve virtual teams from these companies.;Results indicated that several factors were positively correlated to the effectiveness of the participating teams. The teams' processes and team members' relations presented the strongest relationships to team performance and team member satisfaction, while the selection procedures and executive leadership styles also exhibited moderate associations to these measures of effectiveness. Analysis of predictor variables such as the design process, other internal group dynamics, and additional external support mechanisms depicted much weaker relations.;Although the connections between the teams' tools and technologies and communication patterns and the teams' effectiveness measures did not prove significant, content analysis of the participants' narrative responses to questions regarding the greatest challenges to virtual teams suggested otherwise. Beyond the traditional strategies used to enhance a team's effectiveness, then, further efforts directed towards the specific technology and communication-related issues that concern dispersed team members are needed to supplement the set of best practices identified in the current study.
Keywords/Search Tags:Team, Effectiveness
Related items