Project Management

Virtual Team Collaboration

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By Deanna Landers

Agile principles indicate that teams should be co-located. However, sometimes, there is no option other than to have team members geographically dispersed. In fact, sometimes this distribution and diversity may be a key advantage to delivering a particular result, such as handing off between time zones for continuous support, and providing a service to communities throughout the world. 

Oftentimes, a distributed team is not only dispersed geographically in the same city or across the world, but also culturally. This not only contributes to the richness of diversity on the team, but also can include differences in the areas of communication style, business protocol, decision-making, dealing with authority, concepts of time, and negotiation styles.


There is a world of difference between simply working together and truly collaborating. The following are some tips to improve your distributed team’s collaboration and subsequently their performance:

Share the project vision
●    The team needs to document the vision, the value, and benefits realized from the successful completion of the project.
●    Translate this vision into the activities required to achieve the vision.

Build a social contract
●    Identify how the team will interact, what behaviors are acceptable and encouraged, and what is forbidden or discouraged.  
●    Hold each member accountable for adhering to the contract.

Share a dedication to collaboration
●    The team and its sponsorship need to be dedicated to enhancing collaboration among a group of people that does not have opportunities to communicate face-to-face.
●    Help all stakeholders recognize that success is dependent upon greater connections and understanding between team members is essential.

Select the appropriate medium for connection  
●    Take or make opportunities to be face-to-face - even if it’s by video conference - during the first meeting and especially when you find communication difficult. In person interactions are more effective at building trust.  
●    Schedule a teleconference when you find the back-and-forth on a particular topic takes several rounds, or even better, a video conference.
●    Use tools that support remote collaboration, such as information sharing (e.g. Slack, Campfire), videoconferencing (e.g. Skype, Google Hangouts), team social networking (e.g. Yammer, Chatter), scheduling (e.g. Doodle, Timebridge), presenting (e.g. Mural, Prezi), and document sharing (e.g. DropBox, Google Drive).

Increase cross cultural awareness
●    Develop skills for working in a multi-cultural team. Increase the team’s cultural knowledge and sensitivity.
●    Karen Smits, renowned cultural anthropologist, indicates that it's important to remember that "bringing several people (from across borders) together to complete a certain task does not make them a team. You don't build a team by just getting to know each other. You build a team by joint learning and facing challenges together."

Plan for continuous results 
●    Whether officially agile or not, avoid the big bang deliverable at the end approach.
●    Frequently allow team members time to review results and for customers time to provide feedback. This reduces the impact of communication issues caused by distributed teams.

In the end, our teams are dedicated to collaboration. We will be able to attain project success as a team, grow as individuals, and build lasting relationships and trust that will allow for even more success and fulfillment going forward. 

Deanna Landers (@deannalanders) is the founder of Project Managers Without Borders. She was on the PMI International Board of Directors for 6 years, and was the Chair of the Board in 2013. She is a PMO and Portfolio Management leader at IBM. Find her on LinkedIn!
 

 


Posted by Chelsa Dornian on: November 03, 2016 03:00 PM | Permalink

Comments (7)

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David Hernandez PMP| Motivus Mexico City, D.F., Mexico
Great article, in my office we collect money and the team eats together for bonding, in other jobs we did fun quizzes. but I find it difficult to solve the problem when the team is offshore.

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Jinchao Song Other| Shenzhen Insegma Software Co. Ltd. Qujing, Yunnan, China, Mainland
Virtual team will become increasingly common. this article share some key point on team management.the internet communication tools are very important in remote collaboration.

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Karthik T Senior Engineering Manager| Nike Bangalore, Karnataka, India
Good post, and is more realistic.

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Avinash Khare PM II| MAP-IT Consultant Project Management Ambernath (East), Maharashtra, India
Thanks for the post.Virtual teams geographically dispersed had to communicate and collaborate often through some form of medium to be in sync throughout the project cycle.

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Philippe Schuler Senior Instructor/Lecturer in Project/Program/Account PMO Management| Independant Consultant Les Choux, France
Yes virtual teams management is more and more the solution to run international projects impacting several countries. I fully agree with the conten of this article. To summarize: sharing an agreed project management plan is the key. When working for the same company but in different countries it is easier to set up virtual teams around the same standards and the same company culture. When working with different teams not all part of the same company it is mandatory to educate these teams to agree on a common basis for a right teamwork. Of course communication is essential with respect to the different cultures but then the focus on securing the membership of each individual teams to the project. Using video conference or phone conférences is now usual and everyone will be willing to aprticipate to such virtual team work.
To maintain this cohesion between virtual team members I usually set a short phone call named "Good Morning " on each Monday morning where I share some key project information from management from the previous week, I discuss about the objectives for the week and, in a last part of the 30mn call, I give the floor freely to anyone who has Something to share or a concern to raise. And this works on all the projects I have ben in charge of.

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Anupam India
Thanks for sharing.

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Deanna Landers Founder and Chairman of the Board| Project Managers Without Borders Denver, Co, United States
@David. Those are great ideas for colocated teams! Another approach to promoting remote team bonding is to occasionally have team members connect virtually in small numbers, and only discuss topics unrelated to work. This provides greater knowledge of coworkers personally, and can give some context to future conversations.

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