Jarvenpaa, CORE 12/15/02 Geographical Diversity in Global Virtual Teams Jeffrey T. PolzerC. Brad Crisp Harvard UniversityIndiana University Sirkka L. JarvenpaaWon-Yong.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Types and Phases of Conflict. Definition Interaction of interdependent people who perceive incompatible goals, aims, and values and who see the other.
Advertisements

Communication Skills Personal Commitment Programs or Services Interaction Processes Context.
GROUPS and TEAMS Roger Dhesi Roger Dhesi Niels Bauer Niels Bauer Yan Huang Yan Huang Derek Sullivan Derek Sullivan Vick Mann Vick Mann.
The Nature of Work Groups and Teams
Leader-Member Exchange Theory
Festschrift 2007 for Murray Turoff and Starr Roxanne Hiltz1 Leadership Roles and Issues in Partially Distributed Teams Linda Plotnick Rosalie Ocker Starr.
Academy of Management, New Orleans, Taking a crack at measuring faultlines Sherry M.B. Thatcher (University of Arizona) Katerina Bezrukova (Rutgers.
Chapter 5 Leadership and Diversity
Working with Teams. Teams v. Groups A group is a collection of two or more persons to interact with one another in such a way that each person influences.
Introduction: Training for Competitive Advantage
1 Creating Productive Learning Environments ED 1010.
Copyright Dr. M. Myra S. White, Harvard University, 2009 Henry Tam Analysis.
All in due time: The development of trust in distributed groups Jeanne Wilson The College of William & Mary School of Business Administration March 17.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Building and Leading High-Performing Teams Lectures Based on Leadership.
When Does Diversity Erode Trust? Neighborhood Diversity, Interpersonal Trust and the Mediating Effect of Social Interactions Written by Dietlind Stolle,
Lecture 12 International Portfolio Theory and Diversification.
© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights reserved.11–0 What Is Leadership? Leadership The ability to influence a group toward the achievement of goals. Management.
Chapter 3 The Knowledge Leader
1 Introduction to Group Dynamics
Sampling and Participants
Virtual teams These are teams that work together and solve problems through computer-based interactions. What are some benefits? Drawbacks? They save time,
Project Team Building, Conflict, and Negotiation
Leaders and Leadership
Presented by Robert L. Reum MGMT 6600 – Dr. Tang March 14, 2012 Collaborating with Virtuality: Leveraging Enabling Conditions to Improve Team Effectiveness.
Chapter 10 Leading Teams.
발표논문 1. Self-efficacy Changes in groups: effects of diversity, leadership, and group climate Choi, Price, & Vinokur, JOB, 2003 경영학과 인사조직전공 이지혜 Multilevel.
Webinar: Leadership Teams October 2013: Idaho RTI.
People, Process, Technology. Communication Quality Experience(QCE ) What does this mean Why is it important How does it effect us Why do we need it How.
Danielle Varda & Carrie Chapman University of Colorado at Denver, School of Public Affairs.
Chapter 10 THE NATURE OF WORK GROUPS AND TEAMS. CHAPTER 10 The Nature of Work Groups and Teams Copyright © 2002 Prentice-Hall What is a Group? A set of.
Organization and Teamwork
Chapter 11 Sport Organizations and Diversity Management.
© 2006 Prentice Hall Leadership in Organizations 4-1 Chapter 4 Participative Leadership, Delegation, and Empowerment.
ENHANCING STUDENT COLLABORATION IN GLOBAL VIRTUAL TEAMS Laurel Powell.
Consistency Matters! The Multilevel Effects of Group and Division Cultures on the Faultline-Outcomes Link Katerina Bezrukova ( Rutgers University) Sherry.
High-Performance Teams: Leveraging Presented by: Gloria Carter-Hicks.
Leader-Member Exchange Theory
Determinants of successful virtual communities: Contributions from system characteristics and social factors Nova Novita Ira Geraldina Intan Oviantari.
November 3, 2010 Dr. Maureen Ellis & Dr. Eric Kisling Business and Information Technologies Education Department College of Education
Stewart L. Tubbs McGraw-Hill© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 8 C H A P T E R Consequences.
Understanding Groups & Teams Ch 15. Understanding Groups Group Two or more interacting and interdependent individuals who come together to achieve particular.
Presentation Prepared by: Nader H. Chaaban, Ph.D. Montgomery College Rockville, Maryland McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2012 McGraw-Hill Companies. All Rights Reserved.
1 MGI case illustrates faultlines Correlated dimensions of diversity that yield a clear basis for subgroups formation The stronger the diversity faultline,
Parochial and Universal Cooperation in Intergroup Conflict When Parochialism Hurts Out-group Competitors, Pro-social Individuals Extend Their Calculated.
© 2013 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
關係人口變數對於誠信所產生的影響:相似或規範 The impact of relational demographics on perceived managerial Trustworthiness : Similarity or Norms?
COEUR - BCM Business Creativity Module “Virtual group dynamics, leadership and network building” Andrew Turnbull, Aberdeen Business School, Aberdeen, Scotland.
1/29 EXISTING KNOWLEDGE, KNOWLEDGE CREATION CAPABILITY, AND THE RATE OF NEW PRODUCT INTRODUCTION IN HIGH-TECHNOLOGY FIRMS KEN G. SMITH University of Maryland,
Teams in Organizations
Leadership In Organizational Settings By Angi Bustamante, Raymond Yeung & Jeremiah Bostwick.
Chapter 3 The Knowledge Leader
Intercultural Communication Social Psychological Influences.
Copyright © 2015 Pearson Education Ltd Copyright © 2015 Pearson Education Ltd. Chapter 9: Foundations of Group Behavior 9-2.
Synthesizers Integrating diverse thoughts and information into a new single inclusive position to achieve one goal. by Ayesha Judy Kanwal & Nelso n.
LECTURE 4 WORKING WITH OTHERS. Definition Working with others : is the ability to effectively interact, cooperate, collaborate and manage conflicts with.
1 - 1 Employee Training and Development Introduction: Training for Competitive Advantage.
Welcome to AB140 Introduction to Management Unit 7 Seminar – Effective Teams.
Developing and Leading Effective Teams
Organizational Behavior (MGT-502) Lecture-18. Summary of Lecture-17.
Developing your Team Generating Hypotheses for the Team Assignment.
Do Agents and Avatars impact Group Processes? Do Agents and Avatars impact Group Processes? Lynsey Mahmood, Georgina Randsley de Moura & Tim Hopthrow University.
Foundations of Group Behavior Week 6 lecture 11,12.
Chapter 14 Managing Teams.
HEALTH IN POLICIES TRAINING
A New Approach to the Study of Teams: The GAPIM
Chapter 14 Managing Teams.
Understanding groups and teams
Linguistic inter-group bias
Presentation transcript:

Jarvenpaa, CORE 12/15/02 Geographical Diversity in Global Virtual Teams Jeffrey T. PolzerC. Brad Crisp Harvard UniversityIndiana University Sirkka L. JarvenpaaWon-Yong Kim University of TexasHarvard University

Jarvenpaa, CORE, 12/15/02 Agenda Theory Study overview Hypotheses Methods Results Discussion

Jarvenpaa, CORE, 12/15/02 Theory Global virtual teams (O'Hara-Devereaux and Johansen 1994) Highly geographically dispersed; transcend temporal and geographical boundaries Group diversity research (Williams & O’Reilly, 1998) “Value in diversity” approach Members’ differences cause misunderstandings, destructive conflict, and decreased trust due to social categorization processes Faultline hypothesis (Lau & Murnighan, 1998) “Faultlines” are differences that divide a group into distinct subgroups. Strongest intergroup dynamics occur across strong faultlines. Our interest is geographical dispersion as a dimension of diversity

Jarvenpaa, CORE, 12/15/02 Group Diversity Geographical Dispersion: Configuration of locations where a location entails a unique class in a unique university (colocated people were physically present in the same classroom at regular intervals) Diversity arises from differences that are readily and immediately obvious (Pelled, 1996) in virtual teams, geographical differences are potentially more salient than other differences such as demographic characteristics ( the type of electronic media affects the salience of temporal dispersion). Location can influence the amount and nature of interaction – the differential availability of communication media

Jarvenpaa, CORE, 12/15/02 Definitions: Global virtual team: A self-managing knowledge work team, with distributed expertise that forms and disbands to address specific organizational goals; fluid membership, leadership, and boundaries; advanced use of communication and information technologies Trust: “the willingness of a party to be vulnerable to the actions of another party based on the expectation that the other will perform a particular action important to the trustor, irrespective of the ability to monitor or control that other party” (Mayer et al, 1995, p. 712). Conflict: Conflict refers to disagreements (manifested or latent) among group members that imply perceived incompabilities or discrepant views and goals among the members (Jehn, 1995).

Jarvenpaa, CORE, 12/15/02 Study Overview Research question How does geographical diversity affect trust and conflict? We compare three configurations of geographical diversity in six-person groups: Fully dispersed (six locations, one person in each location) Three subgroups (three locations, two people in each location) Two subgroups (two locations, three people in each location)

Jarvenpaa, CORE, 12/15/02 Three Configurations of Geographical Diversity Fully DispersedThree SubgroupsTwo Subgroups

Jarvenpaa, CORE, 12/15/02 Hypotheses Diversity hypothesis Greater geographical diversity will cause more conflict, less trust. H1a: Fully dispersed groups will experience more conflict and less trust than groups with three subgroups, which will in turn experience more conflict and less trust than groups with two subgroups. Faultline hypothesis Stronger faultline will cause more conflict, less trust. H1b: Groups with two subgroups will experience more conflict and less trust than groups with three subgroups, which will in turn experience more conflict and less trust than fully dispersed groups.

Jarvenpaa, CORE, 12/15/02 Diversity Hypothesis Fully DispersedThree SubgroupsTwo Subgroups Most Conflict Least Trust Least Conflict Most Trust

Jarvenpaa, CORE, 12/15/02 Faultline Hypothesis Fully DispersedThree SubgroupsTwo Subgroups Least Conflict Most Trust Most Conflict Least Trust

Jarvenpaa, CORE, 12/15/02 Methods Participants 270 MBA students at 15 schools Each assigned to a six-person group for six week project (45 groups) Group task: Conceive and write a business plan Design Three colocation conditions: Fully dispersed, three subgroups, two subgroups Dependent measures Ratings of conflict and trust on end-of-project survey Ratings of group overall and each group member

Jarvenpaa, CORE, 12/15/02 Methods cont. Controls By Design Equal size subgroups Maximum demographic heterogeneity (e.g., each group had at least 4 home countries represented) By Measurement Team experience Nationality Gender Age Communication volume Temporal dispersion Possible Confounds: university and class however potential confounding factors do not favor either hypothesis

Jarvenpaa, CORE, 12/15/02 Results Group-level analyses (ANCOVA): Mean Conflict Fully dispersedThree subgroupsTwo subgroups 2.40 a 2.53 a,b 2.85 b Mean Trust Fully dispersedThree subgroupsTwo subgroups 3.20 a 2.88 b 2.76 b Group-level results support the faultline hypothesis (H1b)

Jarvenpaa, CORE, 12/15/02 Results Dyad-level analyses Quadratic Assignment Procedure to account for non-independence Significantly less conflict, more trust between colocated dyads than distant dyads Pattern of results holds within two-subgroup and three-subgroup conditions Dyad-level results support the faultline hypothesis (H1b)

Jarvenpaa, CORE, 12/15/02 Discussion The configuration of the virtual team matters! Watch for hybrid forms! Colocated subgroups provide many practical benefits in virtual teams, but this study suggests a potential downside. Colocated subgroups can create faultlines that increase conflict and decrease trust compared to greater dispersion (and presumably no dispersion). Faultline strength may increase with:  Greater similarity within subgroups (language, local culture, etc.)  More face-to-face communication within subgroups  Purely electronic mediated communication can alleviate the boundaries between ingroup and outgroup

Jarvenpaa, CORE, 12/15/02 Future Research Team Design/Team configurations Fluidity in teams (e.g., changing membership) Manager (vs. self-managing team) perspective Remedial Interventions enabled by IT Theorizing the “context” Multilevel research