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Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

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Page 1: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Working Together Apart

Gary M. OlsonUniversity of California, Irvine

May 2011

Page 2: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

…is done by• Judy Olson• Gary Olson• Steve Abrams• Matthew Bietz• Julia Haines

…and supported by• Army Research Institute• National Science Foundation• Google• Donald Bren Foundation

Page 3: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011
Page 4: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Distance

T. Allen, 1977

30 meters

Page 5: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

“Distance Matters” -- Some Overarching Issues Ease of communication -- common ground Nature of the work -- How tight the

coupling Readiness to collaborate Technology readiness -- personal,

infrastructure

Trust Culture Time Zones

Page 6: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

The first concept

The longer the distance between people, the less common ground they have– Definition: what is assumed to be shared

between two people who are communicating

– If you don’t have natural common ground, you have to work at it, discover what each other knows in common and build from there.

Page 7: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Second key concept Tightly coupled work requires

collocation Work gets reorganized so that tightly

coupled is in one location, loosely coupled crosses locations

Page 8: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Coupling, continued

Coupling -- extent of dependence between team members, and the ambiguity of the work, requiring high degree of interaction– loose

• an overall plan divides the work, occasional coordination checks (e.g., large scale routine design)

– moderate• more spontaneous divide and conquer

– tight• high mutual dependence for advancing the work (e.g.,

early planning of a project)

Page 9: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Collaboration readiness The community has to have a spirit of

collaboration. Motivation to work together:

– Mix of skills– Greater productivity– Like working together– Something in it for everyone– NOT

• Mandate from the funder• The only way to get the money• Asymmetries in value, etc.

Page 10: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Trust– Reliable– Produce high quality work– Have their best interests at heart

Goals aligned Group self-efficacy

Page 11: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Fourth key concept

Different organizations are at different developmental stages in using technology of all sorts

Collaboration Technology Readiness (both individual & infrastructure)

email attachments using repositories calendaring creating repositories Need training in hand-off collaboration technologies AND synchronous collaboration how to collaborate

Page 12: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Fifth key concept

Added in J. Olson et al, 2008 Distance work requires good

management and decision making principles– Cummings & Kiesler (2005) studied NSF

KDI collaborations• Collocated more successful than distributed• Distributed success associated with good

mnagement

Page 13: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Management plan Project manager is respected and has

project management experience Communication plan Plan has room for reflection and

redirection

Page 14: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

No legal issues remain No financial issues remain Knowledge management system Decision making is

– Free of favoritism– Fair and open– Everyone has opportunity to influence

Page 15: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

MIT Press, 2008

Page 16: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

“Distance Matters” a decade on Have things changed?

Much has happened in a decade– A large amount of research on the issues

most relevant to distance work– An array of new or improved technologies– Big changes in the experience base of

those who might work at a distance

Page 17: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Distance Work will Only Increase 67% of companies anticipate

increased reliance on virtual teams– 80% for companies with 10,000+ employees

35% of respondents rated difficulty of management as top challenge for virtual teams

92% said trust is critical for virtual teams

• Survey by Institute for Corporate Productivity

Page 18: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Survey of “Hopeful Signs”

Research or technology developments that might ameliorate some of these challenges

Not all of these are yet backed up with careful evaluation

Page 19: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Common Ground

Routinization of knowledge management– Creative incentive schemes

Awareness support– Social computing, sharing– IM, awareness tools– Audio, video options– Social proxies

Page 20: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Common Ground

Workers who are always on line– More mobile options

Page 21: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Nature of the Work

Increased realization of need for divide and conquer

Use of face-to-face meetings to kick of a project– Organize the work

Page 22: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Collaboration Readiness

Better understanding of the role of incentives– Explicit contracts with

financial incentives

Importance of trust– Interventions to establish &

maintain

Page 23: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Collaboration Technology Readiness Many new widely

used technologies– Increased

sophistication Wider array of back

channels– IM, SMS, mobile

phones

Page 24: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Collaboration Technology Readiness

Technologies better designed– Easy to use– Reliable

Page 25: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Management and Decision Making Boom market on books,

articles on how to manage virtual teams

Recognition of leadership skills for virtual teams

Page 26: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Trust

Promising results on establishing & maintaining trust at a distance– Informal social interaction a key

Better support for awareness, presence– Overcome attribution errors

Page 27: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Culture

More awareness of the nature of cultural differences– E.g., increased sales of

Culture Shock books– New university programs

Job rotation in multinational companies

Page 28: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Time Zones

Adjusting work hours Routines for shift

changes Exploration of

asynchronous awareness tools

Page 29: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011
Page 30: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Early Progress in Climbing Himalayan Giants First 8000 meter peak climbed in 1950

– Annapurna Everest (8850 meters) first climbed in

1953 Other 12 8000 meter

peaks climbed between 1953 and1964

Page 31: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Characteristics of Early Climbs

Huge logistical support required– Long ascents with numerous camps

– Long preparation period

Large climbing parties– Up to a score of climbers

– Hundreds of support porters

Dominant use of oxygen Climbs confined to spring, early summer Many failures, including fatalities

Page 32: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Since the 1950s

Exploration of many new routes, many that were thought to be “unclimbable”

Small parties with rapid ascents Solo ascents Ascents with no oxygen Hundreds of ascents

in a given season Still dangerous

Page 33: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

What Changed?

Better knowledge of the Himalaya– Maps, aerial surveys– Weather

More experience with climbing– New techniques– Better understanding of physiology

New, improved equipment But, still very difficult

Page 34: Working Together Apart Gary M. Olson University of California, Irvine May 2011

Analogous to Distance Matters

More knowledge, experience– Organizations– Individuals

Better tools

But still difficult