managing virtual teams
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Shelli Nelson Partner, Human Resources and Business Development
with Voyageur One – an Organizational Development Consulting Firm specializing in strategic planning, team development, facilitation, mediation, professional seminars and executive retreats.
Experience in retail, marketing and finance industries. Has worked for such diverse firms as Levi Strauss & Co., Seven Worldwide, Morningstar and Spot Trading.
PHR certified, Master’s Degree in Human Resources Management and brings over 15 years of Human Resources experience which includes strategic planning, mergers & acquisitions, performance management, and training & development.
Voyageur One has been a flexible & virtual workplace for over 20 years.
As a Partner in Voyageur One, Shelli is responsible for leveraging her diverse work experience to offer Outplacement Services, Talent Discovery and Human Resources Consulting.
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Kyra Cavanaugh President, Life Meets Work--a consultancy and online
community that helps organizations drive bottom line results by implementing and optimizing flexible workforce strategies.
Flexible worker for last 10 years (telecommuting, part-time, contract, compressed work weeks).
Currently manages a virtual team. Career in consumer packaged goods for nearly 20 years:
Quaker, Keebler, Dominick’s Finer Foods, Willard Bishop Consulting
Member of Workplace Excellence Committee, Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce, and spearheading flexible workforce project with the Women’s Bureau, U.S. Department of Labor.
Speaker at upcoming 2009 Illinois State SHRM Conference and recently honored as a finalist in the AWLP Work-Life Rising Star awards.
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Goals for this workshopOur goal is to provide practical advice that
empowers you to implement or optimize your
virtual team starting tomorrow.
What is your goal for today?
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Common concerns
How can I manage what I can’t see? Won’t they run errands/do laundry when they should work? What if some employees don’t want to work from home? What if I need someone and they’re not available? How do I schedule a meeting if we live all over the world? How do I train virtual workers? Will productivity decrease? What if everyone wants to do this and no one’s in the office? Will this work for hourly as well as managerial? Vice versa? How do I ensure that work will get done on time? Are virtual workers as committed as onsite ones? Won’t customer service levels decrease?
©Life Meets Work, 2009
The value of virtual teams
Increased productivity Increased customer satisfaction/retention and service levels Increased employee retention/engagement Reduced absenteeism rates Reduced real estate costs, overhead “Employer of Choice” recruitment and retention strategy Employees closer to customer locations Coordination with virtual offices Supports green/CSR initiatives Offsets commuting costs in time and money Disability accommodation Supports work/life and flexible workplace initiatives Business continuity/disaster planning
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Need more? 60% of teleworkers are less likely to look for
another job. --2008 Clean Air Campaign study
87% of employees and managers agreed telecommuters’ productivity improved or stayed the same. --2008 Study by National Science Foundation
Teleworkers were more engaged and had more favorable opinions of senior management.
--2008 study of 10,000 workers by Kenexa Research Institute
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Case in Point: Sun MicrosystemsOpen Work: a network of people, places and
technologies started in 1995 56% of their employees work remotely at least 2 days/week $387 million saved over six yrs in real estate and utility
costs 60% of the time employees used to spend commuting, they
now spend working 85% of employees say they’d recommend Sun as an
employer $1700 in fuel costs is saved annually by the average
employee telecommuting 2.5 days per week Telecommuters score higher on performance ratings than
their on-site counterparts Lower turnover, higher employee satisfaction ratings
©Life Meets Work, 2009
What is a virtual team? Arrangements vary: Emergency (snow storm, sick child at home) Occasional (1-2 days per week) Consistent (at least 3 days) Ongoing (no on-site office)
Locations vary: Home office Co-working site Coffee shop, library, etc.
©Life Meets Work, 2009
What’s the secret of managing virtual teams?
The skills you need to manage a virtual team are the same ones you need to successfully manage an on-site team.
It calls you to leadership, goal-setting, performance management and communication. It requires you to spend time deliberately managing your team.
In the end, both offsite and onsite team members benefit.
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Create a high performing teamWhat does that look like? Collaboration Productive meetings Communication/Info-sharing Individual accountability Trust/respect for one another Recognition/Celebration Opportunities for learning Transparency Great people No silos Shared goals
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Don’t tell people how to do things, tell them what to do and let them surprise you with
their results.George S. Patton
©Life Meets Work, 2009
What is a team?Group of individuals with common goals and a
mission
The manager’s goal is to harness the collective energy and intelligence of a “potentially” disparate group of individuals and direct it at a fixed set of objectives
Success is highly reliant on “The Sum” of the parts being materially greater than the parts individually
©Voyageur One, 2009
Getting to the “The Sum“ Hire the “right people”+ Create a common thread based on a
singular mission+ Adopt a common view of group and
individual expectations+ Empower the individuals AND the group+ Encourage individual and collective
communications+ Foster adoption of a spirit of trust
____________________________________________
Highly Successful, Productive, and Effective
Virtual Teams
©Voyageur One, 2009
Setting up a virtual teamTwo different ways to approach the establishment of a virtual
team.Approach A:1) Create a proposal and offer telecommuting/flexible work
options to eligible team members.2) Offer a pilot program for 3 to 6 months with an evaluation, and
option for ongoing arrangement.
Approach B:1) Allow entire organization, department, team to work flexibly.2) Team establishes and agrees to rules and signs a Virtual Work
Agreement that is reviewed and renewed every six months.
Recommendation: Regardless of method, establish ground rules and agreed upon behaviors in advance of implementation.
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Virtual Teams AgreementAn agreement that outlines the “rules of engagement” and
includes things like: How quickly team members are expected to reply to voice
mails/emails The agreement is reciprocal-”we flex you, you flex us back” How often team members should report their activities, progress
toward goals How often team members should input information into project
tracking systems, customer updates, shared calendars, etc. Core hours Days/times everyone should be in the office Frequency of regularly scheduled team meetings, 1:1 meetings, etc. Whether new employees have to work in the office for 3 mos/6 mos.
first Attendance at retreats How decisions will be made and documented Conflict-resolution procedures
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Managing a virtual teamKey Components: Execute a Virtual Teams Agreement Realize management style influences outcome Create a sense of place Communicate deliberately Set goals and track performance Choose the right people Global teams have extra needs
©Life Meets Work, 2009
If I can’t see you……how do I know you’re working?
The average office worker wastes 1.7 hours/day surfing the internet, socializing with co-workers, tending to personal business, and running errands.
Why? Not enough work: 17.7% Hours too long: 13.9% Underpaid: 11.8% Lack of challenging work: 11.1%
2007 Wasting Time Survey, Salary.com
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Create a new sense of place Meet every morning on Campfire (group IM chat) to say good
morning, socialize and talk about any pressing issues for the day. Conduct virtual coffees/happy hours/birthday parties where no
work discussion is allowed. Encourage team members to post their photo, photo of their
home office, pets, and info about their likes/dislikes/hobbies/etc. Plan quarterly retreats devoted to team-building and getting to
know each other. Welcome new members in group conference calls. Assign an onsite “buddy” to each virtual team member to keep
them up on the latest gossip, happenings, etc. Celebrate successes, recognize great work, communicate with
all team members electronically so remote workers aren’t left out of the loop.
Take 15 minute water cooler breaks during the day.
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Deliberate communication
“Don’t spend more than 30 seconds being angry without telling someone.”
James Tyree, Chairman & CEO, Mesirow Financial
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Deliberate communication
Set guidelines for how and when to communicate. Be open and honest. Greet every team member every day via IM, email, or phone. Schedule a regular 1:1 meeting and stick to it. Don’t reschedule. Cultivate diversity of opinion. Record meetings for team members who miss. Publish all team members’ contact info in an easily retrievable place. Consider personality profiles and preferred communication styles of
each team member. Customize your communication style to fit each employee.
Pay close attention to written communication. Look for emoticons, changes in tone or length of communication.
Ask about how team members are feeling. You don’t have the benefit of non-verbal cues, so you have to ask.
Ask more questions of virtual team members to be sure you know where they stand.
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Technology for virtual teamsTechnology democratizes communication.
These tech tools facilitate communication for virtual teams: IM (MSN, AOL, YAHOO) Group Chat/IM (Campfire) Email WIKI’s (clearwiki.com) Project Tracking System (Basecamp, WorkZone, FogBugz) File Sharing (Google docs, Google calendar, Filesanywhere) Twitter Teleconferencing (VOIP to save $) Virtual meeting software (gotomeeting) Virtual whiteboard (Scriblink)
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Set goals and track performanceManaging virtual teams means letting go of face time
and shifting your orientation from “how” work gets done to “what” work gets done.
It’s about performance and results, so everyone must be clear about goals and expectations.
Both manager and team member share the responsibility for communicating the status of projects.
Team members hold themselves and each other accountable.
This creates transparency. Productivity increases because there’s nowhere to hide. The virtual worker either meets the deadline and produces quality work or doesn’t. As a manager, you’ll know either way.
Performance problems rise to the surface and are dealt with.©Life Meets Work, 2009
Performance tracking technologyTechnology assists this transparency. From one dashboard, you can see each team members’
projects, tasks, contacts, to-do lists. Late items are flagged, contingencies are visible and at any
moment you can view whether a project or deliverable is in jeopardy.
You assign tasks, leave messages, share documents. You document conversations, save contact and client
information. You track multiple projects, run reports by team member, by
project, by late tasks, etc.
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Choose the right peopleSome people are cut out for virtual teams, others are
not. Consider a candidate’s interests, personality, motivation to
learn and improve, track record of working independently. Get to know them: blogs they follow, leaders in the industry
they look up to, books they enjoy. They must demonstrate that they can work well by
themselves and enjoy it. Key traits: Self-sufficient, self-motivated, self-disciplined,
strong work ethic Traits to avoid: Needs direction, wants peer approval, likes
structure, looks to work for social life
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Tips for global teamsIn addition to the general advice for managing virtual teams: Enable team members from other countries to communicate during
meetings. For team members who are less confident with their English, invite
them to submit their comments via email at the end of the meeting. Rotate meeting times, so everyone takes turns being up in middle
of the night. Create deadline days for when work is due. The “end of the week”
means something different to other cultures and in other time zones.
Pick a time zone that is the standard for meeting times, deadlines, etc. to avoid confusion.
File sharing and project management software is critical for tracking customer notes, daily projects, and creates a seamless transition from one “shift” to the next.
©Life Meets Work, 2009
Additional Resources Co-working sites:
See list at blog.coworking.info Regus-individual and corporate subscriptions
For more information about virtual teams: lifemeetswork.com telework.gov teleworkexchange.com
Resources from Sun Microsystems www.sun.com/aboutsun/openwork/ http://www.sun.com/aboutsun/openwork/managing_virtual
_world.pdf
©Life Meets Work, 2009
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