Managing virtual teams requires planning, communication, and addressing cultural differences. Key steps include: adopting structured project management methods; using tools like video conferencing and shared databases; building team spirit through virtual kickoff meetings and biographies; establishing goals, roles, and reporting structures; making project elements visible online; facilitating training and feedback; recognizing how cultural attitudes can differ; accommodating various communication styles; planning virtual communication through security guidelines, in/out trays, and meeting scheduling; and using appropriate synchronous and asynchronous tools.
1. 10 Tips for Managing your Virtual Team
July 2010
Virtual teams give access to global talent and bring time and cost savings – but how do you
manage them?
1. Plan and standardise: Adopt a disciplined approach using well-tried project management
methodology such as PRINCE2.
2. Technology: Telephone, fax, email, video conferencing, forum, chat rooms, blog, remote
access, networked database, are amongst the plethora of physical and virtual project
management tools at your disposal.
3. People management: Adopt creative staff selection methods, such as video interviews, to
cross geographical boundaries. Transcend time and distance and instil team spirit using soft-
skills and team building with a virtual kick-off meeting, team biographies, and similar
techniques.
4. Goals, reporting, roles and responsibilities: Include in this category the establishment of
a chain of command, expectations and the scheduling of things such as hand-off times.
5. Visibility: Embed and make visible project elements such as goals, tasks and individual, as
well as project progress, on your chosen virtual project management system, to boost mutual
trust and understanding and to call on the problem solving abilities of the whole team if
necessary.
6. Individual and team development: Facilitate staff coaching on soft-skills – such as
leadership, that features in APMP training – and on software application skills. Ongoing
feedback should include reward, recognition (through name checks, for instance) and
constructive criticism.
7. Cultural differences: When working with, or for people, from other countries recognise that
culture differences go beyond clothing or language and that attitudes and behaviour in one
culture might perplex another.
8. Communication style: Accommodate the different ways people communicate: written, oral,
formal, informal, and the like, but remember that communication is as much non-verbal as
verbal, so also encourage collaboration through virtual face-to-face meetings.
9. Planning for virtual communication:
1. Devise security procedures and guidelines for communication and share with members
and interested parties, such as stakeholders.
2. Build virtual in- and out-trays for questions, shared resources, and so forth.
3. Before a virtual meeting, allocate adequate time and then post a deadline for
responses on subjects under consideration.
4. Fix frequent meeting times – say, for brainstorming or problem solving – for an
optimum number of people to communicate simultaneously and arrange for others’
views to be logged on the system.
5. Agree and offer a range of communication tools that include everything from phones to
vlogs, to use in different situations.
6. Allow time for humans to think and interact.
7. Arrange meetings that accommodate people’s communication method of choice
(visual, verbal, written and so on); where several occur simultaneously, perhaps
choose one person to lead, and one person to manage the content of, each meeting.
2. 8. Recognize the advantages and disadvantages of synchronous and asynchronous
communication in terms of technology and the attending humans.
2. Desired deliverables of communication software: These include the ability to manage
the project, facilitate vlogs, forums, blogs, and techniques that allow private communication.
NB: For an uplifting example of virtual team management click on this Eric Whiteacre.