An Enterprise 2.0 meeting on online collaboration involving
large practitioners -- Volvo IT (VIT) and the US Army -- offered a
valuable glimpse of a trend that is being adopted by small online
virtual teams and proliferating as quickly as rabbits.
The experience of a Volvo representative and a retired Army
Colonel demonstrate the importance of finding a human side to
virtual teams whose participants are often scattered around the
world and who have never met each other in person.
"We party online," said Virginia Adamson of Volvo, explaining
how a group in one part of the world might send some food to a team
in another country for an impromptu party. With 60,000 VIT
employees in scores of countries, the company has developed
techniques to humanize relationships among virtual meeting
participants.
Participants quickly learn to respect the cultural differences
among the various participants. Different national holidays are
respected -- the Fourth of July in the US and Cinco de Mayo in
Mexico, for instance. Music from a participant's country, for
instance, might be played to make the participant feel more
comfortable. These human touches help build trust among all
participants.
Adamson said Volvo began working with the virtual collaboration
consultancy NetAge three years ago to develop and refine its
virtual online collaborative experience. Travel expense savings are
obvious. The Enterprise 2.0 panel on "Leading Collaborative Teams"
noted that 10 people on a one-day onsite physical meeting can cost
up to $100,000 including travel expenses.
"Virtual teams can work faster and particularly more
innovatively," said Jeff Stamps, co-founder and chief scientist of
NetAge. "The reality is that (virtual collaboration) requires
understanding of people and cultures and organizations." One driver
of innovation in online collaboration is the general requirement
that issues be written down, which focuses participants.
In an interview, Stamps said the recent proliferation of media
tools are easy to use and have removed much of the difficulty that
confronted potential online collaborators in the past. He added
that use of virtual meetings is exploding in recent years and
particularly in recent months. "High tech teams are no longer
overwhelmed," he said. "Doing a Web conference today is no more
complicated that making a phone call."
The difficulty is getting over the initial hurdle of
implementing a virtual meeting, but once that hurdle is jumped, new
levels of success can easily be achieved.
Another speaker at the Enterprise 2.0 event, Michael Prevou of
Strategic Knowledge Solution Inc. discussed the challenges of
developing strategies for teams that need to come together very
quickly. A retired US Army colonel, Prevou said even quick-response
virtual teams must first develop their online experience in
stages.