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Virtual team interaction: assessment, consequences, and management

Richard E. Potter (Richard E. Potter is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Information and Decision Sciences, e‐mail: rpotter@uic.edu)
Robert A. Cooke (and Robert A. Cooke is an Associate Professor in the Department of Managerial Studies, both at University of Illinois, Chicago, Illinios, USA.)
Pierre A. Balthazard (Pierre A. Balthazard is an Associate Professor in the School of Management, Arizona State University West, Phoenix, Arizona, USA.)

Team Performance Management

ISSN: 1352-7592

Article publication date: 1 December 2000

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Abstract

Virtual teams are typically made up of geographically dispersed experts, supported by computer‐based communication technologies. Though increasingly popular this is still a relatively unstudied organizational form. Virtual team membership is typically based solely on needed expertise; the teams rarely have any history of interaction and their performance potential is unknown. Research shows that teams exhibit constructive, passive, and aggressive interaction styles, which have significant effects on the decisions the teams produce as well as the teams’ satisfaction with those decisions. We present managerial tools for the assessment of conventional and virtual team interaction styles. We detail how the tools are used, and we also discuss how the styles manifest in each medium, and their effects. We give suggestions to team managers on how to use the insights the tools provide to manage their virtual teams for optimal performance.

Keywords

Citation

Potter, R.E., Cooke, R.A. and Balthazard, P.A. (2000), "Virtual team interaction: assessment, consequences, and management", Team Performance Management, Vol. 6 No. 7/8, pp. 131-137. https://doi.org/10.1108/13527590010379558

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 2000, MCB UP Limited

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