Conflict in virtual teams: a bibliometric analysis, systematic review, and research agenda

Andrea Caputo (Department of Economics and Management, University of Trento, Trento, Italy and Department of Management, University of Lincoln, Lincoln, UK)
Mariya Kargina (Department of Management and Law, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Roma, Italy)
Massimiliano Matteo Pellegrini (Department of Management and Law, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Roma, Italy)

International Journal of Conflict Management

ISSN: 1044-4068

Article publication date: 6 June 2022

Issue publication date: 6 January 2023

5991

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this study is to map the intellectual structure of the research concerning conflict and conflict management in virtual teams (VT), to contribute to the further integration of knowledge among different streams of research and to develop an interpretative framework to stimulate future research.

Design/methodology/approach

A data set of 107 relevant papers on the topic was retrieved using the Web of Science Core Collection database covering a period ranging from 2001 to 2019. A comparative bibliometric analysis consisting of the integration of results from the citation, co-citation and bibliographic coupling was performed to identify the most influential papers. The systematic literature review complemented the bibliometric results by clustering the most influential papers.

Findings

The results revealed different intellectual structures across several types of analyses. Despite such differences, 41 papers resulted as the most impactful and provided evidence of the emergence of five thematic clusters: trust, performance, cultural diversity, knowledge management and team management.

Research limitations/implications

Based on the bibliometric analyses an interpretative research agenda has been developed that unveils the main future research avenues. The paper also offers important theoretical contributions by systematizing knowledge on conflict in identifying VTs. Managerial contributions in the form of the identification of best practices are also developed to guide conflict management in VTs.

Originality/value

The uniqueness of this paper is related to its effort in studying, mapping and systematizing the knowledge concerning the topic of handling conflicts in VTs. Considering the current contingencies, this research is particularly timely.

Keywords

Citation

Caputo, A., Kargina, M. and Pellegrini, M.M. (2023), "Conflict in virtual teams: a bibliometric analysis, systematic review, and research agenda", International Journal of Conflict Management, Vol. 34 No. 1, pp. 1-31. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCMA-07-2021-0117

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Andrea Caputo, Mariya Kargina and Massimiliano Matteo Pellegrini.

License

Published by Emerald Publishing Limited. This is published under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) licence. Anyone may reproduce, distribute, translate and create derivative works of this article (for both commercial and non-commercial purposes), subject to full attribution to the original publication and authors. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode


1. Introduction

Handling conflicts properly in teams is crucial for possible success (Caputo et al., 2019). Due to the specific contingencies experienced by virtual teams (VTs), this aspect becomes even more prominent (Gilson et al., 2015). The Covid-19 pandemic forced many organizations to implement remote working, often in an abrupt and fast way, indicating a particularly favorable historic momentum to systematize previous knowledge on the topic and to offer ways forward. With such a purpose in mind, this paper aims to provide an overview of the evolution of the literature regarding conflict and conflict management in the context of VTs over the past two decades. For this study, we broadly define conflict as the situation where parties within a VT perceive that their goals or interests are incompatible or in opposition (Ayoko and Konrad, 2012); whereas we consider conflict management to refer to the understanding of conflict as a whole, its antecedents, the process, the styles and strategies of handling conflicts and associated behaviors in the context of VT (Caputo et al., 2018a). Even in the context and dynamics of the virtuality of VTs, we concur with Caputo et al. (2018a, 2018b, p. 11) that:

The main objective of conflict management is not to eliminate conflict, but to find different ways to manage it properly by controlling the dysfunctional elements of the conflict while facilitating its productive aspects.

The Covid-19 pandemic has accelerated the already rapid development of technologies in information and communication, further reducing the distances and increasing remote work interactions (Garro-Abarca et al., 2021). The hyper-globalization processes of the past decades have led, already before the pandemic, to the growing importance of VTs in today’s organizations (Gibson et al., 2014). VTs can be considered as groups of geographically dispersed co-workers who work interdependently, share common objectives, practices and procedures using technology to communicate and collaborate across time and space (DeSanctis and Monge, 1999). These teams may come from different cultures, yet they operate in the same organizational cultural framework, can bring together a variety of knowledge and experience and deal with a high degree of technologically mediated interactions (Batarseh et al., 2017). These factors contribute to making today’s organizations more diverse and possibly more conflictual.

Previous reviews and conceptual work have touched on the issues related to conflict and conflict management in the context of VTs. In particular, Schiller and Mandviwalla (2007) highlighted the issues related to conflict management in VT in an early theoretical piece that looked at the use of theories in VT research. More recently, Gilson et al. (2015) presented a seminal overview of the research in VTs that unveiled 10 themes and 10 opportunities for future research. According to the authors, conflict management was mostly studied as a mediator in a unidimensional relation, resulting in the suggestion that conflict is more likely to happen in VTs and it negatively affects team dynamics, processes and outcomes. A similar suggestion is made by Jimenez et al. (2017), in reviewing the works about global VTs, and Raghuram et al. (2019), reviewing studies about virtual work, who highlighted how conflicts emerge mostly from cultural and language differences affecting team dynamics. The fragmentation of empirical literature about conflict in VTs and the limited conceptual attention given to the topic calls for an investigation and systematization of the literature about conflict and conflict management in VTs as timely and necessary to support both research and practice to navigate the uncertainties of today’s world.

Shedding light on the evolution of the study of conflicts and their associated management in VTs, a bibliometric analysis of 107 relevant articles published in peer-reviewed scientific journals has been performed to first identify the most influential studies and second, to systematize the academic knowledge by unveiling the existence of five thematic clusters: trust, performance, cultural diversity, knowledge management and team management. In particular, an innovative approach has been adopted by comparing results from alternative, complementary bibliometric tools, i.e. citations, normalized citations and bibliographic coupling, to identify the most influential articles in the field (Caputo et al., 2021).

This study provides several contributions theoretically, methodologically and practically. First, it contributes to strengthening the integration and systematization of the two bodies of literature in conflict management and VTs. Second, it provides a rigorous and systematic identification of the most influential papers in these fields and identifies thematic areas to bring forward the research. Third, it contributes to bibliometric and reviews studies by advancing the use of comparative bibliometric approaches. Finally, the paper interprets in an integrative framework the current knowledge on the field comprising nonlinear and recursive loops between its elements and, thanks to that, elaborates future research avenues.

The paper is organized into five sections, including this introduction, as follows. Section 2 describes the protocol adopted for selecting the paper and the analyses performed. Section 3 presents the results of the analyses and determines the most impactful papers. Section 4 uses the most impactful papers to propose a framework aimed at suggesting an agenda for future research. Section 5 summarizes the contributions of the paper and its limitations.

2. Methods

This paper aims to provide a comprehensive yet succinct and timely knowledge map of the studies investigating conflict management in VTs. Such a knowledge map is purposed to provide both scholars and practitioners with an overview of what we know i.e. best practices and main findings, and what we still do not know i.e. future research directions about managing conflict in virtual workplaces. The Covid-19 pandemic that resulted in large part of the office workforce working remotely is disrupting social relationships in the workplace. A review of conflict management in VTs is therefore necessary and needs to be carried out in a timely fashion to serve its purpose.

To achieve these objectives, we have built upon best practices in systematic literature review and bibliometric studies and complemented the two methodologies to fulfill simultaneously the breadth and depth of the analysis. The simultaneous use of these two complementary methods, albeit recent, is not entirely new as it has been validated in several studies (Caputo et al., 2021; Caputo et al., 2018b; Dabić et al., 2020). It allows researchers to investigate a topic in depth through the systematic review while maintaining a wider picture of the evolution of knowledge through bibliometric analysis. In this study, we have also included a methodological innovation in the complementary use of alternative bibliometric analyses to identify the most influential papers in the field.

2.1 Sampling protocol

Consistent with the systematic review method (Thorpe et al., 2005; Tranfield et al., 2003), a panel of experts was formed to define the field of research, choose the keywords, the database and the set of inclusion and exclusion criteria. The panel of experts consisted of two professors, one an expert in strategy, negotiation and conflict management and the other in organizational studies and team working, together with a PhD student specifically focused on the organizational dynamics of dispersed teams. A step-by-step process was followed as outlined in this section.

Step 1. The database Web of Science (WoS) Core Collection® (research areas “Business Economics” and “Psychology”) was chosen after several alternative searches in Scopus and EBSCO because it retrieved a sample of high-quality articles representative of the best conflict in VTs research published to date. The choice of WoS Core Collection® is also supported and validated as appropriate for the field of inquiry by recent bibliometric studies in conflict management (Caputo et al., 2019).

Step 2. A wide search string based on multiple levels of keywords was used (Caputo, 2013) to ensure the capture of the most relevant papers on the topic. The first level included the keyword “Conflict”. The second level included the keywords about the remote/virtual nature of the investigated relationships: “smart OR virtual OR distributed OR distant OR remote”. The third level included keywords related to the organizational aspect of the teams, including “team OR group OR workplace OR workspace”. The search was run with Boolean operators (AND and OR) via the TS command, which searches among Title, Abstract, Author Keywords and Keywords Plus®. Consistent with best practices in bibliometric research and to ensure the comparability among the indicators, the year 2020 was excluded (Caputo et al., 2019). The search was carried out among peer-reviewed articles written in the English language and resulted in the first sample of 397 papers.

Step 3. Due to the wideness of the search string, we proceeded to the manual “cleaning” of the data set by reading all the titles and abstracts of the selected papers to eliminate those that were not relevant to our search. When it was not possible to assess the relevance of the abstract, we obtained a digital copy of the full text of the paper. Excluded papers fall into two main categories: a large number of papers do not investigate conflict at all (Ebrahim, 2015; Presbitero and Toledano, 2018), although the word “conflict” is presented in the search items. This situation mainly occurs because many papers had a declaration of conflict of interest that was caught by the search; others were eliminated because they simply mentioned “conflicting results” in the abstract or where conflict was just mentioned incidentally; a smaller portion of papers investigated conflict but not in a virtual environment (Sheehan et al., 2016). Following these criteria, two-hundred-ninety-three papers were eliminated because they were not relevant.

2.2 Analyses

The final data set of 107 papers was used as a basis for both the bibliometric analysis and a qualitative systematic literature review to develop a comprehensive map of the knowledge of the field.

Bibliometrics is a subset of scientometrics and applies statistical methods to the study of scientific activity in a scientific community (Zupic and Čater, 2015). For our research, we followed the perspective known as positive bibliometrics (Todeschini and Baccini, 2016). This is because we aim to describe and explain phenomena in science via the analysis of its scientific communication. In this view, bibliometric indicators represent phenomena or proxies of phenomena. For example, the citations received by an article that expresses a concept are a proxy of the diffusion and impact of said concept in the scientific community. Examples of positive bibliometrics are citation analysis, co-citation analysis, citation networks and productivity analysis.

Complementary bibliometric analyses were instrumental to identify the sample of the most influential papers to review. Prior studies argue for the use of more than one indicator (Caputo et al., 2019; Dabić et al., 2020) as an effective way to limit the intrinsic bias that every indicator has.

First, we undertook a performance analysis based on indicators of activity. These indicators provide data about the volume and impact of research during a given timeframe via word frequency analysis, citation analysis and counting publications by the unit of analysis (e.g. authorship, country, affiliation, etc.).

Second, we built a science map based on indicators that provide spatial representations of how different scientific elements are related to one another to picture the structural and dynamic organization of knowledge about conflict management in VTs. We combined results from co-citation analysis and bibliographic coupling to identify the most influential papers, authors and journals and the co-occurrence of keywords analysis to identify the thematic structure of the field. Co-citation analysis “constructs measures of similarity between articles, authors or journals by using the frequency with which two units are cited together, i.e. co-citation counts” (Caputo et al., 2019). Therefore, co-citation analysis is powerful in showing a picture from the past, and it is biased by the time-dependency i.e. an older paper has the probability of obtaining more citations than a newer one. Bibliographic coupling is often used to aggregate papers by similarity, and it “measures the similarity between papers through their common cited references” (Todeschini and Baccini, 2016). The advantage of a bibliographic coupling is to compare recent papers even if not been cited yet. The analysis of the co-occurrence of keywords uses the article’s keywords to investigate the conceptual structure of a field. According to Caputo et al. (Caputo et al., 2019):

This is the only bibliometric method that uses the content of the articles to directly measure similarity in which others use indirect measures such as citations and authorships, co-word analysis is particularly powerful and appropriate to develop a semantic map that helps in understanding the conceptual structure of a field.

By comparing and contrasting the results from activity indicators, co-citation analysis, bibliographic coupling and co-occurrence of keywords, it is possible to provide a systematic overview of the field (Caputo et al., 2021). The activity indicators will show the evolution of the field and its impact. Co-citation and bibliographic coupling will show an unbiased view of the most influential articles, authors and journals, whereas the co-occurrence of keywords will show the thematic map of the topics investigated.

The software VOSViewer (van Eck and Waltman, 2010) was used to calculate the bibliometric indicators and provide the graphic representation of the networks. For a detailed explanation of the scripts and mathematical algorithms adopted in VOSViewer, please see van Eck and Waltman (2007, 2010).

Combining the results of co-citation analysis and bibliographic coupling allowed us to identify a list of the most influential papers that were then considered for the qualitative systematic literature review. We have combined the top 20 papers resulting from three indicators: absolute citations, normalized citations and bibliographic coupling strength. Absolute citations are represented by the total number of citations received by a paper. Normalized citations are represented by the number of citations of the paper divided by the average number of citations of all papers published in the same year and included in our data set (van Eck and Waltman, 2016). The bibliographic coupling strength is measured by the bibliographic coupling total link strength algorithm in VOSViewer, indicating the level of similarity and interconnectedness of a paper in the field regardless of the received citations (van Eck and Waltman, 2016). Integrating these three measures allows us to reduce the age bias of papers and include in the evaluation the influence of a paper, not only the number of citations received but also how the content of the paper relates to other papers in the same scientific community.

The resulting data set of unique papers in the top 20 list from each indicator is composed of 41 papers, which constituted the data set for the literature review.

Having selected the most influential articles to review, we proceeded to the literature review based on the content analysis of selected papers (Duriau et al., 2007). Following best practices, each article was read in full and analyzed qualitatively (Barclay et al., 2011; Pittaway and Cope, 2007). Articles were coded, tagged and later grouped into clusters based on their content; the articles were allowed to be part of more than one cluster (Caputo et al., 2016b). The process was dynamic, allowing new tags to be included during the process of reading articles to allow flexibility in categorizing information and reducing biases that may arise from a rigidly pre-set system (Caputo et al., 2016b; Dabić et al., 2020). Short and Palmer (2008, p. 279) categorize content analysis into three methods: “human-scored systems, individual word-count systems, and computerized systems that use artificial intelligence”. We combined computer-aided techniques with human-scored techniques, integrating rigor and insights from the bibliometric analyses with the interpretation of researchers.

3. Results of the bibliometric analyses

3.1 Activity bibliometric indicators

Our bibliometric analysis confirms a constant growth of attention to the handling problems in VTs over time with an increasing number of journal outlets.

Figure 1 shows how the field started in 2001 and is in a growing directory, although the number of papers published is still limited, making the study of conflict in VTs a niche.

In terms of journals, 58 unique outlets have published 107 papers in the data set. Table 1 shows the 20 most cited journals and indicates also the number of published papers and average citations received by them. In terms of total citations, Organ Sci., Acad. Manage. J., J. Manage. Inform. Syst., J. Int. Bus. Stud. and Inf. Manage., are the most influential outlets. However, if we consider the number of papers published, which is a proxy of the interest of a journal on the topic, Small Group Res., J. Manage. Inform. Syst., Organ Sci., Inf. Manage. and J. Manag. are the five most interested journals. Instead, looking at the impact of the individual articles, the situation changes again with J. Int. Bus. Stud., Acad. Manage. J., Organ Sci., Int. J. Confl. Manage. and Inf. Manage. It can be noted how Organization Science and Information Management are the journals appearing in the top five in all three measures.

Looking at the authors, 290 scholars have authored the 107 papers in the data set. Out of these, only three, Ahuja, Staples and Zornoza, have authored at least three papers and can, therefore, be considered the most prolific in the field. Table 2 lists the most prolific authors who have authored at least two papers. Interestingly, if we look at the most cited authors, only three of them (Hinds, Majchrzak and Staples) appear in the top 10 of most cited (Table 3).

The studies in the data set were authored by affiliates of 186 research institutions from 28 different countries. The research in the field of conflict in VTs appears to be predominantly made in the USA (65 papers) and other western countries.

3.2 Co-citation analysis: the foundations of the field

The co-citation analysis is a powerful tool to investigate the foundations of the research about conflict in VTs through the analysis of the references cited by the papers in our data set. The analysis reveals those that are the most cited references, authors and journals. Table 4 shows the statistics and criteria used for the co-citation analysis.

By performing a co-citation analysis, we were able to identify the 10 most cited papers, authors and journals that constitute the theoretical pillars of the research on the conflict in VTs. The results show how such research is grounded in the literature about VTs and remote working (Cramton, 2001a; Jarvenpaa and Leidner, 1999) pillar studies in conflict management (Jehn, 1995) and the early studies integrating the two (Hinds and Bailey, 2003; Mortensen and Hinds, 2001).

A combined reading of the most influential cited references and the network of similarities (Figure 2) show that the research about conflict in VTs relies on a coherent and homogeneous network grounded in the scientific community of the fields of management and organization studies (Table 5).

3.3 Bibliographic coupling: the structure of the field

Bibliographic coupling analysis is used to evaluate the current structure of a field based on a clustering technique that allows us to compare recent papers even if not yet cited; therefore, not being biased by time. However, the method has severe limitations in cases like ours that analyze smaller research fields (Jarneving, 2007); hence, the technique was adopted to complement citation and co-citation analysis and was not used to create clusters but rather to identify the network relevance of papers, authors and journals. All papers (107), authors (290) and journals (58) from the data set were included in the analysis (Figure 3) (Table 6).

By performing a bibliographic coupling analysis, we were able to identify the 10 most connected papers, authors and journals that constitute the current structure of the research in the conflict in VTs. Via the visualization of networks technique, is it also possible to show how the field is well interconnected across the three levels of analysis, confirming the finding that the research about conflict in VTs relies on a coherent and homogeneous scientific community.

3.4 Co-occurrence of keywords

The analysis based on the co-occurrence of keywords allows us to show the intellectual structure of the field by identifying and grouping the main topics that have been subject to investigation. This method is particularly useful to complement the previous analysis as it offers a direct measure of similarity of topics by analyzing the actual content of the papers via the keywords.

The keyword analysis was performed by adopting the Keyword Plus tool from WoS. Even though the Keyword Plus is usually chosen to ensure consistency across the classification of articles’ keywords, it was necessary to perform a manual harmonization of the spelling of those keywords.

Previous studies have considered Keyword Plus to be effective as the keywords provided by the authors in terms of bibliometric analysis, investigating the knowledge structure of scientific fields (Zhang et al., 2016). The adoption of Keyword Plus allows the researcher to limit biases and risks associated with the manual tagging of content. Only keywords that occurred at least five times were kept; this resulted in having only 39 keywords to constitute the largest usable set of connected terms (Table 7).

The network diagram and overlay visualization of the keywords (Figure 4) show that the intellectual structure of the topics is quite homogeneous and has evolved. In particular, the research on conflict in VTs started with the investigation of technological topics and issues related to cultural diversity, personality and leadership.

3.5 Synthesis of results

Having shown the individual results of activity indicators, co-citation, bibliographic coupling and co-occurrence of keywords, we moved our attention to a synthesis that allowed us to identify the most influential papers to be included in the systematic literature review.

Table 8 shows the top 20 articles according to three complementary metrics: the normalized citations, the total citations and the link strength. The total citations are computed by counting all citations received by a paper in the WoS Core Collection at the time of the study. The normalized number of citations in a paper equals the number of citations in the paper divided by the average number of citations of all papers published in the same year and included in the data set (van Eck and Waltman, 2016). The total link strength indicates the total strength of the links of an article with the other articles in the data set calculated via the bibliographic coupling analysis (van Eck and Waltman, 2016). By comparing these three measures, we can countereffect the biases of each of them in terms of age of the article, relative impact and connectedness in the field. As a result, 41 unique articles were discovered to be included in at least one of the metrics and formed the basis for our systematic literature review.

4. Systematic literature review

This section presents the results of the systematic literature review that has been based on the most influential articles belonging to each cluster and the classification obtained by analyzing the content of each article. We have identified five thematic clusters: trust, performance, cultural diversity, knowledge management and team management.

4.1 Trust cluster

The issue of trust is among the key topics in conflict and conflict management studies (Caputo et al., 2019). Trust is an extremely important variable for successful collaboration (Donovan, 1993) and increased relational capital (Connelly and Turel, 2016). Nevertheless, trust is also regularly perceived as a challenging issue for team effectiveness (Breuer et al., 2016), particularly under virtuality, due to the lack of clarity on interaction mechanisms (Bierly et al., 2009; DeRosa et al., 2004). Being a crucial construct for any variation of teams, trust is proved as more difficult and important to achieve in the circumstances of physical dispersion of team members (Brahm and Kunze, 2012; Breuer et al., 2016; Connelly and Turel, 2016; Staples and Webster, 2008; Yakovleva et al., 2010). Peñarroja et al. (2013) concluded that the level of virtuality negatively influences team trust, whereas trust is also vital for reducing both interpersonal and task conflicts (Connelly and Turel, 2016; Curseu and Schruijer, 2010) as well as for successful conflict management processes (Bierly et al., 2009). Virtuality is mainly considered to be a moderating variable in the relationship between trust and conflict (Bierly et al., 2009), where trust may be both an output and an input of the group processes, such as conflict (Marks et al., 2001). A further explanation is provided by studies that determined that the greater the degree of virtuality, the greater the negative impact on trust by relationship conflict (Bierly et al., 2009; Peñarroja et al., 2013). In this vein, Breuer et al. (2016) showed that a high degree of virtuality increases internal team risks that in turn increase the necessity for trust, thus forming a loop relationship between a group functioning, conflict and trust (De Dreu and Weingart, 2003). In general, the relationship between team functioning, conflict and trust could be described as a negative association between conflicts and trust exacerbated by the degree of virtuality (Bierly et al., 2009; Polzer et al., 2006b).

4.2 Performance cluster

The next cluster is based on team performance which is considered to be highly influenced by internal team communication in VTs (Massey et al., 2014; Montoya-Weiss et al., 2001; Sarker et al., 2011). VTs have different characteristics than traditional teams (Brahm and Kunze, 2012), and it was found that people are capable of adapting to the conditions of VTs, such as restricted communication channels, probable instability of internet connection and lacking opportunities for informal communication (van der Kleij et al., 2009). Moreover, video communication and similar technologies reduce the main differences between teams that are co-located and geographically dispersed teams (Bradley et al., 2013). A great number of studies have shown that geographical distance between team members may complicate conflict management (Cramton, 2001b; Hill and Bartol, 2016). However, the extensive usage of mediated communication technologies may exaggerate the negative impacts of conflict in teams (Kankanhalli et al., 2006) due to complexities such as the unavailability for frequent discussions, information exchange and clarifications regarding personal and task issues, which may result in misunderstandings and further communication closure (Mortensen and Hinds, 2001). In other words, virtuality increases the complexity of the triggers and the dynamics of conflicts as well as their management and resolution (Friedman and Currall, 2003). In turn, such communication complexities among team participants (conflicts) negatively influence team performance (Connelly and Turel, 2016; Turel and Zhang, 2010). However, the understanding of the underlying mechanisms of how conflicts work and their influence on team performance in VTs still demands additional research (Connelly and Turel, 2016). There are several debates about the impact of conflict on VT performance. For instance, Hinds and Mortensen (2005) state that the virtuality of teams increases the vulnerability to conflicts due to the lack of casual, unplanned communication between team members, which, in turn, negatively influences the overall team performance. However, in a review of the literature, Ortiz de Guinea et al. (2012) emphasize contrasting findings where virtuality and performance correlate both in positive and negative directions. The recent body of research regarding conflicts and team performance in VTs admits that virtuality should be perceived as a continuous rather than binary variable to avoid clashing results (Griffith et al., 2003; Malhotra and Majchrzak, 2014; Ortiz De Guinea et al., 2012). It was discovered that a level of virtuality should include distance indicators of separation, the configuration of a proportion working virtually and face-to-face and time parameters of virtual collaboration (Ortiz De Guinea et al., 2012). For studies looking at team performances, it is crucial to consider contextual conditions, degrees of virtuality and mediating technologies as they may significantly alter the relationship (Malhotra and Majchrzak, 2014). For example, research where virtuality is treated as a continuous variable shows less presence of conflicts in more VTs and no impact on the performance (Ortiz De Guinea et al., 2012). Kankanhalli et al. (2006) propose a theoretical framework where both task conflict and relationship conflict do not have a direct influence on VT performance, contingent upon the conflict resolution approach (for both), task complexity (for task conflict) and task interdependence (relationship conflict). Looking at conflict management, research has indicated that the conflict management style (Paul et al., 2004b) and conflict management behavior (de Dreu and van de Vliert, 1994; Montoya-Weiss et al., 2001) are critical conditions for successful team performance in the dimension of virtual collaboration. Additionally, collaborative conflict management style was indicated as a positive influencing factor on team performance, whereas group heterogeneity was found to be a barrier to successful conflict management and effective group performance (Paul et al., 2004b).

4.3 Cultural diversity cluster

Cultural diversity is one of the most ambiguous concepts regarding communication, teams and organizational studies. A series of meta-analyses validate this point stressing the nature of the complex notion to be both a benefit and a challenge (Smith et al., 1994; Stahl et al., 2010). In the context of teams and team working, cultural diversity refers to the different cultural backgrounds of the team members (Harush et al., 2018), including diversity in nationality (Gibbs et al., 2017) and broader cultural aspects (Kankanhalli et al., 2006), such as linguistic diversity (McDonough et al., 1999) and cultural dimensions (Hofstede, 1991). As a concept, cultural diversity is perceived as a key to a greater and innovative performance (Polley and McGrath, 1984) or the contrary, as a reason for ingroup miscommunications (Brett et al., 2006; Staples and Zhao, 2006). Globalization dynamics and technological advancements (Paul et al., 2004b) are increasing virtuality and multiculturality in teams (Gibson et al., 2014), resulting in the prevalence of geographically dispersed international teams over face-to-face ones (Stahl et al., 2010). The combination of physical dispersion and cultural diversity (Shachaf, 2008) increases the complexity of VTs due to the more radical differences between team members’ attitudes and perceptions (Zimmermann, 2011). As a result, communication and the gaining of possible benefits associated with diversity may become more problematic (Gibson and Gibbs, 2006). Implementing cultural diversity may result in misunderstandings and conflicts between team members (Maznevski et al., 2006; Paul et al., 2004b; Stahl et al., 2010) due to reasons such as the communication (Shachaf, 2008) and social categorization (Harush et al., 2018). Hence, conflict management is of significant importance as often team dynamics are complicated not only in the virtual settings but also by the cultural heterogeneity (Paul et al., 2004a; Paul, Seetharaman, et al., 2004b). The debate whether cultural diversity increases or decreases conflicts in VTs is continuing (Kankanhalli et al., 2006; Mortensen and Hinds, 2001). Kankanhalli et al. (2006) discovered from their in-depth study that cultural diversity in VT leads to relationship and task conflicts, which they explain by the similarity attraction theory (Wells and Aicher, 2013) and social identity theory (Ashforth and Mael, 1989). Usage of the latter theory is also supported by Mortensen and Hinds (2001) and Harush (2018), who emphasized the vital role of forming a global identity as a self-categorization process to a shared team ingroup identity to reduce the level of relational conflicts in GVT’s environment, especially in the circumstances of low task interdependence. Paul, Seetharaman, et al. (2004b) support the negative impact of team members’ cultural diversity on conflict resolution processes and group interactions due to the variations in values. Furthermore, Staples and Zhao (2006) concluded that culturally diverse teams indicated lower levels of satisfaction and cohesion and higher levels of conflicts. However, it was also pointed out that culturally diverse VTs showed higher performance rates and fewer conflicts than face-to-face ones. This finding emphasizes the importance of taking under consideration not just every separate characteristic of a team but the combinations of the teams’ settings. Whilst to some, cultural heterogeneity of teams can negatively impact interactions and communication processes, increasing conflicts (Pelled, 1996), to others, diversity can be very beneficial for teams’ dynamics and conflict reduction (Staples and Zhao, 2006). These opposing viewpoints could be explained by several factors. For instance, Paul et al. (2004a), in contrast to a widespread belief about the negative impact of cultural diversity on group dynamics, found that higher levels of agreement within international groups could be achieved by conflict management (Paul et al., 2004a) and relevant media choices (Klitmøller and Lauring, 2013). Additionally, according to Stahl et al. (2010), the physical dispersion of team members tends to moderate the impact of cultural diversity on conflicts as the virtual international teams showed lower levels of conflicts and higher social integration compared with multicultural collocated teams. These findings were similarly indicated by Mortensen and Hinds (2001) in their earlier research with the reason that the notion of reduced conflicts could be a result of either stronger ingroup integration or an adverse environment for conflicts to arise.

4.4 Knowledge management cluster

Efficient knowledge management is vital for the success of a company, project or team (Chiravuri et al., 2011). The process of knowledge transferring, sharing and exchanging provides additional challenges for collocated teams (Ortiz De Guinea et al., 2012). Due to the globalization dynamics, knowledge sharing between geographically distributed team members and experts has become an integral part of international companies and VTs (Raab et al., 2014). Consequently, knowledge management in VTs and presumed conflicts came to the scholars’ attention due to the complex settings of geographically distributed teams. The implied challenges are explained as difficulties in sharing comprehensive knowledge with no face-to-face communication potentially creating sub-groups (Boh et al., 2007) and reducing the attention of team members under virtual circumstances (Ortiz De Guinea et al., 2012). This, in turn, may lead to misunderstandings (Hinds and Bailey, 2003), failure of information sharing (Hinds and Mortensen, 2005) and other interpersonal difficulties (Boh et al., 2007). Ortiz De Guinea et al. (2012) argue that the predominantly multicultural composition of geographically dispersed teams issues such as language diversity may jeopardize the knowledge sharing process and boost the frequency of conflicts. Chiravuri et al. (2011) indicated that a combination of a lack of face-to-face cues (Klitmøller and Lauring, 2013) and probable culturally contrasting behavioral models can cause different patterns of information exchange, which in turn leads to misunderstandings (Cramton, 2001b; Kayworth and Leidner, 2002) and conflicts during the knowledge capture process. At the end of the study, the authors emphasized a repertory grid cognition-based technique (“cognitive mapping technique that attempts to describe how people think about the phenomena in their world” [Tan and Hunter, 2002, p. 40]) as a reliable measure for decreasing conflicts in VTs in the knowledge capture process (Chiravuri et al., 2011). Furthermore, Klitmøller and Lauring (2013) put a value on the multicultural element of VTs and its important role in the process of selecting particular types of media for knowledge exchange (e.g. using a rich media for more ambiguous matters and a lean media in case of canonical knowledge exchange). Raab et al. (2014) researched the mechanisms of knowledge sharing in a globally dispersed context identifying a link between the imbalance of the geographical distribution of group members and the low efficiency of knowledge sharing due to the strong social categorization processes (Polzer et al., 2006a) and potential conflicts between subgroups (Fiol and O’Connor, 2005; Hinds and Mortensen, 2005). Indeed, a proper mix of technological and organizational elements is believed to be crucial for proper knowledge exchange, open knowledge sharing and all other issues connected to knowledge management in the conditions of virtual collaboration (Zammuto et al., 2007). Tools of virtual communication may reduce cultural differences (Stahl et al., 2010) and positively impact knowledge-sharing processes (Klitmøller and Lauring, 2013).

4.5 Team management cluster

The final cluster is devoted to team management issues related to conflicts in VTs. In general, managers’ intention to run a project with a presence of geographically distributed teams can be guided by the benefits of flexible conditions of working (Majchrzak et al., 2004). This regard both: managers looking for the particular targeted expertise needed for a certain case (Boh et al., 2007; Hitt et al., 2001); and team members who can work remotely due to telecommunication tools (May and Carter, 2001), and therefore, avoiding travel costs and improving time management. However, along with these valuable advantages, several adverse effects may be experienced (Saunders and Ahuja, 2006) that consequently lead to conflicts in its varied expressions. For instance, Boh et al. (2007) refer to the result of their longitudinal research concluding that the VTs accumulated more net earnings than the co-located ones by better matching of team members’ expertise with the project’s characteristics. However, in the cases of a very significant percentage of geographically distributed team members, net earnings declined because of increased coordination expenses. Managers have to take into account additional costs for the difficulty for VT members to develop a collaborative environment (Kraut et al., 2002), diminish cases of free-riding (Weisband, 2002) and avoid destructive conflicts (Boh et al., 2007) and misunderstandings (Cramton, 2001b). Therefore, taking into account the increased coordination costs due to the geographical distribution and potential interpersonal difficulties, the benefits of attracting experts/team members remotely may be limited (Boh et al., 2007) and should be carefully thought through by a manager before the implementation of the project. Sarker et al. (2018) identify work-life balance conflicts as important in VTs, stressing that virtuality adds additional challenging issues, such as time difference, usage of telecommunication tools and adaptability. In their research, the hypothesis that higher schedule flexibility will cause lower work-life conflicts was not supported by the results. That could be explained by the “Border Theory” (Clark, 2000), which implies that flexible timing normally makes team members more frustrated because of the need to figure out when they should assume their home and work responsibilities. The potential managerial solution is seen to be as suggesting special creative techniques to self-manage virtual working arrangements to the advantage of employees by employees themselves or careful implementation of agile approaches by managers (Sarker et al., 2018). It is crucial to detect the scale of that intervention for the appropriate functioning of the VT (Raab et al., 2014). Ruiller and Dumas (2018) proposed a framework for the role of the manager in a virtual environment. They define two management modes:

  1. “E-communicational”, i.e. a manager positions himself as a part of a VT and takes under consideration teleworking specificities maintaining informal communication, interpersonal trust, increasing perceived proximity and also exposing a strong shared identity that tends to prevent conflicts (Mortensen and Hinds, 2001); and

  2. “Control mode”, i.e. managers are not co-teleworkers as they manage VTs prevailingly, focusing on work objectives with high levels of institutionalization and formalization.

On the one hand, managerial interference may impede establishing social connections between group representatives (Gulati, 1995). On the other hand, managers should intervene in the virtual setting of a team, stimulating frequent and effective communication. In this way: team members could build better social relationships (Malhotra et al., 2007; Raab et al., 2014; Saunders and Ahuja, 2006) and not experience conflicts due to obstacles in the technological adaptation (Thomas and Bostrom, 2010). The latter claim is also supported by Chiravuri et al. (2011), who consider that a manager has to be involved in the in-group processes to discern the nature of conflicts. In the case of a cognitive conflict, this should be closely monitored as it is capable of causing either stagnation of the process or improved solutions (Chiravuri et al., 2011). In the study by Raab et al. (2014), managerial involvement was found to be a mitigator of cultural boundaries but had no moderating effect on the relationship between trust and satisfaction with knowledge sharing in globally dispersed groups. Thus, managers may be concerned with tracking the essence and type of a conflict in VT’s dynamics and implementing appropriate conflict management techniques to increase the productivity of a project.

5. Setting-up a research agenda

The purpose of this paper is the systematization of the accumulated knowledge of the field and, because of that, paving interesting and promising research avenues (Caputo et al., 2018b; Tranfield et al., 2003), especially about the results of the systematic literature review, the clear focus characterizing research of emerging conflicts and conflict management in VT, and these are interpreted in a framework stressing possible interconnections and relationships among them.

The logic of the framework is consistent with the traditional input-process-output (IPO) approach to studies on VT and has been used in previous systematic literature reviews (Garro-Abarca et al., 2021; Gilson et al., 2015). Differently from that, however, the linearity of a pure IPO logic did not emerge from the results of that literature. For this reason, our interpretative framework cannot postulate a single or cause-effect directionality between its theoretical blocks, hypothesizing fuzzy and yet to be untangled relationships. The “fuzziness” refers to a nonlinearity, i.e. a block seems to have several impacts on others e.g. direct, indirect, moderated or mediated effects; recursive relationships, i.e. most of the blocks have bi-directional relationships with the others; thus, self-reinforcing loops based on previous interaction either positive and negative may occur; configurational approach, i.e. a single block when considered in isolation seems to hold a limited explanatory power, and better results would be achieved analyzing several factors together. Thus, it would be reasonable to say that it is not so much the presence or the intensity of a single element/block to determines the outcomes but the co-presence or, conversely, the co-absence of a set of elements that is the key interpretation. In Figure 5, we only adopted the categorization of the IPO framework, specifically the antecedents, dynamics and outcomes, and we also depicted rippled lines among these categories to represent the fuzziness of these relationships. However, any category of the theoretical blocks potentially influences and is influenced by the others; thus, the arrows are present at both ends of the lines.

The first category of antecedents is fixed elements that come from the structural contingencies in which a VT operates its composition. These structural elements refer to the demographic, cultural and individual characteristics of team members, and they can be grouped under the umbrella concept of the heterogeneity existing in a team. This heterogeneity is the root of several latent or actual conflicts and conflict-related dynamics that may affect individual team members or the whole group (Schaubroeck and Yu, 2017). For example, different personalities or intensity of traits, e.g. consciousness and extraversion, may increase or lessen dyadic conflicts among members (Turel and Zhang, 2010). However, these elements do not affect only conflicts but also shape different strategies to manage them, opening the debate to a contingent and contextual approach to conflict management in VTs. As evidenced from the thematic clusters, heterogeneity may pertain to different cultural backgrounds that may hinder the process of cohesion due to the homophily phenomenon, thus preferring individuals with similar characteristics or common shared culture. This stimulates the formation of sub-groups (Gibson and Gibbs, 2006), highlighting the necessity of specific strategies to reduce conflicts and the fault-lines within a team. Heterogeneity, however, is a broader concept than merely culture (Boh et al., 2007). As the geographical dispersion of team members increases, the higher is the likelihood of having team members with diverse institutional, economic and other contingencies that may stimulate an increment of conflicts, stricter management of them and other problems in the functioning of a team (Jimenez et al., 2017). This heterogeneity may directly influence a team or individual performance, but its indirect effect via conflicts, conflict management strategies and functioning processes of a team are still yet to be explored (dynamics). Future research avenues could inquire what type of heterogeneity factors can have a different impact in VT from those traditionally stressed for co-located teams. Even more interesting could be a study of whether heterogeneity plays a different role in the strategy to manage those conflicts or affect the team functioning of a VT in different ways. For instance, are these potential tensions more marked in VTs related to the fact that interactions are less frequent and with less embedded exchanges (Hinds and Bailey, 2003)? Conversely, as individual differences seem to play a minor role in VTs, can these tensions be lessened when in co-located teams (Wakefield et al., 2008)? Paying attention to the heterogeneity of a VT also holds strong implications for practice; managers and leaders should first carefully design the composition of a VT not only for reasons of technical competencies but also of cultural and soft skill aspects related to the team members. This may reduce potential conflicts at several levels. Second, even if a proper design is not implementable, the heterogeneity of a VT should be fully acknowledged to counterbalance the tendency to disengage.

The second category of this interpretative framework is represented by what has been termed as dynamics, as all these elements pertain to interactions among members and the several processes through which VT functions and performs (Breuer et al., 2016). In our framework based on identified clusters, we consider these categories: the conflicts, in terms of their nature and level of impact, the conflict management process and other relevant dynamic interactions occurring in a team, called team functioning that specifically includes the process of building trust and that of managing knowledge flows. As premised, the fuzziness of these relationships also reveals that blocks of the same category have internal relationships e.g. conflict management impacts, and is impacted by, the characteristic of conflicts in VTs and by the team functioning elements of VTs. Similarly, we expect conflicts to impact team functioning directly and via the various degrees of conflict management and vice versa.

In terms of conflicts in VTs, discrimination should be made of the nature of the conflict. Virtuality, on the one hand, may stimulate relational conflicts, as misunderstandings in communication and lack of trust occur more readily (Hinds and Bailey, 2003). Caputo et al. (2019), in a bibliometric overview of conflict management studies, highlighted the important role of culture in the relationship between trust and conflict. It is expected that building trust and managing trust-based conflicts are more complex in virtual settings due to their enhanced multicultural composition and the difficulty for individuals to decodify clues in a virtual environment. However, in task-based conflict, such a clear negative influence does not seem so prominent (Gibbs et al., 2017). To summarize, can conflicts of different nature be affected by virtuality, and in which ways? Are there interactional effects? Similarly, the specific level at which conflicts are embedded is also relevant. Conflicts may spur at an individual level, for example, a team member that has to juggle between work and personal life (Clark, 2000). The Covid-19 pandemic poses serious questions about the ambivalence of flexible work arrangements and also in VTs, especially concerning team members with care duties (Hilbrecht et al., 2008). Conflicts can be related to a dyadic sphere from a faction of the team members to the whole group (Park et al., 2020). These different levels are not well addressed in team literature, and the virtuality adds complexity to the debate. How do individual, dyadic and group-level conflicts influence each other? How does virtuality impact the propagation of a specific level of conflict onto others? Is it stronger or more insulated?

Conflict and conflict management strategies should also be clear prerogatives of the leaders of VT. Leaders should determine the specific nature and level of impact of this conflict to design proper conflict management strategies. Escalating or de-escalating strategies should be in place to keep a high level of engagement and other team dynamics.

There are several dynamic processes, such as communication (Jarvenpaa and Leidner, 1999), leadership (Hill and Bartol, 2016) and temporality (Saunders and Ahuja, 2006), all of which may cause or redeem conflicts in VTs. In turn, when properly (or poorly) executed, these dynamics create sediment (or detriment) for social identification and trust, fueling (or hindering) any further in-group interactions, exchanges and conflicts (Brahm and Kunze, 2012; Harush et al., 2018). Future studies are required to untangle the nexus between such dynamics, especially as moderators and mediators (Gilson et al., 2015). This is also true about the structural elements: are there joint processes influencing each other to cause conflicts? In addition, as Garro-Abarca et al. (2021) highlighted, the Covid-19 pandemic has quickly changed organizational routines moving traditional co-located teams into the virtual space. Did the changes induced by the pandemic create alternative processes and their related conflict? Does a “new normal” exist in which processes will be managed differently from the past, blending elements of virtuality into traditional teams? All these considerations are research avenues to be considered.

Virtuality, in general, seems to reduce the ability of a VT to manage knowledge (Raab et al., 2014), but some positive effects have also been depicted (Klitmøller and Lauring, 2013). These contrasting results are probably because knowledge management is a broad concept traditionally articulated in sub-processes: knowledge acquisition, creation, sharing or transferring, accumulation or retrieving and application or usage (Inkinen, 2016). Each of these processes may be influenced differently from virtuality, the heterogeneity of the team and the other team functioning dynamics. For example, knowledge sharing is reinforced by participative leadership styles (Pellegrini et al., 2020), but participation and engagement may be reduced in VT due to latent conflicts. Conversely, knowledge accumulation in a virtual environment may be enhanced as to properly function; most VTs need a large stock of codified knowledge. Thus, future studies should address the relationships between every single process of knowledge management and their interactional effects with the antecedents of conflicts, the type and level and strategies to manage them, not forgetting to consider the indirect and interactional effects of other team functioning processes. To summarize, how do the different processes of knowledge management relate to conflicts, conflict management strategies and team functioning in a VT context? Future studies may consider the fast-changing technological environment of the past decade, for example, considering the advent of the 4.0 revolution. If more inclusive and far-reaching information and communications technology tools alleviate the differences between co-located and VTs (Bradley et al., 2013), the sophisticated approaches of the 4.0 such as the Internet of Things (Caputo et al., 2016a), big data (Rialti et al., 2020) and artificial intelligence algorithms may offer interesting modifications about the impact on knowledge management and team performance in general (Manesh et al., 2020). How will the 4.0 revolution affect conflicts in VTs?

Considering the practical implications related to several teams’ functioning processes, leaders may consider constructing a managerial grid to keep control of either the individual performance or the overall group-level results. These ongoing evaluations can help to detect conflicts earlier and thus structure a proper conflict management strategy.

Considering the final category of outcomes, conflicts have been generally studied concerning their negative impacts on the performance of VTs. Virtuality tends to exacerbate conflicts and may reduce the consequentially a VT’s performance (Hinds and Mortensen, 2005). However, as already presented in this framework, a relationship of linearity must be excluded. Too many other co-factors may intervene due to the heterogeneity of the composition of the team, the way conflicts are handled, and their impacts on other crucial dynamics. Conflicts cannot be reduced in this univocal direction (Ortiz De Guinea et al., 2012). Future studies are, thus, invited to clearly define their performance variables and hopefully consider virtuality as a continuum (Malhotra and Majchrzak, 2014) to avoid partial conclusions. Adopting this framework, interesting avenues may be explored about the interactional effects of its several theoretical building blocks. For example, does the different nature of conflicts impact differently on performance? Are these impacts also affected by the specific sources of conflicts (processes of latent elements)?

Further future research avenues may also come from the adoption of newer methodologies in the field of conflict management, such as fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA), a methodology we could not find in the analyzed data set but that is receiving growing attention in management research (Kraus et al., 2018; Pappas et al., 2021). FsQCA is a set-theoretic approach that is used to investigate complex causality, and therefore, allows for the identification of specific combinations of conditions called configurations that are nonexclusive and lead to the same outcome (De Crescenzo et al., 2020; Ragin, 2008). Future studies could use fsQCA to test empirically our proposed framework allowing the complexity of conflict and conflict management in VTs to be investigated.

6. Conclusion

This paper presents the results of an investigation into the existing literature published over the past two decades about conflict management and VTs. To provide a thorough and systematic analysis in support of the growing needs of managing virtual workforces and projects, innovative bibliometric methods have been deployed, displaying an overall view of the field of research and a systematic review has provided us with the details of the five identified thematic clusters enabling a holistic framework to be developed. Results have shown the importance of the interlinkages between the five clusters such as trust, performance, cultural diversity, knowledge management and team management are well-defined topics that rely on each other’s findings for advancing knowledge and practice.

Although this study adopted a rigorous and systematic methodology of review, some limitations remain. Specifically, a limitation may lie in focusing on management studies that contribute to focusing and positioning the paper in a clear discipline of research and homogeneity of data, but it may result in overlooking contributions from other fields. Moreover, to fulfill the need for homogeneity of bibliographic data, the study focused only on published journal articles omitting books, book chapters, conference papers and nonpeer-reviewed papers. This limitation is balanced by the higher quality and rigor of studies that have been peer-reviewed and future studies, perhaps using a meta-analytic approach, may also consider these outputs. As in previous systematic review studies, our study has been privileged to offer a wider overview and research agenda rather than deepening into fine-grained details. However, as this tradeoff is a natural consequence of review studies, our review and agenda offer a solid ground for future studies to build upon and further advance our knowledge of conflict management in VTs, satisfying the latest needs of organizations and societies linked to the increase in remote working conditions.

Figures

Number of papers published per year

Figure 1.

Number of papers published per year

Network diagram of co-citation analysis

Figure 2.

Network diagram of co-citation analysis

Network diagram of bibliographic coupling analysis

Figure 3.

Network diagram of bibliographic coupling analysis

Network diagram and overlay visualization of keywords

Figure 4.

Network diagram and overlay visualization of keywords

A framework for conflict management in virtual teams

Figure 5.

A framework for conflict management in virtual teams

Most cited journals

Rank Journal Citations Papers Citations per paper
1 Organ Sci 839 4 209.75
2 Acad. Manage. J 583 2 291.50
3 J. Manage. Inform. Syst 380 6 63.33
4 J. Int. Bus. Stud 345 1 345.00
5 Inf. Manage 292 4 73.00
6 Small Group Res 267 8 33.38
7 Int. J. Confl. Manage 207 2 103.50
8 J. Manag 188 3 62.67
9 Group Decis. Negot 120 3 40.00
10 J. World Bus 92 2 46.00
11 Group Dyn.-Theory Res. Pract 73 2 36.50
12 Comput. Hum. Behav 69 3 23.00
13 J. Manage. Psychol 58 3 19.33
14 Hum. Relat 57 3 19.00
15 J. Int. Manag 52 3 17.33
16 Int. J. Proj. Manag 51 3 17.00
17 Int. J. Electron. Commer 45 1 45.00
18 J. Appl. Psychol 39 1 39.00
19 Group Organ. Manage 36 2 18.00
20 J. Prod. Innov. Manage 36 1 36.00

Most prolific authors

Rank Authors Papers Citations Citations per paper
1 Ahuja, M 3 138 46
2 Staples, DS 3 174 58
3 Zornoza, A 3 69 23
4 Aliyev, M 2 6 3
5 Bierly, PE 2 48 24
6 Gibbs, JL 2 13 6.5
7 Glikson, E 2 17 8.5
8 Gonzalez-Navarro, P 2 45 22.5
9 Hertel, G 2 55 27.5
10 Hill, N 2 26 13
11 Hinds, PJ 2 574 287
12 Hunter, EM 2 13 6.5
13 Lin, CP 2 43 21.5
14 Majchrzak, A 2 379 189.5
15 Marks, A 2 22 11
16 Martinez-Moreno, E 2 45 22.5
17 Mykytyn, P 2 137 68.5
18 Paul, S 2 137 68.5
19 Sarker, S 2 106 53
20 Sarker, S 2 106 53
21 Seetharaman, P 2 137 68.5
22 Stark, EM 2 48 24
23 Tsai, Y-H 2 43 21.5
24 Vahtera, P 2 6 3

Most cited authors

Rank Authors Papers Citations
1 Hinds, PJ 2 574
2 Bailey, DE 1 399
3 Majchrzak, A 2 379
4 Massey, AP 1 365
Montoya-Weiss, MM 1 365
Song, M 1 365
5 Dougherty, DJ 1 348
Faraj, S 1 348
Griffith, TL 1 348
Zammuto, RF 1 348
6 Jonsen, K 1 345
Maznevski, ML 1 345
Stahl, GK 1 345
Voigt, A 1 345
7 Crisp, CB 1 218
Jarvenpaa, SL 1 218
Kim, JW 1 218
Polzer, JT 1 218
8 Gilson, LL 1 178
Hakonen, M 1 178
Maynard, MT 1 178
Vartiainen, M 1 178
Young, NCJ 1 178
9 Mortensen, M 1 175
10 Staples, DS 3 174

Criteria of the co-citation analysis

Cited references Cited authors Cited journals
Total 5,814 3,872 1,984
Threshold for inclusion in the analysis Cited by eight papers Cited by 12 papers Cited by 20 papers
Included in the analysis 91 93 93

Co-citation analysis

Cited references Citations Cited Authors Citations Cited Journals Citations
1 Cramton, C. D. (2001). The mutual knowledge problem and its consequences in geographically dispersed teams. Organization Science12(3), 346–371 43 Jehn, KA 101 Organ Sci 456
2 Jarvenpaa, S. L., and Leidner, D. E. (1999). Communication and trust in global virtual teams. Organization Science10(6), 791–815 43 Jarvenpaa, SL 85 J Appl Psychol 435
3 Martins, L. L., Gilson, L. L., and Maynard, M. T. (2004). Virtual teams: What do we know and where do we go from here?. Journal of management30(6), 805–835 43 Cramton, CD 73 Acad Manage J 352
4 Mortensen, M. and Hinds, P.J. (2001), “Conflict and shared identity in geographically distributed teams”, International Journal of Conflict Management, Vol. 12 No. 3, pp. 212–238 33 Hinds, PJ 73 Acad Manage Rev 224
5 Montoya-Weiss, M. M., Massey, A. P., and Song, M. (2001). Getting it together: Temporal coordination and conflict management in global virtual teams. Academy of Management Journal44(6), 1251–1262 32 Kirkman, BL 53 Admin Sci Quart 223
6 Hinds, P. J., and Bailey, D. E. (2003). Out of sight, out of sync: Understanding conflict in distributed teams. Organization Science14(6), 615–632 31 Walther, JB 53 J Manage 217
7 Maznevski, M. L., and Chudoba, K. M. (2000). Bridging space over time: Global virtual team dynamics and effectiveness. Organization Science11(5), 473–492 28 Martins, LL 51 Mis Quart 197
8 Hinds, P. J., and Mortensen, M. (2005). Understanding conflict in geographically distributed teams: The moderating effects of shared identity, shared context, and spontaneous communication. Organization Science16(3), 290–307 28 Gibson, CB 48 Small Gr Res 166
9 Jehn, K. A. (1995). A multimethod examination of the benefits and detriments of intragroup conflict. Administrative science quarterly, 256–282 25 De Dreu, CKW 42 J Pers Soc Psychol 127
10 Gibson, C. B., and Gibbs, J. L. (2006). Unpacking the concept of virtuality: The effects of geographic dispersion, electronic dependence, dynamic structure, and national diversity on team innovation. Administrative Science Quarterly51(3), 451–495 24 Daft, RL 41 Organ Behav Hum Dec 120

Bibliographic coupling analysis

Articles Link
strength
Cited Authors Citations Cited Journals Citations
1 Raghuram, S., Hill, N. S., Gibbs, J. L., and Maruping, L. M. (2019). Virtual work: Bridging research clusters. Academy of Management Annals13(1), 308–341 1052 Gibbs, JL 5268 Small Group Research 2515
2 Breuer, C., Hüffmeier, J., and Hertel, G. (2016). Does trust matter more in virtual teams? A meta-analysis of trust and team effectiveness considering virtuality and documentation as moderators. Journal of Applied Psychology101(8), 1151 552 Hill, NS 5264 Journal Of Management Information Systems 1865
3 Harush, R., Lisak, A., and Glikson, E. (2018). The bright side of social categorization: The role of global identity in reducing relational conflict in multicultural distributed teams. Cross Cultural and Strategic Management25(1), 134–156 547 Maruping, LM 3739 Academy Of Management Annals 1527
4 Saunders, C. S., and Ahuja, M. K. (2006). Are all distributed teams the same? Differentiating between temporary and ongoing distributed teams. Small Group Research37(6), 662–700 536 Raghuram, S 3739 Human Resource Management Review 1101
5 MacDuffie, J. P. (2007). HRM and distributed work: Managing people across distances. The Academy of Management Annals, 1(1), 549–615 531 Zornoza, A 3635 Organization Science 1070
6 Stahl, G. K., Maznevski, M. L., Voigt, A., and Jonsen, K. (2010). Unraveling the effects of cultural diversity in teams: A meta-analysis of research on multicultural work groups. Journal of International Business Studies41(4), 690–709 520 Ahuja, M 3048 Human Relations 1023
7 Brahm, T., and Kunze, F. (2012). The role of trust climate in virtual teams. Journal of Managerial Psychology, 27(6), 595–614 508 Hertel, G 3020 Information and Management 952
8 Schiller, S. Z., and Mandviwalla, M. (2007). Virtual team research: An analysis of theory use and a framework for theory appropriation. Small group research38(1), 12–59 502 Glikson, E 2924 International Journal of Project Management 856
9 Schaubroeck, J. M., and Yu, A. (2017). When does virtuality help or hinder teams? Core team characteristics as contingency factors. Human resource management review27(4), 635–647 500 Mykytyn, PP 2562 Journal of Management 774
10 Hill, N. S., and Bartol, K. M. (2016). Empowering leadership and effective collaboration in geographically dispersed teams. Personnel Psychology69(1), 159–198 488 Paul, S 2562 Journal of Managerial Psychology 755

Main topics from the co-occurrence of keywords analysis

Topic Keywords
Outputs Performance, Decision-Making, Conflict Management, Trust, Information, Impact, Information Systems, Richness, Cooperation, Geographic Dispersion, Behavior
Dynamics Distributed Teams, Knowledge, Technology, Computer-Mediated Communication, Understanding Conflict, Global Virtual Teams, Shared Identity, Group Decision-Making, E-Mail, Cultural-Diversity
Differences Face-To-Face, Work, Intragroup Conflict, Leadership, Task, Top Management Teams, Interpersonal-Trust, Task Conflict, Strategic Decision-Making, Personality
Processes Communication, Organization, Diversity, Management, Time, Demographic Diversity, Group-Performance, Consequences

Most influential articles

  Top 20 most cited articles (normalised)   Top 20 most cited (absolute)   Top 20 important articles by bibliographic coupling  
Rank Article Norm
citations
Article Total
citatons
Article Link
strength
1 Stahl et al. (2010) 5.20 Hinds and Bailey (2003) 399 Raghuram et al. (2019) 1052
2 Zammuto et al. (2007) 4.62 Montoya-Weiss et al. (2001) 365 Breuer et al. (2016) 552
3 Klitmøller and Lauring (2013) 3.98 Zammuto et al. (2007) 348 Harush et al. (2018) 547
4 Jimenez et al. (2017) 3.68 Stahl et al. (2010) 345 Saunders and Ahuja (2006) 536
5 Gilson et al. (2015) 3.47 Polzer et al. (2006b, 2006a) 218 MacDuffie, JP (2007) 531
6 Sarker et al. (2011) 3.25 Gilson et al. (2015) 178 Stahl et al. (2010) 520
7 Breuer et al. (2016) 2.76 Mortensen and Hinds (2001) 175 Brahm and Kunze (2012) 508
8 Grossman and Feitosa (2018) 2.67 Shachaf (2008) 156 Schiller and Mandviwalla (2007) 502
9 Sarker et al. (2018) 2.67 Kankanhalli et al. (2006) 145 Schaubroeck and Yu (2017) 500
10 Raghuram et al. (2019) 2.50 Staples and Zhao (2006) 101 Hill and Bartol (2016) 488
11 Ruiller et al. (2019) 2.50 Sarker et al. (2011) 100 Peñarroja et al. (2013) 475
12 Ghislieri et al. (2017) 2.45 Saunders and Ahuja (2006) 87 Zimmermann (2011) 472
13 Gibbs et al. (2017) 2.10 Paul et al. (2004b) 74 Gibbs et al. (2017) 459
14 Hinds and Bailey (2003) 1.92 Klitmøller and Lauring (2013) 72 Kankanhalli et al. (2006) 441
15 Malhotra and Majchrzak (2014) 1.77 Paul et al. (2004a) 63 Malhotra and Majchrzak (2014) 436
16 Hill and Bartol (2016) 1.77 Boh et al. (2007) 62 Bierly et al. (2009) 433
17 Shachaf (2008) 1.68 Curseu and Schruijer (2010) 60 Raab et al. (2014) 423
18 Ortiz de Guinea et al. (2012) 1.68 Ortiz de Guinea et al. (2012) 53 Chiravuri et al. (2011) 420
19 Bradley et al. (2013) 1.60 Schiller and Mandviwalla (2007) 47 Connelly and Turel (2016) 418
20 Polzer et al. (2006b, 2006a) 1.58 Yun et al. (2012) 45 Hinds and Bailey (2003) 414

References

Ashforth, B.E. and Mael, F. (1989), “Social identity theory and the organization, academy of management review”, Academy of Management Review, Vol. 14 No. 1, pp. 20-39.

Ayoko, O.B. and Konrad, A.M. (2012), “Leaders’ transformational, conflict, and emotion management behaviors in culturally diverse workgroups”, Equality, Diversity and Inclusion: An International Journal, Vol. 31 No. 8, pp. 694-724.

Barclay, S., Momen, N., Case-Upton, S., Kuhn, I. and Smith, E. (2011), “End-of-life care conversations with heart failure patients: a systematic literature review and narrative synthesis”, British Journal of General Practice, Vol. 61 No. 582, pp. e49-e62.

Batarseh, F.S., Usher, J.M. and Daspit, J.J. (2017), “Absorptive capacity in virtual teams: examining the influence on diversity and innovation”, Journal of Knowledge Management, Vol. 21 No. 6, pp. 1342-1361.

Bierly, P.E., Stark, E.M. and Kessler, E.H. (2009), “The moderating effects of virtuality on the antecedents and outcome of NPD team trust”, Journal of Product Innovation Management, Vol. 26 No. 5, pp. 551-565.

Boh, W.F., Ren, Y., Kiesler, S. and Bussjaeger, R. (2007), “Expertise and collaboration in the geographically dispersed organization”, Organization Science, Vol. 18 No. 4, pp. 595-612.

Bradley, B.H., Baur, J.E., Banford, C.G. and Postlethwaite, B.E. (2013), “Team players and collective performance: how agreeableness affects team performance over time”, Small Group Research, Vol. 44 No. 6, pp. 680-711.

Brahm, T. and Kunze, F. (2012), “The role of trust climate in virtual teams”, Journal of Managerial Psychology, Vol. 27 No. 6, pp. 595-614.

Brett, J., Behfar, K. and Kern, M.C. (2006), “Managing multicultural teams”, Harvard Business Review, Vol. 84 No. 11, pp. 155-164.

Breuer, C., Hüffmeier, J. and Hertel, G. (2016), “Does trust matter more in virtual teams? A meta-analysis of trust and team effectiveness considering virtuality and documentation as moderators”, Journal of Applied Psychology, Vol. 101 No. 8, pp. 1151-1177.

Caputo, A. (2013), “A literature review of cognitive biases in negotiation processes”, International Journal of Conflict Management, Vol. 24 No. 4, pp. 274-398.

Caputo, A., Ayoko, O.B. and Amoo, N. (2018a), “The moderating role of cultural intelligence in the relationship between cultural orientations and conflict management styles”, Journal of Business Research, Vol. 89, pp. 10-20.

Caputo, A., Marzi, G., Maley, J. and Silic, M. (2019), “Ten years of conflict management research 2007-2017: an update on themes, concepts and relationships”, International Journal of Conflict Management, Vol. 30 No. 1, pp. 87-110.

Caputo, A., Marzi, G. and Pellegrini, M.M. (2016a), “The internet of things in manufacturing innovation processes: development and application of a conceptual framework”, Business Process Management Journal, Vol. 22 No. 2, pp. 383-402.

Caputo, A., Marzi, G., Pellegrini, M.M. and Rialti, R. (2018b), “Conflict management in family businesses: a bibliometric analysis and systematic literature review”, International Journal of Conflict Management, Vol. 29 No. 4, pp. 519-542.

Caputo, A., Pellegrini, M.M., Dabic, M. and Dana, L.-P. (2016b), “Internationalisation of firms from central and eastern Europe”, European Business Review, Vol. 28 No. 6, pp. 630-651.

Caputo, A., Pizzi, S., Pellegrini, M.M. and Dabić, M. (2021), “Digitalization and business models: where are we going? A science map of the field”, Journal of Business Research, Vol. 123, pp. 489-501.

Chiravuri, A., Nazareth, D. and Ramamurthy, K. (2011), “Cognitive conflict and consensus generation in virtual teams during knowledge capture: comparative effectiveness of techniques”, Journal of Management Information Systems, Vol. 28 No. 1, pp. 311-350.

Clark, S.C. (2000), “Work/family border theory: a new theory of work/family balance”, Human Relations, Vol. 53 No. 6, pp. 747-770.

Connelly, C.E. and Turel, O. (2016), “Effects of team emotional authenticity on virtual team performance”, Frontiers in Psychology, Vol. 7, p. 1336, doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01336.

Cramton, C.D. (2001a), “The mutual knowledge problem and its consequences in geographically dispersed teams”, Organization Science, Vol. 12 No. 3, pp. 346-371.

Cramton, C.D. (2001b), “The mutual knowledge problem and its consequences for dispersed collaboration”, Organization Science, Vol. 12 No. 3, pp. 346-371.

Curseu, P.L. and Schruijer, S.G.L. (2010), “Does conflict shatter trust or does trust obliterate conflict? Revisiting the relationships between team diversity, conflict, and trust”, Group Dynamics – Theory Research and Practice, Vol. 14 No. 1, pp. 66-79.

Dabić, M., Maley, J., Dana, L.-P., Novak, I., Pellegrini, M.M. and Caputo, A. (2020), “Pathways of SME internationalization: a bibliometric and systematic review”, Small Business Economics, Vol. 55 No. 3, pp. 705-725, doi: 10.1007/s11187-019-00181-6.

De Crescenzo, V., Ribeiro-Soriano, D.E. and Covin, J.G. (2020), “Exploring the viability of equity crowdfunding as a fundraising instrument: a configurational analysis of contingency factors that lead to crowdfunding success and failure”, Journal of Business Research, Vol. 115, pp. 348-356.

De Dreu, C.K.W. and Van de Vliert, E. (1994), “Optimizing performance by conflict stimulation”, International Journal of Conflict Management, Vol. 5 No. 3, pp. 211-222.

De Dreu, C.K.W. and Weingart, L.R. (2003), “Task versus relationship conflict, team performance, and team member satisfaction: a meta-analysis”, Journal of Applied Psychology, Vol. 88 No. 4, p. 741.

DeRosa, D.M., Hantula, D.A., Kock, N. and D’Arcy, J. (2004), “Trust and leadership in virtual teamwork: a media naturalness perspective”, Human Resource Management, Vol. 43 No. 2-3, pp. 219-232.

DeSanctis, G. and Monge, P. (1999), “Introduction to the special issue: communication processes for virtual organizations”, Organization Science, Vol. 10 No. 6, pp. 693-703.

Donovan, S.S. (1993), “Flowing past organizational walls”, Research-Technology Management, Vol. 36 No. 4, p. 30, doi: 10.1080/08956308.1993.11670912.

Duriau, V.J., Reger, R.K. and Pfarrer, M.D. (2007), “A content analysis of the content analysis literature in organization studies: research themes, data sources, and methodological refinements”, Organizational Research Methods, Vol. 10 No. 1, pp. 5-34.

Ebrahim, N.A. (2015), “Virtual R&D teams: a new model for product development”, International Journal of Innovation, Vol. 3 No. 2, pp. 1-27.

Fiol, C.M. and O’Connor, E.J. (2005), “Identification in face-to-face, hybrid, and pure virtual teams: untangling the contradictions”, Organization Science, Vol. 16 No. 1, pp. 19-32.

Friedman, R.A. and Currall, S.C. (2003), “Conflict escalation: dispute exacerbating elements of E-mail communication”, Human Relations, Vol. 56 No. 11, pp. 1325-1347.

Garro-Abarca, V., Palos-Sanchez, P. and Aguayo-Camacho, M. (2021), “Virtual teams in times of pandemic: Factors that influence performance”, Frontiers in Psychology, Vol. 12, p. 232.

Ghislieri, C., Emanuel, F., Molino, M., Cortese, C.G. and Colombo, L. (2017), “New technologies smart, or harm work-family boundaries management? Gender differences in conflict and enrichment using the JD-R theory”, Frontiers in Psychology, Vol. 8, p. 1070.

Gibbs, J.L., Sivunen, A. and Boyraz, M. (2017), “Investigating the impacts of team type and design on virtual team processes”, Human Resource Management Review, Vol. 27 No. 4, pp. 590-603.

Gibson, C.B. and Gibbs, J.L. (2006), “Unpacking the concept of virtuality: the effects of geographic dispersion, electronic dependence, dynamic structure, and national diversity on team innovation”, Administrative Science Quarterly, Vol. 51 No. 3, pp. 451-495.

Gibson, C.B., Huang, L., Kirkman, B.L. and Shapiro, D.L. (2014), “Where global and virtual meet: the value of examining the intersection of these elements in Twenty-First-Century teams”, in Morgeson, F.P. (Ed.), Annual Review of Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavior, Vol. 1 No. 1, pp. 217-244.

Gilson, L.L., Maynard, M.T., Young, N.C.J., Vartiainen, M. and Hakonen, M. (2015), “Virtual teams research: 10 years, 10 themes, and 10 opportunities”, Journal of Management, Vol. 41 No. 5, pp. 1313-1337.

Griffith, T.L., Sawyer, J.E. and Neale, M.A. (2003), “Vlrtualness and knowledge in teams: Managing the love triangle of organizations, individuals, and information technology”, MIS Quarterly: Management Information Systems, Vol. 27 No. 2, pp. 265-287, doi: 10.2307/30036531.

Grossman, R. and Feitosa, J. (2018), “Team trust over time: modeling reciprocal and contextual influences in action teams”, Human Resource Management Review, Vol. 28 No. 4, pp. 395-410.

Gulati, R. (1995), “Does familiarity breed trust? The implications of repeated ties for contractual choice in alliances”, Academy of Management Journal, Academy of Management, Vol. 38 No. 1, pp. 85-112.

Harush, R., Lisak, A. and Glikson, E. (2018), “The bright side of social categorization the role of global identity in reducing relational conflict in multicultural distributed teams”, Cross Cultural and Strategic Management, Vol. 25 No. 1, pp. 134-156.

Hilbrecht, M., Shaw, S.M., Johnson, L.C. and Andrey, J. (2008), “I’m home for the kids’: contradictory implications for work–life balance of teleworking mothers”, Gender, Work and Organization, Vol. 15 No. 5, pp. 454-476.

Hill, N.S. and Bartol, K.M. (2016), “Empowering leadership and effective collaboration in geographically dispersed teams”, Personnel Psychology, Vol. 69 No. 1, pp. 159-198.

Hinds, P.J. and Bailey, D.E. (2003), “Out of sight, out of sync: understanding conflict in distributed teams”, Organization Science, Vol. 14 No. 6, pp. 615-632.

Hinds, P.J. and Mortensen, M. (2005), “Understanding conflict in geographically distributed teams: the moderating effects of shared identity, shared context, and spontaneous communication”, Organization Science, Vol. 16 No. 3, pp. 290-307.

Hitt, M.A., Biermant, L., Shimizu, K. and Kochhar, R. (2001), “Direct and moderating effects of human Capital on strategy and performance in professional service firms: a resource-based perspective”, Academy of Management Journal, Academy of Management, Vol. 44 No. 1, pp. 13-28.

Hofstede, G. (1991), Cultures and Organizations: Software of the Mind, McGraw-Hill, London.

Inkinen, H. (2016), “Review of empirical research on knowledge management practices and firm performance”, Journal of Knowledge Management, Vol. 20 No. 2, pp. 230-257.

Jarneving, B. (2007), “Bibliographic coupling and its application to research-front and other core documents”, Journal of Informetrics, Vol. 1 No. 4, pp. 287-307, doi: 10.1016/j.joi.2007.07.004.

Jarvenpaa, S.L. and Leidner, D.E. (1999), “Communication and trust in global virtual teams”, Organization Science, Vol. 10 No. 6, pp. 791-815.

Jehn, K.A. (1995), “A multimethod examination of the benefits and detriments of intragroup conflict”, Administrative Science Quarterly, Vol. 40 No. 2, pp. 256-282.

Jimenez, A., Boehe, D.M., Taras, V. and Caprar, D.V. (2017), “Working across boundaries: current and future perspectives on global virtual teams”, Journal of International Management, Vol. 23 No. 4, pp. 341-349.

Kankanhalli, A., Tan, B.C.Y. and Kwok-Kee, W.E.I. (2006), “Conflict and performance in global virtual teams”, Journal of Management Information Systems, Vol. 23 No. 3, pp. 237-274.

Kayworth, T.R. and Leidner, D.E. (2002), “Leadership effectiveness in global virtual teams”, Journal of Management Information Systems, Vol. 18 No. 3, pp. 7-40.

Klitmøller, A. and Lauring, J. (2013), “When global virtual teams share knowledge: media richness, cultural difference and language commonality”, Journal of World Business, Vol. 48 No. 3, pp. 398-406.

Kraus, S., Ribeiro-Soriano, D. and Schüssler, M. (2018), “Fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA) in entrepreneurship and innovation research – the rise of a method”, International Entrepreneurship and Management Journal, Vol. 14 No. 1, pp. 15-33.

Kraut, R.E., Fussell, S.R., Brennan, S.E. and Siegel, J. (2002), “Understanding effects of proximity on collaboration: implications for technologies to support remote collaborative work”, in Hinds, P. and Kiesler, S. (Eds), Distributed Work, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, pp. 137-162.

McDonough, E.F., Kahn, K.B. and Griffin, A. (1999), “Managing communication in global product development teams”, IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management, Vol. 46 No. 4, pp. 375-386.

Majchrzak, A., Malhotra, A., Stamps, J. and Lipnack, J. (2004), “Can absence make a team grow stronger?”, Harvard Business Review, Vol. 82 No. 5, pp. 131-137.

Malhotra, A. and Majchrzak, A. (2014), “Enhancing performance of geographically distributed teams through targeted use of information and communication technologies”, Human Relations, Vol. 67 No. 4, pp. 389-411.

Malhotra, A., Majchrzak, A. and Rosen, B. (2007), “Leading virtual teams”, Academy of Management Perspectives, Vol. 21 No. 1, pp. 60-70.

Manesh, M.F., Pellegrini, M.M., Marzi, G. and Dabic, M. (2020), “Knowledge management in the fourth industrial revolution: mapping the literature and scoping future avenues”, IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management, Vol. 68 No. 1, pp. 289-300.

Marks, M.A., Mathieu, J.E. and Zaccaro, S.J. (2001), “A temporally based framework and taxonomy of team processes”, Academy of Management Briarcliff Manor, Vol. 26 No. 3, pp. 356-376, doi: 10.5465/Amr.2001.4845785.

Massey, A.P. Montoya-Weiss, M.M. Hung, Y. Massey, A.P. and Montoya-Weiss, M.M. (2014), “Because time matters: temporal coordination in global virtual project teams because time matters: Temporal coordination in global virtual”, Vol. 1222, doi: 10.1080/07421222.2003.11045742.

May, A. and Carter, C. (2001), “A case study of virtual team working in the European automotive industry”, International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics, Vol. 27 No. 3, pp. 171-186.

Maznevski, M., Davison, S.C. and Jonsen, K. (2006), “19 Global virtual team dynamics and effectiveness”, Handbook of Research in International Human Resource Management, Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, p. 364.

Montoya-Weiss, M.M., Massey, A.P. and Song, M. (2001), “Getting it together: temporal coordination and conflict management in global virtual teams”, Academy of Management Journal, Vol. 44 No. 6, pp. 1251-1262.

Mortensen, M. and Hinds, P.J. (2001), “Conflict and shared identity in geographically distributed teams”, International Journal of Conflict Management, Vol. 12 No. 3, pp. 212-238.

Ortiz De Guinea, A., Webster, J. and Staples, D.S. (2012), “A meta-analysis of the consequences of virtualness on team functioning”, Information and Management, Vol. 49 No. 6, pp. 301-308.

Pappas, N., Caputo, A., Pellegrini, M.M., Marzi, G. and Michopoulou, E. (2021), “The complexity of decision-making processes and IoT adoption in accommodation SMEs”, Journal of Business Research, Vol. 131, pp. 573-583, doi: 10.1016/j.jbusres.2021.01.010.

Park, S., Mathieu, J.E. and Grosser, T.J. (2020), “A network conceptualization of team conflict”, Academy of Management Review, Vol. 45 No. 2, pp. 352-375.

Paul, S., Samarah, I.M., Seetharaman, P. and Mykytyn, P.P. (2004a), “An empirical investigation of collaborative conflict management style in group support system-based global virtual teams”, Journal of Management Information Systems, Vol. 21 No. 3, pp. 185-222.

Paul, S., Seetharaman, P., Samarah, I. and Mykytyn, P.P. (2004b), “Impact of heterogeneity and collaborative conflict management style on the performance of synchronous global virtual teams”, Information and Management, Vol. 41 No. 3, pp. 303-321.

Pelled, L.H. (1996), “Demographic diversity, conflict, and work group outcomes: an intervening process theory”, Organization Science, Vol. 7 No. 6, pp. 615-631.

Pellegrini, M.M., Ciampi, F., Marzi, G. and Orlando, B. (2020), “The relationship between knowledge management and leadership: mapping the field and providing future research avenues”, Journal of Knowledge Management, Vol. 24 No. 6, pp. 1445-1492.

Peñarroja, V., Orengo, V., Zornoza, A. and Hernández, A. (2013), “The effects of virtuality level on task-related collaborative behaviors: the mediating role of team trust”, Computers in Human Behavior, Vol. 29 No. 3, pp. 967-974.

Pittaway, L. and Cope, J. (2007), “Entrepreneurship education a systematic review of the evidence”, International Small Business Journal: Researching Entrepreneurship, Vol. 25 No. 5, pp. 479-510.

Polley, R.B. and McGrath, J.E. (1984), “Groups: interaction and performance”, Administrative Science Quarterly, Vol. 29 No. 3, p. 469.

Polzer, J.T., Crisp, C.B., Jarvenpaa, S.L. and Kim, J.W. (2006a), “Extending the faultline model to geographically dispersed teams: how colocated subgroups can impair group functioning”, Academy of Management Journal, Vol. 49 No. 4, pp. 679-692.

Polzer, J.T., Crisp, C.B., Jarvenpaa, S.L., Kim, J.W., Polzer, J.T., Crisp, C.B. and Kim, J.W. (2006b), “Subgroups can impair group functioning linked references are available on JSTOR for this article: extending the fault line model to geographically dispersed teams: how colocated subgroups can impair group functioning”, Academy of Management Journal, Vol. 49 No. 4, pp. 679-692.

Presbitero, A. and Toledano, L.S. (2018), “Global team members’ performance and the roles of cross-cultural training, cultural intelligence, and contact intensity: the case of global teams in IT offshoring sector”, The International Journal of Human Resource Management, Vol. 29 No. 14, pp. 2188-2208.

Raab, K.J., Ambos, B. and Tallman, S. (2014), “Strong or invisible hands? - Managerial involvement in the knowledge sharing process of globally dispersed knowledge groups”, Journal of World Business, Vol. 49 No. 1, pp. 32-41.

Raghuram, S., Hill, N.S., Gibbs, J.L. and Maruping, L.M. (2019), “virtual work: bridging research clusters”, Academy of Management Annals, Vol. 13 No. 1, pp. 308-341.

Ragin, C.C. (2008), Redesigning Social Inquiry: Set Relations in Social Research, University of Chicago Press, Chicago.

Rialti, R., Marzi, G., Caputo, A. and Mayah, K.A. (2020), “Achieving strategic flexibility in the era of big data: the importance of knowledge management and ambidexterity”, Management Decision, Vol. 58 No. 8, pp. 1585-1600, doi: 10.1108/MD-09-2019-1237.

Ruiller, C. and Dumas, M. (2018), “‘You have got a friend’ the value of perceived proximity for teleworking success in dispersed teams”, Team Performance Management, Vol. 25 Nos 1/2, pp. 2-29.

Ruiller, C., Van Der Heijden, B., Chedotel, F. and Dumas, M. (2019), “‘You have got a friend’: the value of perceived proximity for teleworking success in dispersed teams”, Team Performance Management, Vol. 25 Nos 1/2, pp. 2-29, doi: 10.1108/TPM-11-2017-0069.

Sarker, S., Ahuja, M. and Sarker, S. (2018), “Work – life conflict of globally distributed software development personnel: an empirical investigation using border theory work – life conflict of globally distributed software development personnel: an empirical investigation using border theory”, Information Systems Research, Vol. 29 No. 1, p. 24.

Sarker, S., Ahuja, M., Sarker, S. and Kirkeby, S. (2011), “The role of communication and trust in global virtual teams”, Journal of Management Information Systems, Vol. 1222 No. 1, pp. 273-310, doi: 10.2753/MIS0742-1222280109.

Saunders, C.S. and Ahuja, M.K. (2006), “Are all distributed teams the same? Differentiating between temporary and ongoing distributed teams”, Small Group Research, Vol. 37 No. 6, pp. 662-700.

Schaubroeck, J.M. and Yu, A. (2017), “When does virtuality help or hinder teams? Core team characteristics as contingency factors”, Human Resource Management Review, Vol. 27 No. 4, pp. 635-647.

Schiller, S.Z. and Mandviwalla, M. (2007), “Virtual team research – an analysis of theory use and a framework for theory appropriation”, Small Group Research, Vol. 38 No. 1, pp. 12-59.

Shachaf, P. (2008), “Cultural diversity and information and communication technology impacts on global virtual teams: an exploratory study”, Information and Management, Vol. 45 No. 2, pp. 131-142.

Sheehan, C., De Cieri, H., Cooper, B. and Shea, T. (2016), “Strategic implications of HR role management in a dynamic environment”, Personnel Review, Vol. 45 No. 2, pp. 353-373.

Short, J.C. and Palmer, T.B. (2008), “The application of diction to content analysis research in strategic management”, Organizational Research Methods, Vol. 11 No. 4, pp. 727-752.

Smith, K.G., Smith, K.A., Olian, J.D., Sims, H.P., O’Bannon, D.P. and Scully, J.A. (1994), “Top management team demography and process: the role of social integration and communication”, Administrative Science Quarterly, Vol. 39 No. 3, p. 412.

Stahl, G.K., Maznevski, M.L., Voigt, A. and Jonsen, K. (2010), “Unraveling the effects of cultural diversity in teams: a meta-analysis of research on multicultural work groups”, Journal of International Business Studies, Vol. 41 No. 4, pp. 690-709.

Staples, D.S. and Webster, J. (2008), “Exploring the effects of trust, task interdependence and virtualness on knowledge sharing in teams”, Information Systems Journal, Vol. 18 No. 6, pp. 617-640.

Staples, D.S. and Zhao, L. (2006), “The effects of cultural diversity in virtual teams versus face-to-face teams”, Group Decision and Negotiation, Vol. 15 No. 4, pp. 389-406.

Tan, F.B. and Hunter, M.G. (2002), “The repertory grid technique: a method for the study of cognition in information systems”, MIS Quarterly, Vol. 26 No. 1, pp. 39-57.

Thomas, D.M. and Bostrom, R.P. (2010), “Vital signs for virtual teams: an empirically developed trigger model for technology adaptation interventions”, MIS Quarterly: Management Information Systems, University of Minnesota, Vol. 34 No. 1, pp. 115-142.

Thorpe, R., Holt, R., Macpherson, A. and Pittaway, L. (2005), “Using knowledge within small and medium-sized firms: a systematic review of the evidence”, International Journal of Management Reviews, Vol. 7 No. 4, pp. 257-281.

Todeschini, R. and Baccini, A. (2016), Handbook of Bibliometric Indicators: Quantitative Tools for Studying and Evaluating Research, John Wiley and Sons, Weinheim.

Tranfield, D., Denyer, D. and Smart, P. (2003), “Towards a methodology for developing evidence-informed management knowledge by means of systematic review”, British Journal of Management, Vol. 14 No. 3, pp. 207-222.

Turel, O. and Zhang, Y. (2010), “Does virtual team composition matter? Trait and problem-solving configuration effects on team performance”, Behaviour and Information Technology, Vol. 29 No. 4, pp. 363-375.

van der Kleij, R., Maarten Schraagen, J., Werkhoven, P. and De Dreu, C.K.W. (2009), “How conversations change over time in face-to-face and Video-Mediated communication”, Small Group Research, Vol. 40 No. 4, pp. 355-381.

Van Eck, N.J. and Waltman, L. (2007), “VOS: a new method for visualizing similarities between objects”, Advances in Data Analysis, Springer, Berlin, pp. 299-306.

Van Eck, N.J. and Waltman, L. (2010), “Software survey: VOSviewer, a computer program for bibliometric mapping”, Scientometrics, Vol. 84 No. 2, pp. 523-538.

Van Eck, N.J. and Waltman, L. (2016), VosViewer Manual: Manual for VosViewer Version 1.6. 5, CWTS, Leiden.

Wakefield, R.L., Leidner, D.E. and Garrison, G. (2008), “Research note a model of conflict, leadership, and performance in virtual teams”, Information Systems Research, Vol. 19 No. 4, pp. 434-455.

Weisband, S. (2002), “Maintaining awareness in distributed team collaboration: implications for leadership and performance”, in Hinds, P. and Kiesler, S. (Eds), Distributed Work, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, pp. 311-333.

Wells, J.E. and Aicher, T.J. (2013), “Follow the leader: a relational demography, similarity attraction, and social identity theory of leadership approach of a team’s performance”, Gender Issues, Vol. 30 Nos 1/4, pp. 1-14.

Yakovleva, M., Reilly, R.R. and Werko, R. (2010), “Why do we trust? Moving beyond individual to dyadic perceptions”, Journal of Applied Psychology, Vol. 95 No. 1, p. 79.

Yun, H., Kettinger, W.J. and Lee, C.C. (2012), “A new open door: the smartphone’s impact on work-to-life conflict, stress, and resistance”, International Journal of Electronic Commerce, Vol. 16 No. 4, pp. 121-152.

Zammuto, R.F., Griffith, T.L., Majchrzak, A., Dougherty, D.J. and Faraj, S. (2007), “Information technology and the changing fabric of organization”, Organization Science, Vol. 18 No. 5, pp. 749-762.

Zhang, J., Yu, Q., Zheng, F., Long, C., Lu, Z. and Duan, Z. (2016), “Comparing keywords plus of WOS and author keywords: a case study of patient adherence research”, Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, Vol. 67 No. 4, pp. 967-972.

Zimmermann, A. (2011), “Interpersonal relationships in transnational, virtual teams: towards a configurational perspective”, International Journal of Management Reviews, Vol. 13 No. 1, pp. 59-78.

Zupic, I. and Čater, T. (2015), “Bibliometric methods in management and organization”, Organizational Research Methods, Vol. 18 No. 3, pp. 429-472.

Corresponding author

Andrea Caputo can be contacted at: andrea.caputo@unitn.it

About the authors

Andrea Caputo is an Associate Professor in Management at the University of Trento, Italy, and at the University of Lincoln, UK, where he is part of the UNESCO Chair in Responsible Foresight for Sustainable Development. His main research interests include entrepreneurial decision-making, negotiation, digitalization and sustainability, internationalization and strategic management of SMEs. He is the editor of the book series “Entrepreneurial Behaviour” (Emerald), and Associate Editor of the Journal of Management and Organization. His research was published in over 100 contributions, including articles in highly ranked journals, e.g. HRM Journal, Journal of Business Research, Small Business Economics, International Journal of Conflict Management, Journal of Knowledge Management, Business Strategy and the Environment and IEEE TEM among the others.

Mariya Kargina is a PhD Candidate in Organizational Behavior at the University of Rome “Tor Vergata”. She holds a Master of Science from the University of Lincoln, UK. Her research interests are cross-cultural management, cultural intelligence and global virtual teams. Her research was published in the Journal of Marketing Analytics and presented at several international conferences.

Massimiliano Matteo Pellegrini is an Associate Professor of Organizational studies and Entrepreneurial behaviors at the University of Rome “Tor Vergata”. Previously, he worked at Roehampton University Business School and University of West-London. He is the editor of the book series “Entrepreneurial Behaviour” (EmeraldPublishing), Associate Editor at International Journal of Transition and Innovation System, and past Chair of the Strategic Interest Group of Entrepreneurship (E-ship SIG) at the European Academy of Management (EURAM). He published in highly ranked journals as e.g. Journal of Business Research, Small Business Economics, Journal of Business Ethics, IEEE Transaction on Engineering Management and Journal of Small Business.

Related articles