Out of Sight, Out of Sync: Understanding Conflict in Distributed Teams

The bulk of our understanding of teams is based on traditional teams in which all members are collocated and communicate face to face. However, geographically distributed teams, whose members are not collocated and must often communicate via technology, are growing in prevalence. Studies from the fi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Organization science (Providence, R.I.) R.I.), 2003-11, Vol.14 (6), p.615-632
Hauptverfasser: Hinds, Pamela J, Bailey, Diane E
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Bailey, Diane E
description The bulk of our understanding of teams is based on traditional teams in which all members are collocated and communicate face to face. However, geographically distributed teams, whose members are not collocated and must often communicate via technology, are growing in prevalence. Studies from the field are beginning to suggest that geographically distributed teams operate differently and experience different outcomes than traditional teams. For example, empirical studies suggest that distributed teams experience high levels of conflict. These empirical studies offer rich and valuable descriptions of this conflict, but they do not systematically identify the mechanisms by which conflict is engendered in distributed teams. In this paper, we develop a theory-based explanation of how geographical distribution provokes team-level conflict. We do so by considering the two characteristics that distinguish distributed teams from traditional ones: Namely, we examine how being distant from one's team members and relying on technology to mediate communication and collaborative work impacts team members. Our analysis identifies antecedents to conflict that are unique to distributed teams. We predict that conflict of all types (task, affective, and process) will be detrimental to the performance of distributed teams, a result that is contrary to much research on traditional teams. We also investigate conflict as a dynamic process to determine how teams might mitigate these negative impacts over time.
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subjects Collaboration
Communication
Communications technology
Conflict
Conflict management
Contextual information
Distributed Teams
Distributed Work
Friendship
Geographic distribution
Geography
Group dynamics
Impact analysis
Information technology
Information transfer
Intragroup relations
Mediation
Organization theory
Studies
Teams
Teamwork
Technology
Time zones
Trust
Virtual Teams
title Out of Sight, Out of Sync: Understanding Conflict in Distributed Teams
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