A team is a cooperative unit of interacting individuals who are committed to a common purpose on tasks; endowed with complementary skills, for instance, in technical competence, problem-solving ability, and emotional intelligence; and who share interdependent performance goals (with indicators and deadlines) as well as an approach to work for which they hold themselves mutually accountable.1 (People try to accomplish with others what they cannot do alone.) When they are effective, teams are typified by intelligibility of purpose, trust, open communication, clear roles, the right mix of talent and skills, full participation, individual performance, quality control, risk taking, collective delivery of products and services, an appropriate level of sponsorship and resources, and balanced work-life interactions. Their stages of development are likely universal.2 But here commonalities end: thanks to globalization and, chiefly, the advent of the Internet, unusual teams whose members may never meet face to face have come to proliferate. 3 Their distinct configurations raise unique challenges for managers, to which literature and practice are only just beginning to pay attention.
CITATION STYLE
Serrat, O. (2017). Managing Virtual Teams. In Knowledge Solutions (pp. 619–625). Springer Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-0983-9_68
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.