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SUPPORTING COLLABORATION Andreas Rio, M.Eng.

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Presentation on theme: "SUPPORTING COLLABORATION Andreas Rio, M.Eng."— Presentation transcript:

1 SUPPORTING COLLABORATION Andreas Rio, M.Eng. contact@andreasrio.com

2 Introduction The Future: Communities  The company of the future could be a collection of online communities  some are internal and others reach outside the organization’s boundaries into one’s business ecosystem;  some are designed and formed completely and others just grow on their own.  The main job of executives and managers is to foster these communities and the collaboration.  A major job of CIOs is to provide the technology to support online communities and online collaboration.

3 Teams: the basis of organizations  Organizations are becoming information based.  It will be organized not like a manufacturing organization but more like a hospital, which is team based.  Hospitals have specialty units, each with its own knowledge, training, and language;  Work in the units is done by ad hoc teams, assembled to address a patient’s condition and diagnosis.

4 Teams: the basis of organizations  Systems that contain support groups are important because most people spend 60 to 80 percent of their time working with others.  Yet, people seem to feel they are most productive when they work alone.

5 Understanding Group Characteristics of Groups  Membership  Interaction  Hierarchy  Location  Time

6 Understanding Group  Not all groups are the same. Some characteristics that differentiate groups include:  Membership – Some groups are open, some are closed.  Interaction – Some groups are loosely coupled (salespeople with their own territories), others work closely together (project team).  Hierarchy – Some groups have a chain of command (tiers of committees).  Location – Some members are co-located, some are dispersed.  Time – Some groups are short-lived, some are ongoing. Some work intensely at times, others do not.

7 Understanding Group Types of Groups  Authority Groups  Intradepartmental Groups  Project Teams  Interdepartmental Work Groups  Committees and Task Forces  Business Relationship Groups  Peer Groups  Networks  Electronic Groups  Communities of Practice (CoPs)  Network Armies

8 Understanding Group  Authority Groups – These are boss and subordinate.  Intradepartmental Groups – These are where all members do the same type of work.  Project Teams – These usually have members who work full-time to accomplish a goal within a specific schedule.  Interdepartmental Work Groups – Passing work from department to department in a chain, these form a super group.  Committees and Task Forces – These are formed to deal with a subject area or issue.

9 Understanding Group  Business Relationship Groups – These are relationships with customers, groups of customers, suppliers, and so on.  Peer Groups – These meet to exchange ideas and opinions.  Networks – Groups of people socialize, exchange information, and expand the number of their personal acquaintances.  Electronic Groups – Groups are formed on the Internet to socialize, find information, entertain themselves, gain comfort, or just experiment with the online world.

10 Understanding Group  Communities of Practice (CoP) – A group of people can work or socialize together for so long that they develop an identifiable way of doing things.  Network Armies – Widely dispersed groups of people form to further a cause.

11 Community of Practice  CoPs are all about managing knowledge, capturing and spreading know-how, ideas, innovations, and experience.  In some enterprises, CoPs form the foundation of their knowledge management efforts.

12 Community of Practice Though informal, some CoPs have had a great effect on their enterprise:  driving strategies,  creating new lines of business,  spreading best practices, and  solving seemingly intractable problems.  CoPs resist being managed.  But some enterprises have seen their value and have learned how to look after them

13 Community of Practice  Identifying Potential CoPs – Companies can use CoP consultants to help employees interested in forming a CoP.  Providing a CoP Infrastructure – Executives need to give CoPs legitimacy because they lack resources and formal standing in the enterprise.  Measuring CoPs – To measure CoPs appropriately often means measuring their contributions nontraditionally because their effects may only show up in a team member’s department, not in the community’s work.

14 Network Army  These sets of individuals and communities are aligned by a reason, so they are as permanent as their common agenda.  Their cohesive force is their value system, and their communications are open, taking place in forums that anyone can join.

15 Network Army  Network armies have existed for a long time, but they can now suddenly appear with a lot of power because of three developments:  High-speed information flows due to a common language (English) and communication system (Internet),  The geometrically expanding power of networks (adding one person geometrically increases the number of interconnections), and  The international visibility now afforded just about any reason.  Hierarchies have a tremendously difficult time fighting network armies because there is no single leader, simply a “hydra with many heads.”

16 Network Army  Example of Network Army?

17 Network Army

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20 System to support collaborations  Group Decision Support Systems (GDSS) have existed for 25 years.  Their intent has been to support the decision making of more than one person, working together to reach a decision.  One framework for categorizing the work of groups has time on one dimension (same time/different time) and place on the other (same place/different place).

21 System to support collaborations

22 Supporting same time same place  This has generally meant supporting meetings.  The Problem with Meetings – Meetings can have many shortcomings: lack of agenda, people arrive late, the necessary information does not arrive, and so on.  Information Technology Can Help – By eliminating some meetings (using e-mail instead), permitting better preparation (discussing items online beforehand), IT improves the effectiveness and efficiency of meetings.

23 Supporting same time same place Benefit:  more opportunities for discussion,  more equal participation,  a permanent record of discussion,  improved feedback to presenters,  improved learning, Lack:  On the other hand, having people type while presenters are presenting could distract participants.

24 Supporting different place Virtual Workforce

25 Supporting different place Virtual Workforce

26 Virtual Organization  Executives of increasingly virtual organizations should consider adopting a governance structure that fosters self-governance by employees.  While the open source movement appears to have all the trappings of chaos waiting to happen, it is actually very well disciplined because of its self-governance.  Four important governance principles are: 1. managed membership, 2. rules and institutions, 3. monitoring and 4. sanctions.


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