The is a list of various research documents and articles relating to
telecommuting, virtual teams, remote management, cloud labor, and Internet
culture that have influenced Jayne and Susan's recommendations in The
Last
Virtual
Volunteering Guidebook, or that have been recommended by
others as resources that can help organizations successfully engage in
virtual volunteering:
Going
Open: Does it Mean Giving Away Control?. By Nadia Noori and
Michael Weiss. Technology Innovation Management Review. January 2013.
All successful open source platforms evolved from voluntarily
initiatives to sustainable entities. "Within the sample cases, we
found three types of governance models: tight-control, loose-control,
and hybrid-control. Each governance model consists of the following
attributes: community structure, extension types, and governance
structure and network openness. Each model was associated with
non-trivial trade-offs in terms of governance, openness, quality, and
flow of ideas." Also "Throughout the years, the open source community
has learned how to organize itself and provide collaboration models
and tools that fit within the free/libre open source software context.
These communities needed such control mechanisms in place to ensure
quality and maintain growth."
"What makes a virtual organization
work?" Markus, L., B. Manvile and C. Agres (2000). MIT Sloan
Management. "What motivates people to participate in open-source
projects? And how is participation governed in the absence of
employment or fee-for-service contracts? The answers to those
questions reveal some important lessons for organizations — whether or
not they develop software products — about both the challenges of
keeping and motivating knowledge workers and the process of managing
various types of virtual organizations, such as ad hoc project teams,
virtual teams, communities of practice and multicompany
collaborations." To access, search the title and authors on the search
engine of your choice.
"The Psychology of Effective
Business Communications in Geographically Dispersed Teams"
In September 2006, Cisco released this white paper that identifies
rules for communicating that will help virtual teams to work together
successfully. Virtual communication 'best practices' recommended in
the report include agreeing to protocols on response times, and
establishing rules for the selection of media and the frequency of
communications, especially in multi-cultural teams. Encouraging
socializing and ad-hoc chats over a virtual 'coffee machine' by using
spontaneous and richer media for communications can also speed up the
development of trust. Whether you work with online volunteers or with
paid staff in dispersed locations, this is a very interesting and
helpful white paper. One of the things I like about it in particular
is it's focus on the cultural differences that can become exaggerated
within virtual teams and lead to misunderstandings. Great stuff.Read
the press release about this(it's a good list
of highlights of the white paper). You candownload
the Executive Summary(PDF 137.10KB).
Understanding the Motivations,
Participation and Performance of Open Source Software Developers: A
Longitudinal Study of the Apache Projects. Jeff Roberts, Il-Horn
Hann,Sandra Slaughter. September 1, 2004. "Understanding what
motivates individuals to participate is a central theme in the
research on open source software development. Our study contributes to
this research by revealing how the different motivations of open
source developers are interrelated, how these motivations influence
their participation and performance, and how past performance
influences their subsequent motivations." Contact
sandras@andrew.cmu.edu, Tepper School of Business Carnegie Mellon
University, for this paper.
"Communication
and Trust in Global Virtual Teams"
This is an in-depth academic study from 1998 by Dr. Sirkka L.
Jarvenpaa that "explores the challenges of creating and maintaining
trust in a global virtual team," particularly those that involve
people of different cultures and interest, and varying degrees of
commitment. I think it's still relevant 10 years after its original
publication.
"Successful
Management in the Virtual Office"
This is a masters thesis by Bernie Kelley and Bruce McGraw that was
published in 1996, and it had more influence on the development of the
resources at the than anything other single resource.
"Building
an Internet Culture"
"In thinking about culturally appropriate ways of using technologies
like the Internet, the best starting-point is with people -- coherent
communities of people and the ways they think together. " An excellent
essay by Phil Agree that discusses the importance of social networking
to job development and performance, how the Internet provides a great
opportunity for such networking, and how cyberspace needs to be
promoted as a place for social interaction and prevented from becoming
a corporate wasteland. Many real world examples of such social
networking that have assisted companies and individuals are given,
even ways in which developing countries can use the internet to the
advantage of itself and its people. This paper is from 1998 -- and
still offers great insight.
Telework.gov
The USA government's Office of Personnel Management and the General
Services Administration (GSA) established this interagency website to
provide easy access to information about telework in the Federal
Government. The information contained on this website pertains only to
Executive Branch agencies and employees, but its extensive information
about policies and procedures, tools and resources andreports
and studiesprovide excellent guidance for any
organization.
There are also several studies, research projects and
evaluation reports regarding the open source movement's involvement of
unpaid people ("distributed engagement"). The data I've found so far has
been regarding efforts to develop commercial or free software, not for the
specific benefit of nonprofit organizations/civil society, and so far, I
haven't found anything that would be obviously valuable to nonprofit
managers (although the way these unpaid contributors are constantly
motivated and continually involved across development levels is definitely
something from which nonprofits could learn).
If you know of a study, research project or
evaluation report regarding telecommuting, virtual teams, remote
management and Internet culture that you believe could help organizations
better engage in virtual volunteering, or that could influence
understanding about online volunteering, please send an email to jc
"at" coyotecommunications.com with the name of the study or
evaluation and a link for more information (even if the entire report is
not freely available online). This can include informal evaluations of
individual programs.
If you are a university-based student or faculty member researching any
aspect of telecommuting, virtual teams, or remote management, or you are
researching some aspect of telecommuting, virtual teams, or remote
management for an academic or professional journal, please send an email
to jc "at" coyotecommunications.com with information about
your research project.
Virtual Volunteering Wiki Footer
Detailed information about how to use the Internet to support and involve
volunteers - virtual volunteering - can be found in The
Last
Virtual
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book - but no substitution for it.
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Volunteering Guidebookplease use
the tag#vvbook
Please note: this wiki project is entirely unfunded - and
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continue to be updated, here's how to support this work.
The most comprehensive guide
available on virtual volunteering, including online mentoring,
micro-volunteeirng, virtual teams, high-responsibility roles,
crowd sourcing to benefit nonprofits and other mission-based
organizations, and much more.
Published January 2014, based on
more than 30 years of research. Available as both a print
book and an ebook.