Title: Human%20Resource%20Management%20in%20virtual%20organisations
1CHAPTER 15 Human Resource Management in virtual
organisations
2Chapter outcomes
- Define the concept "virtual organisation"
- Identify three forms of virtual work arrangements
- List the advantages and disadvantages for the
company and employee when implementing the
telecommuting work arrangement - List the characteristics which truly identify a
virtual team - List three types of virtual teams
3Chapter outcomes (continued)
- Discuss the advantages and disadvantages when
using technology such as e-mail, bulletin boards,
audio and video conferencing - Discuss the role of the HR professional within
the virtual organisation - Discuss issues relating to job analysis practices
within the virtual work environment - Discuss issues relating to a number of HR
practices within the virtual work environment - Explain how the traditional and virtual
organisation differs
4Technology has
- Prompted changes in company structures (eg.
virtual organisation) - Modified work arrangements (eg. virtual team)
- Influenced how people are managed (eg. virtual
workplace)
5Virtual organisation defined
- Virtual organisations are multi-site,
multi-organisational and dynamic. At the macro
level, a virtual organisation consists of a
grouping of units of different companies (eg.
other businesses, consultants, contractors) that
have joined in an alliance to exploit
complementary skills, in pursuing common
strategic objectives
6Virtual organisation (continued)
- Virtual organisations are characterised as those
organisations in which the ongoing relationships
with partners are salient - Core business activities are reduced, leaving the
partners to focus on some of the key business
functions - Core (or central organisation) is connected with
the partners through technology - Virtual organisations tend to be characterised as
flexible, and their structure as transitory and
fluid - Many definitions of the concept tend to see
groups as important. Some appear to see virtual
teams as a sufficient condition for an
organisation to be called a virtual organisation
7The virtual workplace
- Telecommuting
- Frontline model
- Cyberlink model
- Virtual teams
- Group must have some charter for working together
- Group must be interdependent
- Group must be committed to working together
- Group must be accountable as a unit to someone or
something in the bigger organisation
8The virtual workplace (continued)
- Cyberlink model (continued)
- Types of virtual teams
- Project teams
- Service teams
- Process teams
- Why virtual teams?
- Cost benefits of implementing virtual teams
- Complexity of virtual teamworking
- Technology for virtual teams
9Factors that contribute to the complexity of
virtual teamworking
- Number of team members
- Number of different languages spoken in the team
- Number or organisations represented in the team
- Number of time zones within the group
- Technical systems implemented
10HRM practices in virtual organisations
- Virtual HR departments
- The role of the HR professional in the virtual
organisation - HR practices in virtual organisations
- JA
- Participants
- Methods of data collection
- Types of data and level of analysis
11HRM practices in virtual organisations (continued)
- HR practices in virtual organisations (continued)
- Staffing
- Recruitment
- Selection
- TD
- E-learning
- PA
- Compensation
- Negotiation
12Important skills and competencies needed in
virtual organisations
Shared sense of purpose Operating
guidelines Analysing solving problems Conflict
management etc.
Team level
Dealing with change Flexibility Adaptability Emoti
onal control Willingness to learn etc.
Managing alignment Co-ordinating
activities Encourage continuous learning Managing
through technology etc.
Managers
Individual
13Advantages of e-learning
- Self-paced trainees can proceed on their own
time - Is interactive, tapping multiple trainee senses
- Allows for consistency in the delivery of
training - Enables scoring of exercises/assessments and the
appropriate feedback - Incorporates built-in guidance and help for
trainees to use when needed - Is relatively easy for trainers to update content
- Can be used to enhance instructor-led training
14Disadvantages of e-learning
- May cause trainee anxiety
- Not all trainees may be ready for e-learning
- Not all trainees may have easy and uninterrupted
access to computers - Not appropriate for all training content (eg.
leadership, cultural change) - Requires significant upfront cost and investment
- No significantly greater learning evidenced in
research studies - Requires significant top management support to be
successful
15A model of virtual negotiation characteristics
Possible 3rd party
Party B
Party A
Individual differences Personality,
distributive vs integrative, sensitivity vs
non-verbals, comfort with technology
Individual differences Personality,
distributive vs integrative, sensitivity vs
non-verbals, comfort with technology
Negotiation dynamics Personal disclosure,
entrenchment, flaming, ethics
Negotiation dynamics Personal disclosure,
entrenchment, flaming, ethics
Communication media Synchronicity, message
misinterpretation, message content, information
richness
16Attributes of virtual and traditional
organisations
- Streamlined
- Flexible
- Focused
- Communication
- Hyper time
- Organisation structure
- Management of work workers
- Career path
- Information
- Office building
- Professionalism
- Customer relations
17Summary
- There is a fast-growing interest in another way
of working which combines changes, in technical
and organisational systems of choice. This is
virtual working and by extension virtual teams. - Different types of teams within the virtual
organisation can be found namely project,
service and process teams. - The key for any company at the outset of a
virtual teamworking implementation is to be
technologically aware and open, not
technologically deterministic and closed. - Success of virtual teams will not come from tight
managerial control, this inhibits the extent of
the interactions within the network.
18Summary
- The team will benefit most from acknowledging the
fact that they are all individuals, and then
drawing on their individual strengths to create a
microcosm within the wider organisation that
embodies shared culture and operating principle
that they believe will enable them to deliver the
best results as a team. - Virtual organisations will need to adapt their
recruiting processes to the changing skill base
and nature of the labour pool from which they are
recruiting. - For the virtual organisation with its
geographically dispersed global labour pools the
traditional idea of candidates having onsite
testing batteries and interviews is not practical.
19Summary
- The virtual organisation's geographically
dispersed supervisors, peers and subordinates
offer a unique environment for understanding,
performance evaluation, monitoring the employee's
outputs may be a way of making performance
evaluations work under these conditions. - In the area of compensation the following methods
may be used in the virtual environment,
person-based systems, broadbanding and
classification. - While the process of negotiation has been written
about extensively, little has been done regarding
this activity in the virtual environment. This
environment will dictate new rules for
negotiating.