Strategies for Managing a Mobile Team
Posted by Brad EgelandI ran across a great document put together by Terrence Gargiulo for Makingstories.net. Mr. Gargiulo discusses what he feels are the top ten strategies for managing mobile workers. His full document is a very good read because he also discusses things such as risks and issues to consider when managing mobile workers. You can access his full document here.
I’m sharing this here because so many times as project managers we are overseeing the work of a very geographically dispersed team. In the past three years I’ve only managed one project with a team that I could see on a daily basis. Dozens of others involved remote workers all around the country.
Here are Mr. Gargiulo’s Top 10 Strategies for Managers of Mobile Workers as described in his document.
Top 10 Strategies for Managers of Mobile Workers
1. Focus on building relationships
You are now in the business of managing relationships. Once a quarter audit your time. How much time are you spending engaged in activities meant to foster stronger relationships with your mobile employees? Rate each relationship on a scale of 1 to 10 where 1 is weak and 10 is very strong. Craft a strategy for continuing to develop your strong ones and triage the weak ones. Ask yourself why they are weak and what you can learn from them. Avoid finger pointing and hold up the mirror to reflect on your own opportunities for improvement. Extreme cases of under-performance do not warrant time or effort. These however are few and far between.
2. Streamline communications
Consolidate and prioritize communications. Use email and IM (instant message), texting, blogging, threaded discussions, etc. for relationship-driven communications (i.e., staying in touch and being personal). Communications of an important nature should be cohesive and never delivered in fragmentary pieces that have to be cobbled together by the receiver. Mutually assess the communication preferences of yourself and your team members to develop a communication plan. Avoid assumptions and revisit your plan on a regularly basis especially when the nature of the work is about to change.
3. Incorporate less didatic forms of communications
Determining the right amount of detail and when to provide detail is an ongoing responsibility of a manager with a mobile worker. As a general rule, less is more. This leaves bandwidth for the times when lengthy, explicit instructions and information are essential for the work at hand. Try working with more story-based forms of communications. Sharing tidbits from the field and office in the form of stories, anecdotes, case studies (use cases), jokes, innocent productive gossip, and even metaphors will relay context, encode key pieces of information, and give mobile workers a sense of inclusion.
4. Spend more time listening
Obvious, but counterintuitive. When you are out of easy reach and you are tasked with managing the performance of others it’s easy to get sucked into the trap of needing to transmit lots of information. In most cases the opposite is what is most productive. Make listening a priority. This is the hardest and most tiring aspect of managing others. It is also the single most important thing you can do accelerate the development of strong relationships. Listening is not enough. Keep an open mind. Be present and try to enter the perspective of the speaker. This will help you ask effective questions and identify what direction to go with your own needs and agenda. You’ll be surprised at what emerges.
5. Let mobile workers define communication and reporting practices they want to follow
Structure is critical. Adopt rules of engagement that place people at the center of their own decisions. Managers provide the boundaries and constraints but let employees define the working and communication styles, tools, and processes that will help them perform at the best. Set expectations on two fronts. First, treat these employees’ defined practices as privileges that can and will be modified if key performance metrics are not hit. Second, let employees know there will be times when a projects or work require less flexible, employee-driven communication and reporting practices.
6. Manage deliverables, not activities
Lots of project-oriented work is well suited to mobile workers. Even roles that are more task driven can be effectively managed if they are broken into deliverables. For mobile workers this may mean collapsing some of the activities of a business process or workflow that had manual checkpoints and controls associated with them into deliverables. Automation where possible can be used or batching activities into larger groups can transform task oriented jobs into deliverables. Realize that there can be many facets of people’s jobs that need to be adjusted to accommodate a mobile work style.
7. Engage in more frequent and informal performance management activities
When you manage mobile workers, relationships are at the heart of your job. Performance management does not need to be a loathsome, “administrivia” obligation. Designing some unstructured, informal ongoing dialogs with mobile employees about their performance goals and personal development plans is a great way to strengthen communications, and shows an active interest in employees and relationships. This might look and feel very different from one employee to the next. This is another tangible way managers can adapt their style to match the needs and preferences of employees. It works best when the performance management conversation flows in both directions.
8. Give complete trust until given a concrete behavioral reason to do otherwise
According to a recent survey conduct by HR.com and ic4p, listening and trust are the two most important factors to virtual and remote teams. Without trust, relationships are bankrupt. Abuses of trust can always be found but these occur in spite of whatever systems we put in place. Mobile workers thrive when managers give them complete trust. In some respects managers of mobile workers have no other choice. Use trust to create strong relationships. When some concrete behavior and not just someone else’s word of mouth shows that trust has been violated, then take it away, but not until then.
9. Use adaptive management styles tailored to individual workers
Every employee is different. Mobile workers make it easier for managers to take a more personalized approach in how they work and interact with members of their team. It takes more work and effort on a manager’s part but the results can be phenomenal. Understanding what enables each employee to perform at his or her best is the most important responsibility of a manager.
10. Leverage technology
Technology drives and supports managing mobile workers. Using technology well is not as simple as it appears. Standard models of communication and transaction should not always be mapped in a simple one-to-one way. Communication and collaboration technologies offer new and exciting models. These need to be purposely exploited in order for organizations to realize the full extent of benefits these wonderful new capabilities and features offer.
Beyond email, IM and phone, Web conferencing plays a key role in virtual team enablement. Take an inventory of “stuff” you need to collaborate on with your virtual team. If the list includes Word docs, spreadsheets, software applications, or anything else on your desktop, Web conferencing will be critical for collaborating in real time. You’re projects will lag if you can’t be on the same page with mobile workers.
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Dina Garfinkel says:
Nice post! I especially appreciate numbers 2 and 3 because it’s too easy to find ourselves trailing off topic and dumping too much information on everyone on the thread, but when we’re more strategic about the types of technology we use then communication can be much more efficient. I’m an advocate of keeping things off email when possible, IM is good and project collaboration sites are great. Even with that though you have to be careful about what gets posted on the collaboration site and what stays off. I have colleagues who get buried in notices from their project collaboration site and sort everything into a folder, many times missing the alerts relevant to them and only seeing them hours or days later.
And what better time to make a plug for the LiquidPlanner project management and collaboration system. LiquidPlanner allows you to make quick ‘twitter’ style posts and longer detailed posts, each time attached to a specific task or task folder, or entire project. This forces the team to follow rules #2 and 3 above, and is great for mobile and on-site workers!
Terrence Gargiulo says:
Brad…
You sent me an email requesting to quote the article…much appreciate…perhaps you did not get my reply…I asked to know what blog you want to posted my content on and did not give permission.
Please remove the ten strategies from your blog. The article is posted on Scribd and insightory website – feel free to provide readers of your a blog a link to the article.
You have not even given people a link to my website. I’m afraid this content looks too much like your own and misleads people and provides little value to me as the owner of this IP. This is the kind of inadvertent use of IP that has become rampant on the Internet. Its frustrating when as an author I am generous with my sharing my content.
Thank you
Terrence
Brad Egeland says:
Terrence – My apologizies – I never did receive your reply to my request. I hope that you will allow this content to remain posted here with proper link modifications/additions as I believe it is very useful to our readers. Please consider this and provide any and all linkages and I will promptly modify the article. Thanks for your consideration.
Brad