Does Medium Matter? A Comparison of Initial Meeting Modes for Virtual Teams

Hyo-Joo Han ; Starr Roxanne Hiltz New Jersey Institute of Technology ; Jerry Fjermestad New Jersey Institute of Technology ; Yuanqiong Wang Towson University

Abstract

Research Problem: There are no prior studies comparing modes of communication for virtual teams working over a substantial period of time that combined an initial synchronous desktop audio or video meeting with subsequent text-based computer-mediated communication (CMC). Research Questions: Does the initial medium condition impact decision-making quality, creativity, group development, and process satisfaction? Literature Review: Previous literature on media richness (the ability of a medium to carry and reproduce information based on feedback, multiple cues, language variety, and personal focus) and group outcomes (the level of creativity and quality of the work delivered by the group) suggests that ad-hoc groups using asynchronous CMC alone (without any initial meeting) or asynchronous CMC combined with an initial face-to-face (FTF) meeting have significantly higher levels of creativity and decision quality, compared to single-mode synchronous CMC groups or FTF groups. Methodology: In this study, a laboratory experiment was conducted with 136 participants from 14 countries. All teams used asynchronous CMC for two weeks for a software requirements task, following an initial synchronous meeting in one of four conditions: FTF, desktop audioconferencing, desktop videoconferencing, or text only. Results and Discussion: Results suggest that there are no significant differences among the four conditions. This research indicates that it does not matter what medium is used for an initial short meeting of a group that is to subsequently work together via asynchronous text communication.

Journal
IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication
Published
2011-12-01
DOI
10.1109/tpc.2011.2175759
CompPile
Open Access
Closed
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Cited by in this index (7)

  1. IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication
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  1. IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication
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