Temporal coordination through communication: using genres in a virtual start‐up organization
Abstract
Purpose
To explain how genres structure temporal coordination in virtual teams over time.
Design/methodology/approach
The first year e‐mail archive of a small distributed software development start‐up was coded and analyzed and these primary data were complemented with interviews of the key participants and examination of notes from the weekly phone meetings.
Findings
In this paper, it is found that members of a small start‐up organization temporally coordinated their dispersed activities through everyday communicative practices, thus accomplishing both the distributed development of a software system and the creation of a robust virtual team. In particular, the LC members used three specific genres – status reports, bug/error notifications, and update notifications – and one genre system – phone meeting management – to coordinate their distributed software development over time.
Research limitations/implications
The study confirms the various suggestions from prior virtual team research that structuring communication and work process is an important mechanism for the temporal coordination of dispersed activities. In particular, an attempt has been made to show that the notions of genre and genre system are particularly useful to make sense of and analyze how such structuring actually occurs over time.
Originality/value
In this paper, the research focus is shifted from how a given set of temporal coordination mechanisms affect team performance to how coordination mechanisms emerge, are stabilized, and adapted over time. It is also shown how the notion of genre may be used to shed light on the practices through which temporal coordination is accomplished in geographically distributed teams.
Keywords
Citation
Im, H., Yates, J. and Orlikowski, W. (2005), "Temporal coordination through communication: using genres in a virtual start‐up organization", Information Technology & People, Vol. 18 No. 2, pp. 89-119. https://doi.org/10.1108/09593840510601496
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2005, Emerald Group Publishing Limited