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Bagels: The Secret to Building a High-Performing Virtual Team
ATD Blog

Bagels: The Secret to Building a High-Performing Virtual Team

Monday, February 9, 2015
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With more and more companies working seamlessly across cultures and time zones, I am often asked by clients what the secret is to building an effective virtual team.

The answer is simple: fresh bagels. Okay, the secret is really building trust, but we’ll get to the bagels in a minute.

The challenge, of course, is that it is much tougher to build trust when your team is split across time zones and continents than it is when you’re able to have a friendly chat across the water cooler every day. So, perhaps a second step needs to be added to help trust develop: getting together.

I appreciate that there may be logistical and financial challenges for some organizations in getting together, but it is almost certainly a cost less painful than the missing financial targets due to a poorly functioning global team.

Case in Point

A team leader in a global IT company asked me to help improve the performance of his project team. He told me: “My team members are all respected experts in their fields and perform to an outstanding level individually; but I don’t understand why they miss their targets as a team by some 75 percent?”

The client was British and based in Singapore; his team members were based in China, South Korea, South Africa, Japan, and Holland. We talked about teambuilding, and he added: “But that’s a lot of culture and time zones to navigate just to build a team!”

We went back to basics. I interviewed every member of his team. It quickly became apparent that they didn’t trust each other and, as a result, were holding back from sharing information and collaborating with each other.

What I found was that, right from the beginning, a few cultural miscues and misunderstandings had spiralled out of control and resulted in a very fractured and dysfunctional team.

At the first few team conference calls, the Dutch and South African members had led most of the discussions. Hearing no questions or objections from the rest of the group, it was assumed that everyone was in agreement with their proposed plan.

As time went on, it became painfully apparent that not everyone was on the same page. Deadlines were missed, tasks weren’t completed and, seemingly, much of the inaction came from the team members from Asia who hadn’t spoken up at the group meetings.

The South African and Dutch team members were frustrated and told me: “I thought we all agreed on the plan! But some team members didn’t keep their commitments. They seemed incompetent. I am not sure I can trust them again.”

On the other hand, Asian team members were equally frustrated: “We never agreed with the decision. They dominated the meeting and didn’t ask us for our input. We need more time to process the information and reach our own conclusions. We felt excluded!”

Over the next year, as the project continued, they communicated less and less with each other and worked in silos. What communication they did by emails and conference calls often led to finger pointing on both sides as the divide between the various groups grew wider and wider.

Hardly any effort was made to establish positive relationships among the team members, to better understand the various cultures at play within the group, or to resolve the conflicts in a constructive way.

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For example, if the South African and Dutch team members had spent some time understanding Asian culture, they would have recognized that the fact that their Asian colleagues were quiet during the meeting was not necessarily acquiescence or their tacit approval. It was much more likely that the Asian team members were taking the time to process the information due to language barriers or they simply disagreed with the decision but were too polite to challenge.

On the other hand, if the Asian members had realized that many from western cultures are more direct and require more active involvement, they could have asked more questions and made more of an effort to make their feelings known.

In the absence of any genuine bonding, along with misunderstandings due to cultural differences and language barriers, the group had each made assumptions about other members of the team and were jumping to conclusions about each other’s motives. It was like a cancer growing within the team that my client simply couldn’t stem.

The Solution

I worked with the client to bring the team together for three days—not only to work on their challenges, but also to rebuild trust.

On the first day, we talked openly about what each of them needed from the others in order to build better teamwork, and the responsibilities each of them had to the others.

It was striking how straightforward their needs were. They all consistently asked of each other:

-be respectful
-don’t interrupt
-listen
-say “thank you”
-apologize if you’re wrong.

In other words, act with consideration and kindness—the basic human building blocks of trust. Somehow these ideals had gotten lost along the way because there was no rapport among the group.

They worked out what their top five behavioral rules would be for future team interactions to ensure their new-found team spirit didn’t evaporate again. The team leader turned this into a slide which would always appear at the start of every meeting to remind them of their commitment to each other.

They completed the three-day meeting with a memorable night out eating Singapore’s famous Black Pepper Crab and drinking ice cold Tiger beer. They all returned to their countries reinvigorated. One year later, the team leader called me with the news that his team had just hit 89 percent of its targets.

Examples of Creating Connections

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The importance of not forgetting the basics can be seen in other ways, too.

I heard recently of a global virtual team that takes turns, once a quarter, to send local food from their country to other team members around the globe so that they can all share breakfast or snacks together during their regular conference calls. At a recent team video conference, the United States colleagues sent a box of fresh bagels and coffee grounds to introduce team members in the Philippines to an “all-American” breakfast. This simple idea has transformed their calls into something that is the highlight of their meeting and the call is now a vibrant and effective communications forum.

Another U.S.-based client was struggling to connect with a member of his new team, based in Mexico City, who seemed very slow to respond to email requests. Hiding his growing irritation he asked other colleagues, “What’s she like?”

The leader learned that the worker had recently had a baby and was balancing work and new motherhood, which explained the sporadic responses. He immediately emailed her, congratulating her on her new arrival and sharing the news that he had become a grandparent around the same time. He even attached a photo of his grandson. Within minutes she responded with a picture of her daughter, starting a dialogue that helped them to quickly build an effective working relationship.

Five Tips for Moving Forward

Here are my five top tips for building a virtual team that trusts each other and works as well together thousands of miles apart as if they say in the same room.

Keep your commitments. Do what you say you are going to do. Keep your promises. This may sound obvious, but keeping your word is absolutely essential to earn trust with other team members.

Share information equally, transparently, and timely. Make sure everyone, particularly team members in remote locations, are not left out in the communication loop.

Give feedback in a culturally appropriate way. Give positive feedback in public and negative feedback in private. Be culturally sensitive when delivering feedback so you don’t damage relationships and trust.

Don’t jump to conclusions. Check your assumptions first. Make sure your understanding is in tune with other team member’s cultural tendencies. Listen to everyone’s opinion. Check back to confirm that you understand their point of view. Ask open-ended questions to make sure you are all on the same page. Always take a step back to understand the other person's perspective and pressures and give them benefit of the doubt.

Help other team members without being asked. Maybe you’ve heard of the “Pay it Forward” principle? Doing something that is kind and helpful for someone (without being asked) is both a simple act of kindness and powerful way to build trust and rapport. It will also probably make their day.

In my next blog, I will talk about how to take advantage of best practice and technology to ensure your virtual team is properly equipped to deliver outstanding results.

About the Author

Maya Hu-Chan was rated one of the world’s top eight global solutions thinkers by Thinkers50, and one of the World’s Top 30 Leadership Gurus in 2013. Maya is an international management consultant, executive coach, and author. Harvard Business School has chosen her book , Global Leadership: The Next Generation, to be one of their working knowledge recommended books. She is also a contributing author to 10 leadership and management books. Maya was born and raised in Taiwan and lives in San Diego. She has worked with thousands of leaders in Global Fortune 500 companies around the world. To contact her, email  [email protected], or visit her website at www.mayahuchan.com.

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