Publication | Closed Access
An analysis of predictors of team satisfaction in product development teams with differing levels of virtualness
44
Citations
49
References
2009
Year
Total Quality ManagementProject ManagementOrganizational ConflictOrganizational BehaviorOrganisational Structure EvaluationTeam MembersProduct Development TeamsManagementNew Product DevelopmentVirtual TeamOrganizational SystemsDesignUser ExperienceVirtual OrganizationTeam Member SatisfactionVirtual EnterpriseOrganizational CommunicationBusinessWork Group DynamicTeam Satisfaction
The purpose of this study is to empirically examine and assess the moderating effects of extent of virtualness on a variety of well‐established predictors of new product development team satisfaction. We focus our study on 178 different new product development teams from a variety of industries and use extent of virtualness as a structural characteristic of the teams, measuring it on a continuum. The predictors of team satisfaction we studied are relationship conflict, familiarity, goal clarity and preference for group work. Primary findings include: (1) relationship conflict has a more deleterious effect on team member satisfaction as teams become more virtual, mainly because it is very difficult for team members of virtual teams to resolve their interpersonal disputes; (2) the relationship between preference for group work and team satisfaction is moderated by extent of virtualness, such that preference for group work increases team satisfaction more as virtualness increases; (3) goal clarity and familiarity are not moderated by extent of virtualness, but have a significant direct effect on team satisfaction. Managerial and research implications of these findings relative to new product development teams are also discussed.
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