For modern managers faced with hybrid teams, it pays to be aware of the cultural differences that members bring to the table
Team dynamics are always tricky, and the post-pandemic landscape of virtual and hybrid teams calls for new management tools.
Research by IESE Business School’s Isabel Villamor, with N. Sharon Hill of George Washington University, suggests that managers need to be aware of cultural differences between team members and how these affect communication and cohesion. Where cultural traits that signal team cohesion are absent, managers may need to do the extra work of promoting shared behavioral expectations.
Specifically, the authors look at how two cultural traits affect team cohesion, and what this means for virtual work.
Hill and Villamor draw on two aspects of cultural values that can be decisive to how effectively a team functions:
[This article has been reproduced with permission from IESE Business School. www.iese.edu/ Views expressed are personal.]