Trust, Rationality and the Virtual Team 317
Copyright © 2004, Idea Group Inc. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written
permission of Idea Group Inc. is prohibited.
Chapter XIII
Trust, Rationality and
the Virtual Team
Peter Murphy
Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Abstract
Virtual teams need trust in order to function. Trust is an efficient way of
gaining group cooperation. Online, trust is more effective than instruction
or authority or status in getting people who are largely strangers to one
another to work together. But trust is not a simple quality. The kind of trust
that is the cement of distance relations of a global or virtual kind is different
from the type of trust that binds face-to-face interactions and from the
procedural kind of trust that operates in regional or national organizations
of a traditional managerial kind. This study looks at the ways in which trust
between virtual team members is generated. “Trust between strangers” is
optimally generated when persons are allowed to self-organize complex
orders and create objects and processes of high quality. Also looked at are
the kinds of personalities best suited to working in a virtual collaborative
environment. The study concludes that persons who prefer strong social or
procedural environments will be less effective in a virtual environment. In
contrast, self-steering (“stoic”) personality types have characteristics that
are optimally suited to virtual collaboration.
This chapter appears in the book, Virtual Teams: Projects, Protocols and Processes, edited by David Pauleen.
Copyright © 2004, Idea Group Inc. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written
permission of Idea Group Inc. is prohibited.
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