Investigating Decision Making Processes in Distributed Development Teams: Findings of a Comparative Empirical Study

  • Authors:
  • Ban Al-Ani;David Redmiles

  • Affiliations:
  • -;-

  • Venue:
  • ICGSE '09 Proceedings of the 2009 Fourth IEEE International Conference on Global Software Engineering
  • Year:
  • 2009

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Abstract

In this paper, we report the findings of an empirical investigation into decision making processes (DMPes) in distributed teams. We conducted the study in a Fortune 500 organization with a total of sixteen respondents who participated in an hour-long interview. Our analysis of the DMP reported by our respondents suggests that there is a strong organizational culture that supersedes local and individual culture. We also found that while decisions are predominately made in consultation with team members, the leader is usually the decision maker regardless of team distribution or size. The role the leader plays in the DMP implies that greater consideration should be given to assigning a team leader and also the DMP in place. It is also significant that we did not find any evidence of support mechanisms to the DMP leading us to conclude that this possibility needs to be explored by the organization. Our data also suggests that the DMP is chosen ad-hoc and is not explicitly articulated in this organization, which may benefit from documentation.