MANAGERIAL OPENNESS AND THE ADOPTION OF
DISTRIBUTED GROUP SUPPORT SYSTEMS
The Case of WebWide Participation
John Rohrbaugh
Rockefeller College, University at Albany (SUNY), 135 Western Avenue, Albany, NY, USA
Keywords: Managerial openness; group support systems; asynchronous meetings; distributed meetings; virtual teams
Abstract: The full involvement of designated participants in meeting process is a well-recognized standard of group
effectiveness, yet most face-to-face meetings are undertaken without the presence of every group member.
The problem of total participation in asynchronous meetings convened with distributed group support
systems has been noted frequently but investigated rarely. This paper describes a portion of a large field
study using the distributed group support system WebWide Participation in which explanations for meeting
involvement (and non-involvement) were explored. In particular, four WebWide meetings with varying
levels of participation were selected, and surveys were sent to all designated participants. The hypothesis
was that non-participants have less openness (i.e., one of the key personality dimensions in Big Five
personality theory--the characteristic of being intellectually curious and receptive to new experiences) than
active participants who willingly joined in the meeting process. Using two indices of managerial openness,
a discriminant analysis was undertaken that correctly distinguished over four of every five participants and
non-participants in the targeted WebWide meetings. The importance of this finding for advancing the
adoption of other new group support technologies is discussed.
1 INTRODUCTION
With proliferation of virtual groups with members
distributed in various sites who rarely work together
in the same place at the same time, the use of online
meetings has increased tremendously (Kock, 2000;
Qureshi & Vogel, 2001). This presents additional
challenges for group support, especially in
circumstances where situational determinants such
as distance, time pressure, and efficiency lead to the
use of alternative technologies as communication
channels (Haythornthwaite, Wellman, & Mantei,
1995; Hinds & Kiesler, 1995). Online group support
has acquired even greater significance as
organizations try to gain competitive advantage by
effective facilitation of virtual teams (Furst,
Blackburn, & Rosen, 1999; Beise, Niederman, &
Beranek, 1999).
Typical of organization innovations generally
(Kanter, 1988), most distributed group support
systems were first designed and implemented in
environments apart from organizational units in
which their intended users are located. For this
reason, such new technologies must be transferred
from the R&D settings that hosted the development
of the innovation to the organizational settings into
which they eventually may be assimilated and
institutionalized. Between the preliminary phase of
innovation development when ideas are generated
and realized, and the second phase, termed
assimilation, when systems are adopted, adapted,
and accepted, are found those activities of
technology transfer best described as initiation,
during which the use of some inchoate form of
group support system (GSS) is introduced and used
for the first time in an organization (Applegate,
1991).
Successful initiation arguably encourages a
willingness to use the technology again, perhaps
repeatedly, while problems at the time of
introduction may doom, at least temporarily,
subsequent progress toward assimilation
(Fjermestad & Hiltz, 2001). While new technology
must be modified repeatedly following adoption to
suit the unique demands of each workplace, an
organizational unit also must be able to change
appropriately its established structures and
processes. This mutual adaptation model suggests
that the eventual assimilation of new technology
115
Rohrbaugh J. (2004).
MANAGERIAL OPENNESS AND THE ADOPTION OF DISTRIBUTED GROUP SUPPORT SYSTEMS - The Case of WebWide Participation.
In Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems, pages 115-120
DOI: 10.5220/0002607501150120
Copyright
c
SciTePress
becomes threatened wherever it is rigidly introduced
or wherever executive teams are not flexible enough
to alter their decision-making routines at the time of
initiation.
1.1 Managerial Openness and the
Adoption of Distributed GSS
Openness was identified by the “Berkeley school
(Adorno et al., 1950) as an underlying trait of
flexibility, although their emphasis was on the
negative or pathological end of the dimension:
intolerance, rigidity, dogmatism, and premature
closure. There is growing evidence that an
individual's capacity to be cognitively and
behaviorally flexible in dealing with new situations
is one of five key (i.e., the “Big Five”) factors in
personality structure (Digman, 1990; Goldberg,
1993; McCrae, 1987).
1
Because the openness factor is connected to
intellectual curiosity, creativity, and divergent
thinking (McCrae, 1987) that tend to be encouraging
of efforts toward organizational innovation and
change, not surprisingly, its connection to training
proficiency has been well established (Barrick &
Mount, 1991; Hough et al., 1990; Salgado, 1997).
Individuals who have greater openness to new ideas
may benefit most from training opportunities.
McCartt and Rohrbaugh (1995, p. 577) concluded
that “over 30% of the variance in outcome reports of
decision conference success can be predicted
reliably from the degree of openness in client
organizations.” In a recent international survey of
experienced facilitators, greater openness in groups
(i.e., “members are intellectually curious, flexible,
and creative in approaching issues”) was identified
most frequently (83% of the responses) as the reason
why groups are effective at addressing problems and
successfully accomplishing the tasks on which they
work.
2
Consistent with the early work of Rogers (1962;
with Shoemaker, 1971), longer-term assimilation
and institutionalization of distributed group support
systems depend upon the potential adopters'
openness to change at the time new technologies are
first introduced in organizations. Applegate (1991),
for example, identified the receptivity or resistance
of end-users as a key factor associated with success
and failure in technology transfer. It can be argued
1
It is important to note, however, that an individual who displays
substantial openness to change is
not necessarily an innovator,
that is,
not particularly an initiator or "prime mover" of change,
especially capable of originality of thought, greatly motivated to
develop novel solutions to problems (Jackson, 1976, 10).
2
Special Report, International Association of Facilitators,
February, 1998.
that rigid adherence to established organizational
structures and work routines will preclude any
possibility of achieving the beneficial results
frequently ascribed to new applications of
technology. Managerial openness to change permits
the creative use of alternative, even initially
unfamiliar, methods of deliberation and conflict
management provided by online group support.
Successful introduction of new technology will
increase willingness to use an innovation again, the
basis of its eventual adoption.
1.2 Asynchronous Meetings through
WebWide Participation
The focus of the present study is on a unique form
of online meeting termed “asynchronous” to indicate
that the communication of the virtual group is not
concurrent in time (see, for example, Ocker et al.,
1995; Shirani, Tafti, & Affisco, 1999; Warkentin,
Sayeed, & Hightower, 1997). Such any-time any-
place (ATAP) meetings give each and every
participant complete control over their own
schedules; they join in the group process whenever
and wherever they choose. ATAP meetings are
convened by computer through any local or wide
area network or the Internet and can take place over
a period of one to six weeks, since participants
contribute to the group process whenever they have
a few minutes to spare, even late evenings or
weekends. ATAP meetings are different from other
electronic forums such as bulletin boards,
newsgroups, listservs, and chat groups. An ATAP
meeting gathers individuals together who share
responsibility for a common task, who need to focus
on an explicit problem, and who must be successful
in getting useful results from their collaboration. In
short, ATAP meetings are convened to get work
done with a broader base of effort.
WebWide Participation (WWP) was designed to
support the simplest, most basic form of ATAP
meeting. As a series of elementary Web pages,
WWP allows first-time participants in ATAP
meetings to join in the sessions without difficulty, as
long as they have the capacity in their office or
home to access the Internet. The use of WWP
requires the designation of at least one individual to
serve as the online meeting facilitator whose efforts
on behalf of the group complement the
responsibilities of the group leader(s) (Rangarajan
and Rohrbaugh, 2003).
WWP meetings typically involve 5 to 100
participants over a two to four-week period. There
are three stages to a complete WWP meeting:
listing, categorizing, and prioritizing. In the listing
stage, participants are asked to respond to specific
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elicitation questions by generating lists of proposed
ideas; this is the brainstorming phase of the meeting.
In the subsequent categorizing stage, each
participant sorts all of the proposed ideas into
clusters of identical or quite similar contributions to
the list. The number of resulting categories usually
is about half the number of initial ideas. In the final
prioritizing stage, each participant ranks or rates the
idea clusters according to one or more specific
assessment criteria. Both the meeting facilitator and
group leader(s) actively encourage the involvement
of designated participants during all stages of a
WWP meeting.
1.3 Specifying the Research Question
Since the argument has been made for mutual
adaptation in successful routinization of new
technology, the primary importance of managerial
openness to change appears worthy of further
investigation with respect to distributed group
support systems. The hypothesis directing the
present study was that non-participants in WebWide
meetings have less openness (i.e., the characteristic
of being intellectually curious and receptive to new
experiences) than active participants who willingly
joined in the meeting processes. It was expected
that the measurement of managerial openness would
allow for relatively accurate predictions of which
designated participants either had become actively
involved--or had remained uninvolved despite
multiple invitations to join in the asynchronous
meetings.
2 METHOD OF STUDY
A large field study of ATAP meeting facilitation has
been initiated using WWP and e-mail as the primary
communication channels for each group. Thus far,
12 ATAP meetings have been facilitated for external
organizations facing real, not experimentally
contrived, problems. Meeting size has ranged from
7 to 93 designated participants with a median of 19.
Actual participation rates (i.e., the ratio of active
participants to designated participants) have ranged
from .41 to .94 with a median of .66.
For purposes of this study, four of these
meetings were selected for further investigation:
two meetings with higher participation rates (.94--16
active participants out of 17 designated; .92—23
active participants out of 25 designated); one
meeting with a lower participation rate (.41--9 active
participants out of 22 designated); and one meeting
with a moderate participation rate (.55--28 active
participants out of 51 designated).
A three-page questionnaire was sent to every
active participant in each meeting. Altogether 76 of
these surveys were distributed. This questionnaire
asked respondents to evaluate the usefulness of
(seven questions) and satisfaction with (six
questions) the WWP meeting. In addition,
respondents were asked to agree or disagree (using a
six-point, Likert-type scale) with ten descriptive
statements about the WWP meeting and to estimate
the amount of time that they had devoted to meeting
participation.
A two-page questionnaire was sent to every
designated participant who did not at any time join
in the WWP meeting. Altogether 39 of these surveys
were distributed. This questionnaire asked
respondents to rate on an 11-point scale the
importance of 12 alternative reasons why they did
not join in the WWP meeting.
The final page of both the three-page (for
participants) and the two-page (for non-participants)
forms of questionnaire were identical. All
respondents were asked to agree or disagree (using a
six-point, Likert-type scale) with statements about
organizations and also about themselves. These
items were selected specifically to measure the level
of managerial openness for each individual. For
example, statements about organizations included
“Most managers fails to provide sufficient stability
and consistency in office routines,” “Organizations
do not need to take any risks in order to achieve
excellence,” and “Experiments belong in the
laboratory, not in the workplace.” Personal
statements included “I think it’s interesting to learn
and develop new skills and hobbies,” “My friends
and family might say that I’m a person who is pretty
much set in my ways,” and “I prefer a job that
doesn’t require me to keep learning new tasks.”
The response rate (i.e., the ratio of returned
questionnaires to distributed questionnaires) was .74
for participants and .51 for non-participants.
Altogether 76 of the 115 distributed questionnaires
were returned, producing an overall response rate of
.66. The response rates for each of the four selected
meetings were .94, .84,.64, and .47, respectively.
Respondents to the questionnaire were
demographically similar to all participants in WWP
meetings. Women only slightly outnumbered the
men. Respondents typically were in mid-level
management positions and between 35 and 45 years
of age.
MANAGERIAL OPENNESS AND THE ADOPTION OF DISTRIBUTED GROUP SUPPORT SYSTEMS: THE CASE
OF WEBWIDE PARTICIPATION
117
3 RESULTS
3.1 Participants Only
On the whole, participants (n = 56) reported quite
positive experiences with WWP meetings. Nearly
60% generally or strongly disagreed that “first-time
participants will find it difficult to join in a WWP
meeting,” and three-quarters (77%) generally or
strongly agreed that “once group members join in,
they will find that it is easy to contribute to a WWP
meeting.” When asked if they “would be very
willing to participate in another WWP meeting,”
80% generally or strongly agreed. More than 85%
reported that they were either generally or extremely
satisfied with the overall meeting process.
Participants did not appear to have spent a great
deal of time joining in the WWP meetings. On
average, participants reported spending about five
minutes “initially finding and getting access to the
right Web pages” and about 20-30 minutes for each
of the three meeting stages: “contributing to the list
building,” “categorizing all the ideas that everyone
had contributed,” and “prioritizing the idea
categories during the final week of the meeting.”
The greatest amount of individual time reported in
any of these four-week meetings was four hours.
3.2 Non-participants Only
Although non-participants (n = 19) indicated a
variety of important reasons for not joining in the
WWP meeting, two explanations were widely
offered. About two-thirds (65%) reported “My
schedule was so full of other meetings and tasks that
I just didn’t have time.” A second explanation given
by over 40% was “The meeting could produce good
results from others without requiring my time.”
Other reasons identified by two or three non-
participants included: “I was away from my office
and home during most of the meeting period without
Internet access;” “I didn’t know that I was expected
to participate in the meeting;” “I didn’t think that I
could make a useful contribution to the meeting;
and “Our group should not be working on issues by
using Internet meetings.”
3.3 Openness Differences between
Participants and Non-participants
As shown in Figure 1, differing levels of agreement
with statements pertaining to managerial openness
emerged between participants and non-participants.
In particular, significant differences (p < .10) were
found with two organizational statements:
“Organizations do not need to take any risks in order
to achieve excellence” (t = 1.99) and “Most
managers fail to provide sufficient stability and
consistency in office routines” (t = 2.10). In
addition, significant differences (p < .10) were
found with two personal statements: “I think it’s
interesting to learn and develop new skills and
hobbies” (t = 2.43) and “My friends and family
might say that I’m a person who is pretty much set
in my ways” (t = 1.80).
It is important to note that the differences in
responses of participants and non-participants
shifted in opposite directions from organizational to
personal statements.
Non-participants were
significantly less open to risk taking and changes in
routine than participants in responding to
organizational statements. However,
non-
participants described themselves as significantly
more open to developing new skills and less set in
their ways than participants’ self-reports. These
differences allowed for the development of a
multivariate statistical model for discriminating
between participants and non-participants which is
described in the next section.
3.4 Predictions of GSS Participation
with Use of Discriminant Analysis
Using the two organizational statements where
significant differences were found, a two-item index
of managerial openness was formed by
standardizing the 6-point coded responses of both
participants and non-participants and then
computing a mean for each pair of individual
responses. Similarly, using the two personal
statements where significant differences were found,
another two-item index of managerial openness was
formed in an identical way. As one might expect,
both the organizational index and the personal index
scores generated significant differences (p < .05)
between participants and non-participants (t = 2.73
and -2.60, respectively) in the differing directions
described above (see Figure 1).
A discriminant analysis was performed to test
statistically how well the organizational and
personal indices of managerial openness would
distinguish between participants and non-
participants.
The model chi square (14.77) derived for Wilks’
lambda (.80) was significant (p < .01). Accordingly,
the canonical correlation coefficient--which reduced
in this two-group situation to the Pearson correlation
coefficient between the discriminant score and the
group variable--was .45. Both standardized
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canonical discriminant function coefficients for the
organizational index (.78) and for the personal index
(-.76) were significant (p < .01).
An alternative view of the predictive efficiency
of the discriminant analysis was gained through the
construction of a classification table of correct and
incorrect predictions. For over 80% of the
respondents, the model’s predictions of whether they
did participate or did not participate in an
asynchronous WebWide meeting corresponded to
actual occurrences. The model had a high level of
sensitivity (89%): only six of 53 participants (11%)
were predicted incorrectly as likely non-participants.
The model also had a high level of specificity
(67%): only six of 18 non-participants were
predicted incorrectly as likely participants.
4 DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
Lower than ideal participation rates for many of the
ATAP meetings in our field study (the median rate
for designated participants is .66) is a focus of
considerable concern and well worth documenting
for other applications of computer-mediated
communication systems, as well. Outside of
laboratory settings, participation rates of .40 to .60
are probably not uncommon. Certainly, not
everyone who is scheduled will attend face-to-face
meetings either (or arrive punctually, contribute
actively, and stay through adjournment), but special
effort appears to be required to assure reasonably
high participation rates, especially when the
distributed group support system is directed at ad
hoc groups with little or no history of collaboration,
that is, groups for whom the WWP process was
especially developed. This is an area of inquiry that
largely depends on field study rather than laboratory
research.
This study indicated that measures of one of the
Big Five personality dimensions--openness--were
able to distinguish with about 83% accuracy
between participants and non-participants in one
form of asynchronous, Web-mediated group
process. Such a significant finding implicating the
openness factor in decisions of whether or not to
become involved in ATAP meetings may have
wider implications for predicting participation levels
in other applications of distributed group support
systems, as well. The empirical results reported here
add to a growing body of evidence that managerial
openness is a key variable in explaining successes
and failures in the introduction and appropriation of
a variety of new information technologies and
management systems.
The level of accuracy of the discriminant
function documented in this study was based on
only four statements: two about the nature of
organizations and two in the form of self-reports. It
is both somewhat surprising and encouraging that
differences between participants and non-
participants could be uncovered with so sparing a set
of questionnaire items. However, it is important to
note that the organizational statements and the
personal statements revealed opposite patterns of
response. Although non-participants were more
willing than participants to criticize organizations
for inordinate risk taking and a lack of
stability/consistency, they appeared more likely than
participants to describe themselves
as not so “set in my ways” and particularly
interested in developing new skills.
Why would individuals who refused the
opportunity to join in a meeting using a new
distributed group support system (and who were
relatively less comfortable with risk taking and
disturbances in routine) reply so positively (some
might say excessively) to personal statements about
their openness to new experiences? Although the
answer is not clear, one possibility is that
respondents who are somewhat lower on the
openness factor may be more susceptible to the
demand characteristics inherent in this type of
revealing self-report. As a result, in comparison to
the rest of the population, they may tend to more
strongly agree or more strongly disagree with
personal statements in the scale direction that they
perceive to be more socially desirable.
The difference in managerial openness between
participants and non-participants documented in this
study was relatively large: about three-quarters of a
standard deviation unit on both the organizational
and personal indices. With such a relevant and
meaningful difference in openness between groups,
there was no need for a more powerful statistical test
(i.e., for a larger sample of participants and non-
participants). However, there is no doubt that the
findings reported here warrant replication, not with a
larger sample but with more samples (of
approximately the same size) of designated
participants for additional ATAP meetings. This is
one of the purposes of the extended field study
currently being undertaken.
A better test of the research question would be to
administer the managerial openness measures to
designated participants in advance of the online
meeting. With this method, the predictions from a
validated discriminant function truly would be a
forecast of participation or non-participation well
before the distributed group support system was
introduced to the group. The opportunity to assess
the openness of a prospective management team to
MANAGERIAL OPENNESS AND THE ADOPTION OF DISTRIBUTED GROUP SUPPORT SYSTEMS: THE CASE
OF WEBWIDE PARTICIPATION
119
innovation and change and, thereby, to anticipate the
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adoption curve that would be due less to flawed
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inflexibility and rigidness of the potential
appropriators, since intellectual curiosity and
receptivity to new experiences increasingly appear
to play a considerable role in the observed adoption
or rejection of new information technologies and
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