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What are the things to keep in mind while working with Offshore Teams ?

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@Rachel: why do you ask this question? Do you have some experience to share, such as difficulties you've had, or issues you'd like to overcome? Your question will do better if it's fleshed out a bit more. – Michael Petrotta Oct 18 at 21:41
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I think it's a perfectly valid question, though you are probably pressing a lot of emotional buttons, hence the down votes – lagerdalek Oct 18 at 21:52
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My intentions were never to hurt anyone. – Rachel Oct 18 at 21:53
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@lagerdalek: well, for my part, I voted the question down because it's very shallow. One sentence without any context doesn't do a lot to inspire an answer. I was hoping that Rachel would work a little harder on it. – Michael Petrotta Oct 18 at 21:56
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Upvoted, nothing wrong with this question. There is no formatting rules for a SO question, if you can ask the question in one sentence then there nothing wrong with that. – Owen Oct 18 at 21:58
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closed as not programming related by Lance Roberts, Martin, Greg Hewgill, MusiGenesis, Manni Oct 19 at 8:49

10 Answers

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To me, the most important thing to keep in mind is that offshore teams are distant so you need to put a special emphasis on communication to limit the impact of distance. I call this proactive communication.

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10% plus unemployment in America, why our politics is shifted so far to the right, Howard Zinn, Utah Phillips, and the possibility of reclaiming self-respect through the formation of a worker owned collective.

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So was that one of the coolies benefiting from the downward wage spiral of American capitalism who downvoted that, one wonders, or just someone who's been drinking the prevailing cool aid? – John Lockwood Oct 18 at 23:58
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I didn't downvote you, but you may have been downvoted because it's not completely clear what your point is, even to someone like me who thinks everybody should read A People's History of the United States. – MusiGenesis Oct 19 at 1:00
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In no particular order:

  1. Document as much as you can up front, in as much detail as possible, on both the technical and business ends:
    • Costs
    • Schedules
    • Tools
    • Assumptions
    • Acceptance Criteria
    • Resources
    • Support
    • Contingencies
  2. Make the time difference work to your benefit: each side's daily deliverables (questions, answers, documents, tests, code...) should be provided before they leave for the day, so one team is always productive while the other sleeps.
  3. Schedule frequent, regular checkpoints before the project starts. These should be real-time (conference call, Skype, web meeting) to encourage questions and joint troubleshooting while problems are still minor.
  4. In addition, schedule frequent, regular deliverables so you'll be able to monitor progress, quality, etc., while there's plenty of time to address discrepancies from expectations.
  5. Assign an official point of contact on each side whose purpose is always to be available, not for day-to-day communication, but as the go-to person for administration, emergencies, etc.
  6. Ensure the people who are actually doing the work on each side have direct communication with their counterparts. Copy the manager or official contact if you like, and invite them to join phone calls, but let the workers collaborate directly.
  7. If possible, host the source repository and defect-tracking system locally. If that's not possible, insist on regular code drops, even before the code is working. You'll be in a better position to answer questions, verify progress, and otherwise guard against unforeseen problems.
  8. Communicate your questions, concerns, and appreciation. Constantly. Let them know what's wrong, and what's right. Express your appreciation when they go out of their way to accommodate you.

Good luck!

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The answer depends on who is managing your offshore team.

Are you doing it yourself? Are they your employees? Are they contractors from a "consulting" company (shudder) ?

Yet, a few things remain constant that you need to be aware about :

  1. Skills that are considered basic become niche skills in some countries. Be it C/C++ or Perl or even an offshore project manager certified from PMP.

    You just cannot assume.

  2. If coding or testing is the job getting offshored, keep at mind that kids in college or right out of college is going to write the code!

    This might seem surprising at first, but that would explain the lack of understanding requirements.

    It is precisely for this reason that I find it "cheaper" to develop "in house" than offshore development as the time required to write and maintain a detailed spec costs far too more than the apparent cost savings in developer time.

  3. Offshore teams just cannot seem to get their estimates right. Not that our estimates have always been bang on target, yet I am talking about difference of magnitudes here.

Make sure to manage the offshore team directly - atleast as far as task and issue tracking goes.

For some reason offshore managers think that people can work for 8 hours at a steadily increasing pace of productive levels everyday throughout the lifetime of the project!

As a result, they tend to assign 1 "Full time employee" where 4 FTE should had been the correct estimate.

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Your question is absolutely in perspective. Unlike, other answers!

Being someone who has really read your question these are the things you need to keep in mind.

  1. If design is being driven by on-site team...be precise in your requirements.
  2. Apart from reasonably precise requirements, follow Agile methodology...keep the requirements incremental to reduce pressure on both sides.
  3. Have a sacrosanct testing team.
  4. Measure all things that could possibly go wrong.

And unlike other learned people here, who defile others with specific examples...treat the offshore workers as a team. There is a reason it is called team.

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There are alot of things to consider when talking about "off-shore". There is no silver-bullet answer that can be given to this question, since it all depends on where you have outsourced to, and where you yourself are from.

Things I would keep in mind:

  • Culture (This is both on a personal and a work-place level... things like authority-patterns.. India is very special here.)
  • Time-Zones
  • Language (do you have to talk in a less "fancy" way perhaps?)
  • Distributed Project-team-work (Have some talks with them often), use Skype (preferably with video)
  • Get to know the team
  • Review the results WITH the team

Mostly it's human factors. So it's important to get involved with the off-shore team in the most personal way, so you are not just "the client".

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Apply the same selection criteria that you would in the country of origin if you were selecting 'a team' to complete your project.

  1. Education completed comparative to
    the education standards you expect
    from developers 'at home'
  2. Years of experience
  3. Have the team produced a product in the past that was commercially successful (brought money by itself or as a part of successful product)

And so on.

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Negative person, care to explain where you disagree? – stefanB Oct 18 at 23:14
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Timezones. Language Barrier.

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The one rule you must observe if you offshore, is that you have to be very precise and unambiguous with your requirements.

You can not manage this project locally, so you MUST be clear with what you want. Do not assume a thing!

In a former role at a large US vendor, we offshored an LDAP adapter to one of our flagship products to India, with the requirements simply specifying the adapter interface, and whilst the resulting library we received was functional, it was a beautiful analogy of Indian bureaucracy, you had to call it at least 5 times with exactly the same parameters, then the output was sourced from 4 (yes, count them, 4!) different accessors that had to be joined, then the resulting text had to be parsed with a regex to make any sense!

It was a wonderful work of art, but a royal PITA to work with.

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  1. Don't work with offshore teams.

  2. See 1.

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+1 agree from my experience, I can imagine lot's of managers would disagree but I guess they don't hv to use or maintain the product ... – stefanB Oct 18 at 21:56
I tend to say: instead of offshoring a suboptimal process, optimize it locally, ROI is better. But lots of people don't like change... – Pascal Thivent Oct 18 at 22:16
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Developers in a corporate environment - or even in a lot of smaller businesses, are not going to be the one to make that determination. However, it is perfectly reasonable for a developer placed in this situation to wonder what methods can help make the best of the situation. – joseph.ferris Oct 18 at 23:49
Again from my experience it depends on the type of offshore operations. If you (developer) get any feeling that there's no clear domain boundary between expertise in offshore team and local team - run because you will be made redundant. If you see clear domain boundary but hear a lot of management talk about economic efficiency of offshore teams - run because you will be made redundant. – stefanB Oct 19 at 0:03

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