What are the things to keep in mind while working with Offshore Teams ?
|
2
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
closed as not programming related by Lance Roberts, Martin, Greg Hewgill, MusiGenesis, Manni Oct 19 at 8:49 |
|
|
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. |
|||
|
|
|
|
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. |
||||||
|
|
|
In no particular order:
Good luck! |
|||
|
|
|
|
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 :
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. |
|||
|
|
|
|
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.
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. |
|||
|
|
|
|
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:
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". |
|||
|
|
|
|
Apply the same selection criteria that you would in the country of origin if you were selecting 'a team' to complete your project.
And so on. |
|||
|
|
|
Timezones. Language Barrier. |
|||
|
|
|
|
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. |
|||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
