Âé¶¹´«Ã½

News

Doctoral thesis: Sharing expertise is increasingly flexible - but increasingly challenging as well

Understanding how experts collaborate across distance is important for designing successful organizations.
Viiden hengen ryhmä työskentelemässä pöytien äärellä
Photo: Unto Rautio / Aalto University

In her doctoral thesis, Tuuli Hakkarainen, M.Sc. (Econ.), examines global expertise sharing from the perspective of individual experts. Multinational companies work in global teams where expertise is shared across the world. While much needed for developing new products and services, sharing expertise is a complex social process increasingly relying on the efforts of the individual experts. In particular, as individuals work in multiple projects at the same time, teamwork has become extremely flexible. Thus, finding the new best practices for effective teamwork poses challenges for the organisations and their employees, in particular.

‘It is not always easy to get things done over distance. We can’t walk into the colleague’s office for a quick question. We can’t rely on well-established team routines that have worked in the past. This means that misunderstandings cannot be always avoided. We have all experienced this during the global pandemic,’ Tuuli Hakkarainen says.

Specialisation that is needed to become an expert easily becomes a barrier in collaboration

What is often emphasised is that in global teamwork, misunderstandings are often associated with cultural differences. However, as project teams combine expertise from different fields, Hakkarainen’s study emphasises what can be called a “language of expertiseâ€. The thesis work draws from in-depth interviews with different functional experts (e.g. engineers, specialists) as well as observing their team interactions. Both show the complexity related to how expertise is shared and for example, how experts talk at work.

‘Individuals can use different terms although they essentially talk about the exact same thing and just think they disagree. What makes these misunderstanding particularly difficult is that they can be hard to detect as our taken-for-granted assumptions tend to be deeply rooted. It is interesting that the specialisation that is needed to become an expert in the first place, in collaboration easily becomes a barrier’, Tuuli Hakkarainen explains.

According to Tuuli Hakkarainen, to make global teamwork successful in the increasingly fragmented organisations, understanding individuals is the key to find the best ways to collaborate.

‘Although it can be difficult, everyone has the possibility to make an extra effort to being on the same page with others. Participants in my study emphasised that it is often useful to stop and think whether a misunderstanding relates directly to the common task or could be explained by differences in the work environments, or if the source of tension is expertise-related. By taking time to figuring this out is the way to improve how we work together.’

The doctoral thesis demonstrates that to understand effective expertise sharing, it is useful to first tune in to the everyday work of individuals to then know what types of structures can truly support collaboration. For example, organisations could go beyond the focus on technology enabling global teamwork to emphasise the interpersonal skills of their employees and allow new project teams enough time to get to know each other across different locations and teams.

In June 2019, prestigious Academy of International Business (AIB) granted Doctoral Candidate Tuuli Hakkarainen the Award for the Best Doctoral Dissertation Proposal in the field of international business.

The doctoral thesis of Tuuli Hakkarainen, M.Sc, "Sharing expertise within the MNC" will be publicly examined on Friday, 11 December 2020. The public defense will be organised via remote technology. The Zoom link will be published on the event page a day before the defense at the latest.

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Grey stone stock exchange building facade with tall windows and flags reading BÖRS and PÖRSSI at the entrance
Press releases, Research & Art Published:

Finland ranks among Europe’s top investing nations, study finds

Nearly half of Finnish households now invest in stocks or mutual funds, according to a new study from Aalto University.
Family posing by a fjord harbour with red cabins and snow-capped mountains in the background
Awards and Recognition, Cooperation, Research & Art Published:

The film Fjord wins the Palme d'Or at Cannes – featuring a number of Finnish creators

The film was co-produced by Jussi Rantamäki of the film company Aamu, and it also features a Finnish costume and sound designer.
Graphic poster with dark leaves, grey textured surface and Finnish words “Näytös 26 Näyttelyâ€.
Research & Art Published:

Näytös/Näyttely26 transforms Helsinki’s Lasipalatsi Quarter into a hub for fashion and textile expertise

The event showcases Aalto’s comprehensive expertise in textiles, clothing, and fashion, as students graduating from both the Bachelor's Major in Fashion as well as the Master's Major in Fashion and Textile Design will present their thesis work.
Brown-toned display of wood, pulp, fibre, thread cone and knitted fabric, showing stages from log to textile.
Research & Art Published:

The journey of a 17th-century shipwreck continues as a unique knitted dress

Researchers at Aalto University transformed surplus wood from the Hahtiperä shipwreck into textile fibre, spun it into yarn, and knitted it into a dress using new AI-assisted technology.