Collaboration tool choices and use in remote software teams: emerging results from an ongoing study
Collaboration tool choices and use in remote software teams: emerging results from an ongoing study
As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, more software teams than ever find themselves working in a remote model with team members separated by location, timezone, and working hours. This working model is expected to persist post-pandemic as companies explore the benefits of hybrid working. Software teams have always been reliant on tools to help them build software. Now they find themselves wholly reliant on tools to help them collaborate online. Surprisingly, there has been little research to date on which collaboration tools are used, how they are chosen, how they are used, and what challenges are faced when using such tools. This short paper offers emerging findings from an ongoing study in which we are interviewing software professionals about these questions. The insights are preliminary in that we are still conducting additional interviews beyond the ones reported here, yet some common themes are already emerging. Among others, we highlight the following: choice of tools made by the teams is opportunistic; teams adapt existing collaboration practices to utilize the tools better when working remotely; and a persistent problem exists of being unable to find information across chats, emails, and documents.
Collaboration, Collaboration tools, Developer tools, Remote software development, Software team practices, Virtual software teams
76-80
Jackson, Victoria
28beab06-6fae-46d3-ad73-1d29897680db
Van Der Hoek, Andre
4c4cdeed-2314-47ad-ab7f-ae14026a028c
Prikladnicki, Rafael
7139f69b-6fba-4a68-b602-bb94ec835714
19 July 2022
Jackson, Victoria
28beab06-6fae-46d3-ad73-1d29897680db
Van Der Hoek, Andre
4c4cdeed-2314-47ad-ab7f-ae14026a028c
Prikladnicki, Rafael
7139f69b-6fba-4a68-b602-bb94ec835714
Jackson, Victoria, Van Der Hoek, Andre and Prikladnicki, Rafael
(2022)
Collaboration tool choices and use in remote software teams: emerging results from an ongoing study.
In Proceedings - 15th International Conference on Cooperative and Human Aspects of Software Engineering, CHASE 2022.
IEEE.
.
(doi:10.1145/3528579.3529171).
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, more software teams than ever find themselves working in a remote model with team members separated by location, timezone, and working hours. This working model is expected to persist post-pandemic as companies explore the benefits of hybrid working. Software teams have always been reliant on tools to help them build software. Now they find themselves wholly reliant on tools to help them collaborate online. Surprisingly, there has been little research to date on which collaboration tools are used, how they are chosen, how they are used, and what challenges are faced when using such tools. This short paper offers emerging findings from an ongoing study in which we are interviewing software professionals about these questions. The insights are preliminary in that we are still conducting additional interviews beyond the ones reported here, yet some common themes are already emerging. Among others, we highlight the following: choice of tools made by the teams is opportunistic; teams adapt existing collaboration practices to utilize the tools better when working remotely; and a persistent problem exists of being unable to find information across chats, emails, and documents.
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Published date: 19 July 2022
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Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 ACM.
Venue - Dates:
15th ACM/IEEE International Conference on Cooperative and Human Aspects of Software Engineering, CHASE 2022, , Hybrid, United States, 2022-05-18 - 2022-05-19
Keywords:
Collaboration, Collaboration tools, Developer tools, Remote software development, Software team practices, Virtual software teams
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 506905
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506905
PURE UUID: 088f3799-26db-4680-a820-a8e7d9748658
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Date deposited: 19 Nov 2025 17:53
Last modified: 20 Nov 2025 03:13
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Contributors
Author:
Victoria Jackson
Author:
Andre Van Der Hoek
Author:
Rafael Prikladnicki
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