As social distancing and isolation were one of the first measures taken to counter the spread of COVID-19, the first challenge to collaborative projects was a need to rethink and reorganise their forms of communication and gatherings with and between partners and colleagues. The question they faced was, ‘how do we keep alive the daily and periodic human interaction and communication that generate new knowledge, ideas, and innovation?’.
Technology already offered some basic tools for remote working which were increasingly being adopted in international professional contexts. Yet, remote working was the exception, sometimes the innovation, and rarely was it the norm.
Based on the survey questionnaire returns for this study, we found that that projects had to identify new ways to:
- Reorganise meeting formats, frequency, and platform (digital/physical/hybrid). Hence, from an operational point of view they had to:
- Redesign physical collaborative meetings for online delivery and ensure their effectiveness in reaching the predefined objectives.
- Design online sessions in a way that ensured the commitment and active involvement/participation of all partners (i.e., keeping the participants engaged and their levels of attention high).
- Overcome the lack of technical skills in the use of tools that were relatively new/unfamiliar to most and fill any hardware gaps (e.g., partners/employees not owning a laptop).
- Overcome access limitations / restrictions to workplaces, fieldwork, and target groups. This implies the need to develop special safety measures, organise ad-hoc workspaces to enable in-presence meetings, and restructure plans/guidelines for site visits and fieldwork.
- Manage the working group on a personal and emotional level to develop a collaborative environment for distant interaction/communication. Projects reported how crucial it was to ensure mutual trust and commitment and to build momentum, especially when a lack of in-person encounters (and therefore face to face mediation opportunities) could increase the risk of conflicts among individuals/partners.