About The Author

DOUGLAS CASTLE: PROFESSIONAL PROFILE


914.462.2299 (Direct Telephone)

914.514.1673 (Facsimile)

douglascastle (Skype, By Appointment)

douglas.castle@yahoo.com (Email - Preferred)

douglas.castle@icloud.com (Email - Large Document Transfers, By Arrangement)



Douglas Castle is a senior level expert in all matters of high-level corporate negotiations, deal structure and finance, strategic planning, international business, major project management and all aspects of business communication. He speaks, consults and writes frequently about these subjects, as well as about key aspects of leadership, crisis management and the Human Condition. He has authored a great many articles on a very wide variety of subjects. Mr. Castle is currently a private consultant to young companies in several different countries.


Mr. Castle has been, and continues to be a seasoned and acclaimed advisor, director and trustee to emerging enterprises and growing companies worldwide, across a broad variety of industries on matters of organizational development, strategic planning, financing (both institutional equity and debt), international incorporations and negotiating of joint ventures, licenses of intellectual property, and mergers and acquisitions. Mr. Castle’s current passions are centered upon leveraging his wealth of experience in high-stakes corporate negotiations, deal structure, organizational engineering, strategic planning, business communications, social media marketing campaigns and financing to foster innovation and entrepreneurial growth and success in promising early-stage companies.


Mr. Castle’s professional resume has encompassed: international banking, asset-based financing, merchant banking (equity), factoring, purchase order financing, trade financing, leasing, sale/leaseback transactions, credit enhancement and surety bonding, transactional structuring (mergers, acquisitions, LBOs, ESOPs, management buy-outs, transnational and domestic co-ventures), real estate investment syndication, and the creation and monetization of unique investment instruments.


He has written and presented operating plans for international and offshore banks, finance companies, leasing companies, guarantee (bonding and other credit enhancements) companies to various financial institutions and government agencies and ministries; he has chartered a number of international commercial and economic development banks and reinsurance companies in multiple offshore and international jurisdictions -- these institutions had a combined aggregate capitalization at their operating outset of in excess of US$12,800,000,000.00.


During the past thirty five years, he has also incorporated close to one hundred IBCs (International Business Companies) and formed more than a dozen APTs (Asset Protection Trusts) in conjunction with domestic and international legal counsel across many business sectors. He has worked as a turnaround expert for troubled US and UK companies, and has renegotiated loan terms with banks, other creditors, bondholders and shareholders for these companies, both as pre-bankrupts, and as debtors-in-possession or trustees-in-possession.


Some of Mr. Castle’s prior engagements have included: Chairman of Global Edge International Consulting Associates, Inc.; Executive Director of Global Business Intel™, an unincorporated Division of Global Edge Technologies Group, LLC; Director and Senior Consultant of The Castle Consultancy; Managing Director and Member of Global Edge Technologies Group LLC; Acting Chairman and CEO of TNNWC Group, LLC; Senior Financial Analyst In Charge Of Special Projects for National Westminster Bank, plc; Adjunct Associate Professor in the Department of Banking, Finance and Investments at the Hofstra University School Of Business; Director of Capitol Guaranty Surety Company Inc.; Director of First Empire Capital Corporation and First Empire Autolease, Inc.; Intelligence Contractor for Kroll International Inc.; Interim CEO for AGP Group (publicly-traded, subsequently privately purchased); Member of the Board Of Directors, Triangle Group International, Inc. (publicly-traded, subsequently divided into several private concerns, each one a Management Buyout); and numerous others.


Mr. Castle received his B.S. in Economics from Stony Brook University (1976), with Omicron Delta Epsilon honors (as well as a New York State Regents Scholarship), and he received his MBA in Public Accounting from The Hofstra University Graduate School Of Business (with a graduate fellowship) in 1979.


Mr. Castle is a passionate and prolific speaker and writer about topics relating to Internationalism, futurism, leadership, negotiation, communication, and a variety of other non-financial topics.


You can obtain more information about Douglas Castle’s personal, educational and professional background by visiting his Linked In profile, which can be found by going to http://www.linkedin.com/in/douglascastle



Douglas Castle

914.462.2299 (Direct Telephone)

914.514.1673 (Facsimile)

douglascastle (Skype, By Appointment)

douglas.castle@yahoo.com (Email - Preferred)

douglas.castle@icloud.com (Email - Large Document Transfers, By Arrangement)


This document is Copyright © 2017 by Douglas Castle, with all rights reserved.

Monday, November 20, 2017

Managing The Virtual Enterprise

Managing The Virtual Business Enterprise
Being A Virtual Virtuoso
Managing Employees And Contractors Over Space And Time
The Unique Interpersonal Skills Required Of A Team Leader Or Project Manager Who Works Virtually


An aerial view of a virtual employee, stock photo style, which employee who could easily win the intergalactic prize for the neatest, most stereotypical and technologically incongruous desk of all time. [There - I’ve actually said it and we all feel better!]


Introduction

With virtual enterprises being on the rise, the issue of how to direct and coordinate the efforts of a group of people working remotely is crucial. Certain management directives, as well as the deployment of certain technology will be essential to the success of the virtual enterprise. This article breaks this topic into two sections, one being “Communications Protocol” and the other being “Useful Technologies”. The bold assumptions here are that the enterprise at issue is completely virtual, that employees or contractors working from home offices each have a specific area of responsibility and corresponding accountability (and are fully aware of what is expected of them), and that it is your role, gentle reader, to manage their work efforts and their ultimate work product.

In the growing world of the virtual organization, the best natural or trained communicators and charismatic commanders will rise to the top as successes, whereas the more technically-oriented individuals taking the narrower view of business, i.e., those who manage processes and projects instead of managing people, will tend to lag behind in their ability to bring out the best in the employees and contractors as a group.

Communications Protocol

  1. Contact every employee or contractor at least once daily via telephone or Skype -- preferably via Skype due to its video feature, and simply inquire as to: A) what that individual is working on, B) does he or she require assistance or additional resources, C) whether or not he or she been in communication with any of the other team members, D) what his or her expectation is in terms of meeting his or her budget and performance deadlines, E) whether you might just have a look (either via email, screenshare or through collaboration tools) at what he or she has produced so far.

  1. Hold a weekly meeting of all employees and contractors in order to build the sensation of team, to allow for intelligence-sharing and brainstorming and to encourage open communications amongst all members of the group.

  1. Schedule meetings, as necessary, via telephone or Skype [Skype video is much better than mere telephone conversation because you have the additional dimension of body language to enhance the efficacy of interaction], with twosomes or other small groups of employees and contractors who may have dependent or overlapping responsibilities, or who may be at odds with each other for any number of reasons.

Communication should be frequent (short bursts), intensive and highly-focused. As the manager or project coordinator, you must also keep the entire team apprised of any changes in budgeted resources, expected timeframes, engagement scope, and the like. You must monitor their performance with great vigilance and you must foster a spirit of “team” and of “teammates”. You are the conductor of an orchestra with remote instrumentalists… and you are responsible not only for getting the best performance out of each virtuoso, but you must get the best performance out of the entire virtual orchestra, which requires providing frequent feedback and input.

Useful Technologies

Aside from the telephone and Skype, the following are all helpful collaboration, communication and cooperation tools which can be used by the manager to keep the virtual business tightly together and performing as a whole. Google has a suite of tools which are almost “made to order” for virtual teams needing to accomplish great and meaningful things.

GOOGLE DOCS - A great tool for sharing documents and for the cooperative authorship of documents such as reports, plans, etcetera. Certainly far more efficient than sending documents back and forth to groups of people as attachments to email correspondence. This is one of my favorites.

VIBER - A smartphone application which allows free international voice calling.

ALL OF THE OTHERS - A host of other contemporary (as of the date of this writing) tools is available to supplement the above. These are discussed in some detail in an article recently published by Time Doctor™. Just click on the link below for a wealth of information on these gizmos and gadgets:


Some Other Thoughts Regarding This Topic

  1. If your team is international, or if time zones may be an issue (even between New York and California), give very careful consideration to the times at which you contact individuals and arrange group meetings. For group meetings you might want to shift the weekly scheduled time (after giving very ample notice to all of your employees and contractors) to accommodate different people in different geographies.

  1. Use as many visual aids as possible to be clear and effective over time and distance.

  1. Be rapidly responsive when employees and contractors contact you; this might mean working an extended schedule to get the job done right.

  1. Don’t ever forget to offer praise and encouragement (and don’t be robotic - your team members will be more responsive to a Human than to a cheap science-fiction cyborg or automaton) -- these are part of sound management.

  1. As the manager of your virtual team, you are expected to A) know how to use each of the best collaboration tools, and B) to be ready, willing and able to remotely train your employees and contractors in the use of each of them. Waxing philosophical for a brief moment, in this life you must be a great student and a great teacher in order to truly be successful.

Lastly, remember that while a modicum of patience is critical in managing people, too much patience and empathy can make for poor leadership. And you can be certain that managing a virtual team requires emotional intelligence and people skills well beyond those required to manage a real-time, physically-grounded enterprise.

Thank you, as always, for reading me. - Douglas Castle

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