Remote working, or telecommuting, has been around since the 1970s but has only made a measurable shift in adoption in the past ten years. Technology improvements in communication and security makes it possible for people to work from wherever & whenever. Remote workers need guidance and leadership like traditional co-located employees. You must use different leadership methods to be a successful remote leader.
Leading a traditional team in a physical office is a demanding role but has years of training and resources available to learn from. Leading a remote team is a newer concept and there isn't a real well-defined way of how leaders should operate in these environments. Remote teams can be set up in different ways which each affect how leaders run their teams.
In this session, you'll learn ways to help manage your remote workers in ways that'll support them to be productive and prevent you from coming across as a micro-manager. Remote working brings a whole set of challenges that should be addressed by every employee and it's a good leader's role to make sure nobody is blocked by them. You'll also learn the importance of cultural bias and how it can affect communication and team harmony. Lastly you'll find out how critical regular feedback is and how to put in place with your teams. Throughout the session you'll get some tips on tools and processes that you can start to use immediately.
6. Here’s my team at a recent meetup; I can tell you a story about every one of these people
London, Argentina, Kansas, nomadic, me, Boston, Prague, Milwaukee, Tennessee and Montreal
But a team doesn’t magically happen overnight. It starts with hiring.
7. Who here is involved in hiring?
Self-starters, hiring process at Automattic, can be more solitary, great communicators, hard to hire juniors right now but remote is commonplace
Huge investment of time but the whole team is involved
9. Probably the most important thing you can do as a team lead is regularly privately speak with each team member
10. You don’t necessarily have to like your coworkers, but the team should respect each other and genuinely want everyone to succeed
This feeds into the next big topic, trust
11. Huge part of a successful team is developing a sense of trust between everyone.
13. Psychological safety refers to an individual’s perception of the consequences of taking an interpersonal risk or a belief that a team is safe for risk taking in the face of
being seen as ignorant, incompetent, negative, or disruptive. In a team with high psychological safety, teammates feel safe to take risks around their team members.
They feel confident that no one on the team will embarrass or punish anyone else for admitting a mistake, asking a question, or offering a new idea.
16. I believe the key to successful leadership of a remote team is to encourage collaboration amongst your team including yourself.
17. 👏 talk 👏 to 👏 each 👏 other 👏
Communication. Remote workers need to communicate more and differently in several important ways. A remote team can’t succeed without a trusted system of
communication.
19. Geographically disperse teams get to deal with timezone fun. My team is spread across the world. Hong Kong, Taiwan, India, Czech Republic, Argentina, US. 14-15 hour
spread. If I get New Zealand, eek. Some people just have to make accommodations. We're upfront about this in our hiring process.
20. You need a way to record things in a way that others won’t miss if they’re AFK or working in a timezone not similar to yours. Standups, weekly meetings, weekly
wrapups, P2s. You have to trust the system of record.
21. There needs to be one place where someone can definitively find decisions made. No e-mail chains, links to systems you no longer pay for, etc.
23. Having gone through a refactoring how I approach work, I recognize how important it is to have clear focus on not only what I do as a lead, but ensuring each person on
the team has a similar ability to focus. I frequently ask my team how the clarity is with what we're doing.
24. You and your team need a sense of purpose. They need to know their work has impact on the team and also for the company. It's important to show how your team's
goals align with the division/company goals in some way.
25. Your team has goals. Now you need to plan well to make sure there is a pipeline of work. It should be clear where the team has to go after this current thing is done.
Transparency is very important.
26. I need to feel accountable for the things assigned to me. Anything I commit to do or ask people to do for me, I make sure there is an understanding on why it is important
to do it. Knowing your work affects someone else is the biggest motivator to do things on time and correctly.
27. A super power to have is the ability to smell when things are going off course early.
28. Leadership is hard. It can take a toll on your mind, your body, and can affect how you ultimately lead your team. Self-care is important for you and your team.
29. It’s really easy to always work when you’re remote. Set boundaries for yourself and lead by example. Status indicator in Slack; Jason Fried from Basecamp.
30. Not everyone will get burned out, but it’s pretty common. Recognize when you need real time off. Your team also needs time off.
31. Third party person; mention the program Automattic has. Also mention it’s important that you help coach others. There’s a book called the Coaching Habit that is a good
introduction on what it means to coach.
32.
33. You don’t need to do everything. This is the hardest thing to date for me. You’re not giving away stuff that you don’t like to do, you’re empowering people to do a better
job at things you do to focus on other important things.