What A Company Needs To Provide Employees For Effective Remote Work

How To Make Remote Working More Effective

How To Make Remote Working More Effective

How To Make Remote Working More Effective: 5 Key Areas To Pay Attention To

As a small business owner, I am thinking a lot about what companies can and must provide to employees who are working remotely full time. Obsidian Learning has had flexible work hours including the option to work from home (WFH) for years. But mandatory, full-time WFH for all employees and contractors raises the bar considerably, as does the general uncertainty of a global pandemic.

Here are my top thoughts on what our staff needs from us, and what companies can provide on the people side as well as in terms of other resources.

1. Leadership, Of Course

Leaders can provide our people with:

2. Tools And Resources

Chances are good your organization already had tools for communication and collaboration in place. And chances are good that more people need to use those tools now, and need to do more with them.

Along with basics like email, don’t forget:

PRO TIP: Look for social connection bonus points

Who on your team or in your organization can help people quickly get on board with new-to-them tools? Just because your developers use Slack doesn’t mean your back office people are familiar with it. If it’s now the company quick collaboration tool of choice, someone needs to invite the back office people to the appropriate channels, and maybe give a couple of pointers to get them going. It’s not the tool functionality that most needs explaining—newbies can Google that—it’s how this team uses the tool to do their work.

3. Home Office Setup

If your employees need more than a laptop to be productive and healthy in the office, they will need more than a laptop to be productive and healthy full-time at home too. Headphones are great for focus and for video conference calls—especially if kids, pets, and spouses are also at home during work hours. Keyboards, monitors, chairs, printers, office supplies—all these things may be needed.

Tell your employees up front what you can provide and how they can get the things they need. For example, do they order themselves up to a certain dollar limit and expense it back to the company? Or do they contact a designated support person who is ordering for everyone because they have a company credit card?

We opted to let our people check out their monitors, keyboards, and ergonomic chairs from the office to take home with them while our offices are closed. This gets them what they need quickly and reduces short-term expenses for the company.

4. Management

Employees need what they always need from managers, only more so. Managers make everything better when they:

5. Social Connection

Especially in times of stress and uncertainty when “social isolation” is a thing we do intentionally instead of an unfortunate and unintended symptom of our lifestyles, we need connection. We need to feel we are not alone. We need to feel we belong. This is one of the most impactful things a company can provide its people.

Our work is not just the tasks we do, the goals we accomplish, the revenue we generate, and the paychecks we take home. Our work knits us into the social fabric of our communities. At a time when our kids are not in school, sports leagues are suspended, and festivals, concerts, and other public gatherings are canceled indefinitely, we are craving ways to weave together and belong.

How companies can help:

One of the most wonderful things I have noticed recently is how patient and supportive most people are about everything that is not going smoothly right now. When my online conferencing tool won’t let me share files with a client, when I flub an interaction in a new collaboration tool, when I missed reaching out to someone yesterday but I do it today—each time the people on the other end have been gracious and understanding. This feels like a time when people are judging less and appreciating more. So even if you are not sure how to reach out and support your employees or your team, I encourage you to try. Then listen when they tell you what might work better next time and put them in charge of designing the next event.

For better or worse, for most Americans, our work and workplaces are central to our lives. Recognizing the impact beyond the paycheck can go a long way toward making everyone’s lives better as well as helping people and teams be much more effective and productive while working remotely.

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