Remote Working and Working From Home

The Covid-19 pandemic has presented unique challenges to organisations’ ‘business as usual,’ resulting in many employees working at home for the first time in their lives. According to YouGov, during May 2020 38% of the UK workforce was working at home, a significant increase from 7% pre-Covid-19. Whilst there are clear organisational benefits to this style of working, managing teams which are not co-located in a physical office, “virtual” team management, requires an adapted skill-set.

Distributed Team Management Skills

Research in this field is still in its infancy, but there is a broad consensus on how managers need to develop their
approach.

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Clarity and focus needs to come from you. It is harder to read the organisational mood when there are no informal
conversations in the kitchen or by the water cooler. You need to have a transparent structure of management
processes which are understood. This means creating and sharing a vision and clear expectations of performance
and rewards too. The vision needs to even sharper if you are working across cultures and continents.

Informal communication suffers in distributed teams. You will need to prioritise effective communication. This
means making time to speak to people face-to-face is desirable, but if this is not possible, via conference calls
and video conferencing. People respond better to voice and the subtleties of gestures which can be read from
face and voice tone. Email should be used as a last resort since it is easy to overwhelm people and even seeking
clarification is more stilted. The written word too often does not convey the intention and the more informal
aspects of communication. If you are working across continents and cultures be aware of differences in hidden
meanings in responses. It is important that leaders of distributed teams working across cultures develop a “Global”
way of seeing themselves rather than a hierarchy of cultures (Harush et al 2018). Tuning in to sensitive cultural
communication achieves more. Pick the right time to communicate with your distributed team is vital; just because
it is 2pm in San Francisco doesn’t make it a good time for a conference call to London!

Together with improved access to face-to-face communication, using technology well can improve other aspects
of the management of distributed teams. Enterprise technology platforms can facilitate dispersed team working,
including such features as: collaborative software, managed social media, blogs, forums, and bookmarking, which
together encourage collaboration – if enough people use them (Brzozowski, 2009). Opportunities for social chat
also help to build team identity and loyalty, even if work partners are 9,000 miles apart.

Team building is vital and, although it could be judged a cost (travel, hotels, activities etc.) it is an investment.
Seeing the faces of team members, finding out about them and building in social time, is vital to build a sense of
identity. Slogans, collective memory, laughing together and branding are crucial. Team building must have time for
a social element, breaking bread together, and even going on a journey or challenge are key aspects of building a
team identity. Whilst communication technology is improving, nothing has yet been invented that sends a signal of
trust and partnership as much as a handshake.

When you have distributed teams, it is less easy to gauge their needs as much as those you see in the office
every day. You therefore must make a special effort to look after your human assets who work remotely, from
managing expectations of delivery timescales to developing online training so that everyone has equal access to
opportunities to develop their skills portfolio. Finally, help them to look after their mental health by keeping a check
on workloads and offering local mental health support when needed. Leading remotely can have advantages but
it can also mean it is possible for staff to drift from an ideal state when social cues are missing or weak.

Technology has changed the workplace beyond recognition. Managers now need to embrace the freedom and flexibility it can offer to meet the changing needs of our teams and capitalize on the business benefits.' 
Cooper, K. (2018)

ReferencesBrzozowski, M (2009). WaterCooler: Exploring an Organization Through Enterprise Social Media Proceedings of the ACM 2009 international conference Supporting group work
Cooper, K. (2018). 9 Tips For Leading Distributed Teams https://www.forbes.com/sites/katecooper/2018/08/28/top-10-tips-for-leading-distributed-teams/
Fried, J & Heinemeier-Hanson, D  (2009).  Remote, Office not Required Vermilion Press Edition (2013) 
Harush, R, Lisak, A, & Glikson, E (2018). The bright side of social categorization: The role of global identity in reducing relational conflict in multicultural distributed teams Cross Cultural & Strategic Management https://doi.org/10.1108/CCSM-11-2016-0202
ONS (2016). UK labour Market Data www.ons.gov.uk/employmentandlabourmarket/peopleinwork/employmentandemployeetypes/bulletins/uklabourmarket/february2016 
The Institute of Leadership & Management (2017). Going Remote: Leading dispersed teams The Institute of Leadership & Management
The Institute of Leadership & Management (2020). Life after lockdown: The future of work Published by the Institute of Leadership & Management July 2020
YouGov (2020) Many more middle-class workers able to work from home than working class workers www.yougov.co.uk/topics/economy/articles-reports/2020/05/13/most-middle-class-workers-are-working-home-full-ti