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Being a remote-enabled team doesnât mean you are remote-first. It means that youâre open to your colleagues occasionally working (or maybe full time) from home (or wherever). Today, Iâm going to explain how my team at Careem is a remote-enabled team and what that means for our work and culture.
Itâs scary
Having employees work remotely is scary for management. How can they trust you to do your work if they canât see you? At Careem, we already have multiple offices that people work from. Itâs, even more so, the case for my team, where the product manager and designer work out of Dubai, and the development team work out of Berlin.
We work on trust. We trust that weâll produce the same output no matter where we are. We talked as a teamâââis it possible for some of us to work remotely (some of the time). The answer was a resounding âyesâ! Butââânot everyone wants to work remotely. So, you canât force remote-work on your colleagues.
As the leader of the team, I find that being so flexible has enabled my colleagues to make their own decisions and be owners of their time and space. Itâs created an environment where people can asynchronously and synchronously work.
Tools
When working remotely, a lot of the time communication will be asynchronous. So, you need excellent communication tools to help facilitate the conversation.
At Careem, we use Slack. I know, I know, everyone uses Slack these days. Our email is only for âofficialâ things like getting approvals or calendar invites. We donât have too many rules around our slack culture. Most teams have a public and a private channel. There are channels for the regions (i.e. Berlin), and there are channels for announcements and IT chat and devops and help.
We also use a video meeting tool called Zoom. We have bi-weekly meetings with the entire Careem staff where we can hear business updates and cool things in tech or tech updates. My team also uses this for retrospectives, stand-ups, backlog grooming, and sprint planning. Video chat is much more real-time and energetic than just text.
The Careem for Business team has a shared (google) calendar where we put things like holidays and if someone is going to be remote for a longer period. It helps to know where and when people are.
Careem is also unique, in that we also have an internal CMS where news about Careem and announcements as well as stories are posted for all to read. I find that this helps me build a connection to the company even though my development team is not based in the middle east.
Communication
When we work remotely, we make sure that anyone on our team can easily contact us. That means, announcing in Slack, either the day before or on the day that youâre working from home. Making sure you attend all meetings (that you needs toââânot all are required), including asking for a âZoomâ link when the team holds local meetings.
We also announce on slack when a pull request is ready to be reviewed. Itâs just easier to find it because reviews are usually done when people are in-between tasks or out-of-flow state.
If you have a problem, and youâre working remotely, please do send someone (or your team) a slack message. Donât just sit there playing with your thumbs. You wouldnât do that in the office, so you donât do it remotely either.
One thing you may have to watch out for is silos. Youâll find that overheard chat like two people discussing a code review in a room or general tech topics that randomly sprout up will be missed. The âwater-coolerâ banter will go missing too. Itâs not all rosy!
Be Personal
Just because youâre a remote team, doesnât mean you donât need to know how someone is doing or whatâs going on in their lives. Be personal and ask how was their day. Be a human and ask if everything is ok.
When someone is sick, the little things count. We usually send a quick slack saying we canât make it. Send them your wishes back. It helps everyone feel like their not alone.
Meet up sometimes. Have a team lunch. Go for a coffee. Itâll help bond your team and build the trust for a remote-enabled team. Recently, our product manager visited our Berlin office. We went for lunch as a team twice that week. Itâs fun and helps the connection.
Rules
There are no set rules for being remote-enabled or being a remote-only team. It really shouldnât be decided at an organisational level; it should be decided at the team level.
Are you okay with your team members being occasionally away?
How would it work if theyâre in a different time zone?
When should people be available?
Do you have on call?
Do you have VPNs?
There are a lot of questions and rules to decide before you embark on this as a team. But I think itâs an awesome privilege to have access to and it enables the team to take ownership of how they do their job.
TL;DR
Make sure you have trust in the team. Itâs scary to allow your peers to work from somewhere other than the office, but itâll be worth it.
Use the right tools for your jobs. Slack is great for asynchronous conversation. Video calling is great for synchronous. Shared calendars are useful for planning.
Keep all communication channels open. Itâs better to over-communicate than have someone sitting a whole day doing nothing.
Be there for your colleagues. It makes the day a bit better if things are a little more personal.
Finally, make sure you set the grounds rules. Thereâs not going to be a one-size-fits-all, so make sure you cover the bases when someone is going to work remotely for a longer period.
Originally published at www.alexaitken.nz on September 17, 2018.
Being a Remote-Enabled Team was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
Disclaimer
The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not reflect the views of Bitcoin Insider. Every investment and trading move involves risk - this is especially true for cryptocurrencies given their volatility. We strongly advise our readers to conduct their own research when making a decision.