Together, we win: 6 ideas for building culture in remote teams

Did you know that “loneliness” and “difficulty in collaboration and communication” are two of the biggest struggles faced by remote workers? Often, the lack of human interaction leads to remote workers feeling isolated and disengaged, eventually affecting their mental health and productivity. 

The solution? A robust and inclusive remote company culture. Your company culture directly impacts the enthusiasm of your workforce, and how much of their time and energy they are willing to invest in your company. Not just that, there is now a proven link between healthy company culture and employee productivity. According to a study conducted by Oxford University’s Saïd Business School, happy workers are 13% more productive than their unhappy counterparts.

In co-located settings, company culture often stems from various naturally occurring triggers built upon how team members treat one another, and what is the accepted code of conduct. On the other hand, in the absence of these natural triggers, remote companies often struggle with the following challenges when it comes to building culture: 

The water cooler effect

The ‘watercooler effect’ is defined as “a phenomenon occurring when employees at a workplace gather around the office water cooler and chat.” In a physical office, casual conversations and non-work banter build trust amongst employees, in effect strengthening company culture. However, in the absence of these regular conversations and social interaction, remote workers often find themselves distanced and disconnected from their team members.

Cultural differences

In colocated offices, a large part of the workforce shares a common culture. Festivals and holidays become a natural point of convergence, adding to the team’s sense of oneness and camaraderie. On the other hand, members of a distributed team hail from different cultural backgrounds and celebrate different festivals, and thus have to work harder to find common ground. 

Lack of trust and empathy

Non-verbal cues like facial expression, body language, gestures, and eye contact play a huge role in any kind of communication. When a person’s nonverbal signals match with their words, it increases trust, clarity, and empathy. Team members feel connected to each other, viewing fellow colleagues as people instead of merely names on a screen. One of the biggest factors for disengagement within remote teams is the lack of trust within team members.

For distributed teams, culture must be built intentionally, and strengthened continuously. Here are some steps that every remote organisation can take to build and strengthen their work culture: 

Re-emphasize core values

Ensure that the company’s core values are clearly articulated, and reiterated at regular intervals. We recommend ensuring that your company’s website clearly reflects your vision and mission statement and your core values. Remember, simply adding that you’re an equal opportunity employer in your company’s values is not enough. The same must be reflected in the composition of your workforce. 

Get buy-in from the leadership

One of the best ways to earn credibility in this area is to get participation from your company’s leadership. Here’s an example: back in May 2020, when most companies were struggling with the transition to remote work, Twitter’s CEO, Jack Dorsey, sent a company-wide email telling his employees that they had the option to continue working remotely forever. This endorsement by the CEO played a huge role in helping Twitter’s employees feel safe and valued as they chose to continue working remotely. Today, we know that company culture remains an empty phrase unless it is reflected in the actions of the company’s leadership. 

Create open channels of communication at all levels

In physical workplaces, interaction amongst team members is often decided by physical proximity of their cubicles. However, in a remote setting, every employee is simply a message away, whether it’s your immediate manager or the company’s CEO. Remote companies must use this advantage to form better relationships between employees that are not restricted by organisational hierarchies. 

Set clear availability expectations

In a remote team, it’s easy for people to feel like they need to respond to requests immediately to show that they are staying actively engaged. However, this also leads to the problem of constant presenteeism followed by burnout. Companies need to set clear expectations with respect to time and channels of communication. Slack, email, video calls – clearly demarcate your policy with respect to synchronous and asynchronous communication. Clearly defined expectations ensure that all employees are on the same page.

Invest in your onboarding process

69% of employees are more likely to stay with a company for three years if they experienced great onboarding. As a remote company, your onboarding process is your best chance to create a positive lasting impression on new employees. We recommend investing into weekly and monthly check-ins, a thoughtful welcome kit, and a company handbook with all the  relevant information an employee needs to get started.

Set up a virtual water cooler (or banter channel)

 Much like an actual water-cooler, where colleagues indulge in non-work banter and socialising, a virtual water cooler enables the same for distributed teams. A dedicated slack channel, a virtual game room or even an email thread – the idea is to help your workforce bond over shared interests and non-work conversations. From Gatheraround to Donut, there exist hundreds of tools to help strengthen the connection between members of distributed teams. 

Remote teams work because they refuse to let barriers like physical location and time zones act as hurdles. The same also holds true for building company culture. 

As a remote first organisation, we know at Talent500 that there is no fixed secret-sauce for building the perfect remote culture. As leaders begin to understand and prioritise the needs of their distributed workforce, a healthy and nurturing company culture is the natural result. 

Removing barriers: 5 team building activities for your distributed team

One of the few advantages of a brick and mortar workplace is that colleagues get multiple opportunities to interact with each other and form social bonds. It is natural to socialise at cafeterias and water coolers, social and cultural events. 

However, when your office is remote and meetings are virtual, team building requires a little more innovation than just foosball and monthly coffee meetings. According to this survey by Buffer, the top two challenges faced by remote workers include “barriers to communication & collaboration” and “loneliness”.

Luckily, the right team building activities can help solve both of these problems. When members of a distributed team participate in virtual team building activities, it builds bonds of trust and empathy between them. Team members understand each other’s strengths and weaknesses. As a result, teams experience increased productivity, better collaboration, and a marked increase in employee engagement. 

Struggling to find an activity that will help erode the cultural and geographical barriers amongst your team members? Here’s a list of 5 universally popular team building activities: 

Virtual escape room

Clues, competition, and camaraderie; a virtual escape room is the perfect combination of all three. Participants are divided into teams, which must then compete against each other across a variety of challenges. The challenges mostly include solving puzzles and riddles. The team that is able to complete all the challenges in the least amount of time wins, or “escapes the room”. Here’s a list of some very popular virtual escape rooms.

Virtual pictionary

There’s something about poorly drawn illustrations that makes us inevitably smile. Much like real life pictionary, one team member tries to illustrate the word on the virtual paint board, while the others take turns guessing. Skribbl.io, Let’sDraw.It, and Brightful are all great multiplayer games.

Two truths and a lie

Here is one team building game that never fails to break the ice between members of a distributed team. Just as the name suggests, each member of the group introduces themselves by stating two truths and one lie about themselves. The rest of the participants then guess which statement is the lie. In addition to being a great alternative for the usual introduction, it also gives team members a brief insight into the personal lives of their team members. 

Gatheraround

What if you could find a way to make sharing easy and effortless? That’s exactly what Gatheraround does. The game lets team members answer random questions based on a particular theme. It’s USP lies in its easy to use interface and carefully curated questions. Gatheraround offers an entire list of themes to choose from, ranging from “All-Hands Social” to mixers for various communities.

Mad, glad, sad retrospective

Although a tool devised for the improvement of project management, the mad-glad-sad-retrospective exercise makes its way into our list due to its sheer simplicity. Team members take turns discussing 3 things in the previous sprint/work week; one that made them mad, one that made them glad, and one that made them sad. Apart from being a great way for team members to share their emotions, it also enables leaders to understand team dynamics.

Still wondering if there are any tangible benefits of investing into team building activities? According to this Gallup research, virtual team building activities lead to an increase in employee performance rate, resulting in 41% lower absenteeism and 21% higher profitability. So the next time you think about skipping that Fun Friday session, remember that it impacts your bottom line directly. 

Take your pick from our list of fun and easily executable team building activities. You can thank us later!

At Talent500, we help companies build, manage, and scale their distributed teams.  With our best-in-class benefits, managing a remote team becomes easy with us as your EOR. We leverage a host of community activities, learning and development initiatives, and many more methods to help bolster employee engagement. To know how we can help you achieve this goal, book a consultation online.  

4 secrets to successfully manage global tech teams

It is said that managing a technical team is more of an art than it is a science. Even though the team is consistently dealing with data, it would prove problematic if companies tried to measure an engineer’s productivity through an agile process. Managing a team is already a challenge on-site, and this challenge is compounded in a globally distributed system. When working as a location-independent force, other factors like time zone, language barriers, and working culture come into the mix. 

While an administrative role is the natural next step for many developers, the job now is a lot more different than it used to be. With companies going fully remote, most leaders now oversee globally distributed teams, often spread across different parts of the planet. 

However, most of us were unprepared for this sudden shift to remote work. 2 out of 3 managers surveyed said that they were untrained for this new transition to managing dispersed teams. Naturally, this proves problematic for aspiring tech leaders or those thrown into the fray in the past 2 years.  

So, if this is your first stint as a manager for a global tech team, or you are looking to take on a leadership role, here are a few quick lessons to help you manage a tech team spread across the globe. 

Make trust-building the first priority

The absence, or lack, of trust within any team is among the dysfunctions that need to be addressed at the earliest. Mutual trust must exist between team members, and on an interpersonal level between an employee and their manager. Without trust, members of the team are more likely to be defensive in their approach and will often work in silos. This curbs collaboration, which is a fundamental element for any team, especially for remote teams. Hence, it becomes the responsibility of the team leader to build trust within the team.

However, considering the shift to digital communication mediums, leaders have to think beyond the traditional approaches of trust-building. A study conducted with 597 leaders found common approaches to not be as effective as expected. Actions that did not have much impact on build trusting were:

  • Giving recognition
  • Promoting complete transparency
  • Focusing on team building

On the other hand, things that did work were when managers:

  • Showed vulnerability
  • Maintained commitments
  • Communicated true intentions behind decisions

This makes sense, as employees interacting virtually need to know that there’s another human on the other end. As such, exhibiting these traits of genuine trust is sure to help you form the coveted trust bond. 

Leverage technology for communication and planning tasks

While it may seem like a no-brainer to manage a remote team with technology, the lesson here is to use all common platforms available to you. Oftentimes, leaders will use a suite of tools for project management, communication, collaboration, conferencing and other such activities, causing a break in the flow. Your goal is to simplify, integrate, and enable teams to efficiently collaborate. Here, popular services like Slack, Asana, Workplace, Zoom, and others are viable solutions. They allow seamless communication and also enable planning, scheduling, and tracking on the same platform. 

In a distributed team, project management is a critical process. With the right tools, giving real-time updates, communicating and planning can, and should happen on one platform. This way, everyone involved has access to crucial information, resources, and instructions, without key details being lost to poor management. Besides project management, effective communication is key for any remote leader. Schedule routine meetings with the entire team to stay in tune and get updates from real-time interactions. 

Pay close attention to cultural differences

More often than not, a remote leader will have to manage team members of different nationalities. This is mainly because remote teams leverage talent across borders efficiently, thus bringing value to the table. However, for a leader, this means having to navigate the delicate rules and boundaries of culture. With members from different countries, cultural differences are bound to exist and being aware of these is crucial. 

For instance, the concept of collaboration may differ based on cultural context. Some team members may be more accustomed to a passive approach, while others may assume a dominating, loud role. Expecting either to act like the other would prove problematic. Additionally, some nationalities may have working culture norms that must be respected. Be it national holidays, timings, or communication cues, it is important to give these factors necessary attention.  

Leaders that turn a blind eye to culture are sure to alienate their employees and hurt their effectiveness during communication. Experts and renowned leaders believe that cultural awareness training is absolutely important for all leaders managing geographically dispersed teams. There is a learning curve here, but the best approach would be to work on a personal level. Each individual’s cultural bend will demand a unique approach, and while this is effort-intensive, it pays off in the long run. 

Be flexible to foster round-the-clock efficiency

A key lesson for any modern leader to keep in mind is that flexibility is king in today’s workplace. According to one survey, 54% of respondents chose ‘flexibility in the workday’ as the best way in which their company could support them. The ‘always-on’ feeling is a known cause for burnout, and is very damaging if it is established as an appropriate working culture. Instead, as a leader, you should put flexibility above all and ditch the idea that tasks need to be scheduled around ‘HQ-time’. While it can’t always be fair to everyone, there are ways to adapt efficiently. 

For instance, company meetings that require members across oceans to get on a call could be split into two to accommodate time zone differences. Another option is to have members work on a late, or early-split on rotation so that there’s never just one part of the team which is required to make adjustments.

Lastly, experts also advocate for the approach wherein the project follows the sun. The hand-off of duties moves from the west to the east; this way, everyone stays on track seamlessly.  

Only the truly talented can bring in results, despite all the expected hardships. In some cases, it could also serve as a stepping stone to bigger career opportunities. A surefire way to give yourself this advantage and position yourself among the best in the industry is to sign up on Talent500

Join an elite global talent network of the top tech specialists and pave the way forward to your dream career. Access a network that enables #limitlesslearning and soar to new heights at leading Fortune 500 companies. Sign up online today in order to #BeLimitless!