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Nick Taylor
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What are your tips for working remotely?

I've been working remotely since before the pandemic and love it. For those of you that work remotely, what are some tips or great things you've seen an organization do to facilitate remote work life?

A woman pointing at a taco saying,

I'm always looking to up my remote game and as well, the comments here could help newer folk to remote work level up.

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Top comments (35)

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sylwiavargas profile image
Sylwia Vargas • Edited

tl;dr: try different work setups out and see what works best for you even if you've never done it!

This is something I've been reflecting a lot on in the past weeks so I'll use the comment space as my notepad 😅

Where I'm coming from

When I started to work remotely I had to rediscover what I (dis)like about my adult life. We are socialized to believe certain things to be true that not necessarily have to hold up under scrutiny, like:

  • eight-hour work makes sense / results in productivity
  • meetings are necessary

Since I no longer worked at an office, I allowed myself to go wild with testing what works for me. I asked myself questions like:

  • Do I like to work in the morning, in the afternoon, or at night?
  • Do I like strict schedule? Is it about how long I work or what type of work I do?
  • What kind of connection do I need with my colleagues to feel happy and safe?
  • Do I need an office, office space, or none of that?
  • If not measured by time, what is my definition of an "honest day's work"?

Because I take time to get used to changes, for the first year, I just observed my reactions to different settings. So, for instance, I'd work for a few weeks in a designated space, then a few weeks in my bed, then from a cafe, then from a living room, etc. Now, three years in, I have clarity on what I need to be happy, which informs the tips below, and also the companies I look for when job-searching.

1. Make sure to rest

Resting when working remotely is different from the in-person office experience.

First of all, most likely you don't have the clear "ritual" of finishing work (packing things up, commuting, changing clothes). Many people struggle with that even if they can't pinpoint the source of the discomfort. Resting becomes easier if you tell your brain: "that's it, work's done" so it's helpful to develop something along these lines. This might be changing clothes, going for a walk after work, leaving the space designated for work.

Secondly, you use your energy differently on zoom calls and in the in-person meetings. It's different for everyone so observe your body and your mind after different types of activities throughout the day. What leaves you exhausted or drained? What gives you energy? For me, zoom calls exhaust me and after a day filled with online chats, I find it extremely difficult to rest - it's like I'm running on a debt energy and even a good night's sleep won't be enough. A solution to that for me was taking ownership of my schedule and guarding the quiet times like my life depended on it (it kinda does).

Lastly, I see that my remote-working friends feel even more guilty to take time off, sick days, or mental health days because they are not commuting to work so who cares. Well, our bodies and minds care! It's extremely important that we schedule time to rest and totally disconnect from work. The world won't end if you're out for a week or two.

2. Find a way to connect to people

Working remotely can be lonely. When you work at the office, you share a little snippets of your real self with your colleagues throughout the day - the opportunities arise naturally, contrary to the online setting.

I love how StackBlitz manages that. We have minimal number of meetings but almost every day there's an opportunity to join and hang out with our team. On Mondays we talk about the weekend, on Wednesdays we play games, on Friday we express gratitude. We also host cook-together sessions and I feel like those are the times when I connected the most with my team because I saw them in their homes and saw their non-work personas. Also, we use Donut for online coffee pairings and I learned to use that time to actually learn something from my colleagues instead of just talking about the weather.

3. Find a team where you can assume good intentions

Misunderstandings on slack or on zoom can be really nasty. Of course you should improve the way you communicate, be kinder, softer, more open and understanding but even with that, you have little control over how others are so you may still end up frustrated. I paired my efforts at becoming a better communicator with finding a team where I feel safe. In such a team, I don't default to feeling like comments or disagreements are personal and that helps me react in a more constructive way. Most importantly, I don't end the day feeling frustrated because I know that all the things will straighten up sooner or later given we all care about each other.

4. Be comfortable

Comfort means something different for everyone. For me it's working in my pajamas and in my bed at home, not having meetings before 11am, but also working in a non-strict schedule. There are days when I wake up and want to go to a museum and then I start late. On Wednesdays, I play Scrabble at the local library with a group of lovely 80-year-old ladies. I take 1,5h lunch breaks so I can do analogue things like sitting in the garden, reading a book, or talking to my mom on the phone. Working remotely gives you more freedom to be comfortable and given all the stresses and obstacles that come with the distributed team, I think we should really take personal comfort seriously.

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michaeltharrington profile image
Michael Tharrington

Wow, this is amazing info and so thorough! Honestly, this could be a whole post of its own. Really appreciate ya sharing! 🙌

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patecatl848 profile image
Patecatl848

I agree 110%, I am very new to this arena. I am a Surgical tech and have worked in the medical field for over 26 years. I now want to marry both Python/Jupyter/Anaconda/PyCharm and a few sectors of the Medical field.
I am open to any & all suggestions.

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gamerseo profile image
Gamerseo

These few points are really important. We also recommend it to our employees.

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jake0011 profile image
JAKE

damn, that is a lot of great information.
thanks Sylwia!

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ben profile image
Ben Halpern

Great reply!

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nickytonline profile image
Nick Taylor

Thanks for sharing Sylwia!

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grunk profile image
Olivier

From a personal standpoint what's important to me is to recreate what i have known before in non remote workplace :

  • A fixed schedule of work
  • Work at desk with a good chair and good hardware
  • Schedule breaks , without interruption it's easy to work to much and it's usually not very efficient (at least for me)

From a company perspective , i think it's important to give employee the opportunities to know each other a create link.

  • Allow virtuals events on work time (coffe , snack break)
  • Help new comer to onboard with a mentor (ideally they will be geographically close to each other)
  • Create IRL meetup to create a strong sense of belonging.
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nickytonline profile image
Nick Taylor

Captain America saluting

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ben profile image
Ben Halpern

Having starting and stopping routines.

I generally focus on the same type of work every day when I start. I try to quickly finish something important before getting into anything that requires more depth. It gives me some momentum.

To end the day, I have somewhat of a ritual to fully close my laptop, write down some key things for tomorrow, and disengage.

With these two things, the "messy middle" is more straightforward to handle, and I feel like I'm in a really solid routine.

With all that said: Remote work post-pandemic is 100% different than in pandemic. One factor is that I work part time from a nearby co-working space. This happens to fit with my lifestyle and routine (not always possible), but it's a great part of the pace. I have a somewhat different flow and energy whether home or "in the office" as it is. It's still the same "remote work", but I feel like I have a pretty solid "best of both worlds" setup these days.

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nickytonline profile image
Nick Taylor

Thanks for sharing Ben!

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ibliskavka profile image
Ivan Bliskavka

Join a gym or club. Being cooped up every day can get very lonely.

Working in the same place nudges people into collaborating, socializing, and making friends. When I went remote full time in 2016 I felt pretty lonely, I also started shaving/washing less, and eating worse.

I started going to the gym (7am crossfit) regularly in 2017 and its been a game changer. I was forced to wake on a schedule, and wash afterwards. I started to eat better, and after a while, I found I looked forward to working out with the regulars. They are a lot like my work friends used to be - we see each other roughly every day, but we dont necessarily hang afterwards.

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hollyw00d profile image
Matt Jennings

Join a Co-working Space

For people that don't know, a co-working space is office space that you rent and where other random people rent and work close by as well.

I'm a full-time web developer and I've worked out of my co-working space cubicle most days. It's great because I:

  • Leave my computer at the co-working space most days so when I go home I don't work.
  • I meet other IT people so I don't get lonely.
  • I still get freedom to come and go as I please for personal appointments, compared to working at an office with coworkers.

Obviously this works best if you can afford it and the commute is short.

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theaccordance profile image
Joe Mainwaring • Edited
  • Remote work is not for everyone. As I've witnessed on more than one occasion, people have to be self-motivated to continue participating in a remote work environment. Some individuals are simply not positioned to excel in a remote work environment and can't be encouraged using either a carrot or stick; they only perform consistently when they think they're being observed by their peers or boss.
  • Understand the difference between synchronous and asynchronous work. Remote work may allow to work wherever you want, but it doesn't inherently enable you to work whenever you want. As developers, we have more asynchronous responsibilities than our peers in other departments, but we still probably have some responsibilities that are synchronous and require our presence at a specific time.
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katafrakt profile image
Paweł Świątkowski

I feel that you are asking about working from home, not working remotely. Having been working remotely since 2015 (with 3 years break in between) I'd say the challenges with remote work are mostly organizational and there really not a lot you, as an individual contributor, can do about it.

Sure, there are some small things around communication you could implement (mostly revolving around communicating much more than you'd do working on-site), but it's not really essential.

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nickytonline profile image
Nick Taylor

Definitely I was referring to a lot of what you can do as an individual, but how your org works for sure as well falls into the discussion, e.g. async communication first etc.

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highasthedn profile image
highasthedn

For me the most important is to have some kind of "hello afterwork ritual". When I'm finishing work in my office I go down to my car, turn up some loud metal tunes and drive home. So when I am arriving I'm also mentally home. In the first weeks when remote work started during the pandemic I just closed my notebook and well - I'm home but my head is stucking at work. I realised I need to do something. Mostly I go for a walk outside or listen to some records of my vinyl collection, otherwise I can't finish work

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anthonyjdella profile image
Anthony

Use a Kanban board to keep focused and prioritize work! It helps make yourself accountable so you don't end up playing video games all day :)

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volker_schukai profile image
Volker Schukai

Working on a laptop at starbucks sounds cool, but it's not healthy in the long run.
Use a good workstation, table, chair, monitor.

ehs.unc.edu/workplace-safety/ergon...

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nickytonline profile image
Nick Taylor • Edited

Agree on a good setup. If I do go to a coffee shop though, I have a stand. Here's my whole setup, iamdeveloper.com/uses