Career

Five best practices for implementing remote working

In the past few weeks remote working has, virtually overnight, become the default modus operandi for organizations that are in a position to allow their employees to work from home. How likely is it those employees will be productive?

The short answer is, it depends. In our experience, organizations that do remote working well, don’t do so by chance. Rather, they have well entrenched practices and processes in place to ensure their employees operate efficiently and pull together as a team, regardless of where they’re located.

1. Applications that make the process easier

A worker is only as good as their tools. Giving your team access to the applications they need to keep doing their jobs, irrespective of where they’re sitting, is Remote Working 101. That means mobilizing your email, commerce, communication and collaboration solutions so they’re available from laptops, tablets and smartphones, and putting security measures in place to reduce the risk of those systems, and the data they contain, being compromised.

2. Beam me in – reliable video conferencing technology

The digital era may have provided us with a plethora of options for staying in touch but face to face contact still trumps all of them. If that’s not possible, a decent video conferencing system is the next best thing. Working with the IT team to identify a platform that works for all users, including those not blessed with an abundance of bandwidth, and fulfils the organization’s security and privacy needs is a must. 

3. Note it down – making documentation mandatory

Joint projects are all about information sharing and, when a team is clustered together, mostly that just happens. Not so though when its members are scattered across cities and states, as is now the case. Documenting activity and tracking progress, rigorously and consistently, can have a big impact on productivity, and an investment in systems which support this is money well spent. 

4. Collaboration – it’s about actions, not software

The term collaboration – the act of working with others to achieve something – is bandied about with abandon in the modern workplace but talking about it and making it happen are two different things. Numerous platforms exist to encourage the process but unless they’re employed effectively, their effectiveness can be limited. Experienced remote working organisations recognise this and develop protocols and processes to ensure these collaboration solutions become effective tools that help employees solve real business issues. 

Some go a step further, with the appointment of collaboration SWAT officers or teams – individuals with a remit to identify bottlenecks and other business problems which could be addressed via improved processes or more effective use of collaboration software. 

5. All together now – build a team environment

The switch from office to home based working can be a culture shock – particularly for individuals who enjoy the bustle and camaraderie of the office environment. Feeling unmoored from the mother ship can send their morale and productivity south. That’s why putting a real effort into building a team identity is critical. 

Encouraging the use of social and collaboration tools – think Microsoft Teams, Slack, WhatsApp, Instagram and WeChat groups – can help create a ‘virtual water cooler’ where jokes and stories are shared and social bonds maintained.

Team building sessions shouldn’t be off the agenda either. Getting employees together at lunchtime for a virtual staff meeting, perhaps even springing for pizza or Uber Eats occasionally, delivered to their respective home offices, can help keep spirits and output high.

A status quo?

The rapid onset of the Covid-19 pandemic has forced scores of organizations to make a sudden shift to remote working and many have been caught on the hop. Taking steps to make the practice more efficient will be of benefit in the challenging months of the lockdown which lies before us – but that’s only part of the story. 

Arguably, the most cataclysmic global event since the Second World War, the Covid-19 pandemic may effect an enduring change to the way organizations do business. Practices such as enterprise-wide remote working, which have been born out of necessity, could well remain the status quo for many businesses, long after the state of emergency has abated. Against that backdrop, getting it right may prove to be a critical commercial imperative in the post-Covid -19 world.

Personal Development Goals – Creativity and Growing Through Doing

Growing into Yourself

It is in the doing that you are expressing being. In expressing being, you’re getting to know yourself. Personal growth comes quickest when learning is coupled with doing. Discoveries in the doing fuel growth and anchor experiences that percolate into wisdom.

Planning personal development goals is about so much more than goal setting. The creative process is as much about creating yourself. In creating, discover, heal, and grow.

The human brain developed over eons through movement and action. Learning through movement is still the physiological process of how the brain learns best. Learning through movement is also learning through doing.  Read more...

“Personality development occurs over time through the experience of living your life. Add intention with a focus on purpose and passion, and your life will soar.” ~LeAura Alderson, Cofounder-iCreateDaily.com

Emotional Intelligence

The hot new buzz word in the business, management, and executive world is “emotional intelligence,” but the question is, what exactly is emotional intelligence? Emotional intelligence, as Ashley Zahabian describes, is applied best when you are feeling a certain way, but act differently to obtain a better outcome. In essence, she claims we become more logical as become more emotionally intelligent.

Ashley shared a few words with us below on the topic:

“It’s one of those “it” factors, you know? When you meet someone, you’ve got a few seconds to connect or disconnect, and that connections happens subconsciously. It’s brain to brain, and unless you’ve got that “it” factor, there’s not much you can do to connect otherwise. This is why so many more companies are moving towards behavioral interviews; they want to see how you behave because your behavior tells much quicker whether you’re credible and fitting for whatever position or connection you’re trying to obtain. Now, to be fair, there is a connective ability for everybody in this world. However, majority of those who are seeking to do well in business need not only high business acumen, but high emotional intelligence too. Most leaders, both in the startup world and in large corporations focus much of their time backing future strategies up with data and logical reasoning, and the rest of their time figuring out how they can convince others to see this problem and solution through reasoning, and through emotional persuasion.”

Leaders think logically, but understand that most people don’t. They find logical reasons to pursue a decision, and then carry on persuading others emotionally to buy-in, while backing their emotional reasons up with logical ones.

This combination of thinking logically, and understanding emotion is what emotional intelligence is. It’s understanding the emotional mind enough to combat it when needed, but use it when needed, too. It’s solving problems from a bird’s eye view rather than being in the picture and being blind to the frame.

Logical thinkers even use emotions as data, and make sure they use all of the data when making a decision. This is what makes it easier, specifically in business, to run successfully. When you use every data point possible, you have a more accurate picture of where to head next. When you make emotional decisions, however, you miss out on important data and make decisions based on anxiety; this usually fails quickly.

When we think anxiously rather than logically, we also struggle to innovate. This is because we are constantly looking at our competition, anxious to fail against them. In these cases, we simply follow the steps of competitors and fail to think outside of the box to beat the competition. These are common traits of businesses that are not first to market new ideas and contributions.

If you are trying to start a business, or manage an existing one, becoming more logical and improving your emotional intelligence can really help you make better strategic decisions.

 

Looking For A Job? Don't Tell LinkedIn

While having a resume means you're looking for a job, having a LinkedIn profile does not send the same signal. As a result, many job seekers think they need to say on their profile that they are actively searching. Otherwise, how else would a hiring manager or recruiter know to contact them? So they'll add phrases like "open to new opportunities" or "seeking the next exciting challenge" or "seeking a position in…"

I always tell all my clients, however, not to add these phrases to their profile, or anything else that indicates they are looking. (Click Here For More...)

Make Your Goals Stick!

COVID-19 is in full throttle mode and it’s new me time right? Yes and No! Unless we let some of our old die-hard habits go & shift to a higher vibration. The type of vibration that shapes the way we feel, think & view things. According to statistics, more than 40% of Americans make new resolutions goals in the midst of chaos, BUT only 8% complete them. So the real question here is, “Where is the disconnect?”. Below we can find short & simple tools to help us make our goals come into fruition.

BE S.M.A.R.T. .... click here for more!

Allynn Taylor is a certified life & career coach, who enjoys giving people simple yet effective tools to find solutions to their challenges/obstacles. https://www.sipofpositivitea.com/