Thanks to the global coronavirus pandemic, around a third of the world’s population is on lockdown in their homes, which means a huge number of businesses are currently trying to navigate remote working solutions. Trying to collaborate on software development is difficult at the best of times when your team is all in the same office, but with your team split across various home offices communication and collaboration is made all the more difficult.
Remote development work is an altogether different challenge, one that needs careful thought and new solutions. Luckily, there are ways to get around it, and they don’t all require huge investment or innovation. Just tweaking the way you think and work will help you continue to deliver on your development goals.
Spread Knowledge
Many teams run into problems with their remote workforce when they realize knowledge is not equally distributed amongst team members. I don’t mean the company log-in details (though you might have that problem too), but that the company’s vision and culture have not been effectively communicated. In an office setting this isn’t too much of a problem, as developers can be sent off on projects and the team can come together to implement them with one voice at the end, but when the whole team is divided it’s a lot harder to achieve this final cohesion.
To avoid having to piece your projects together like a jigsaw puzzle, make sure all of your developers are clear on what goals the company wants to achieve as a whole, and what culture and tone the company is wishing to promote. That way any development decisions made in private working sessions are still geared toward the overall company aim, and individual projects will slot in well together.
Communicate
To spread knowledge effectively, you also need a major focus on communication. You won’t realize how much the office dynamic contributes to communication until it’s gone. Working from home eliminates many of the little interactive scenarios in which team members can discuss ideas and clarify details.
To counteract this, you need to communicate far more than you previously did. Send more emails for clarification and have more regular meetings (over video chat) than you otherwise would. This might seem annoying or even counterproductive at first, but having a clear flow of information across the whole team is important for accountability.
Take Note
Related to communication, you may find it really helps to note more things down. You’d be surprised how much information is transmitted from being physically in the same space as someone, so a lot of workers find it a lot harder to pay attention to video of audio meetings and can easily forget details. Whether it’s minutes of a Zoom meeting or a brief one-on-one phone conversation, jot down a note of important tasks or details to remember, and circulate them throughout your team.
Be Humble And Accept Feedback
If you’re managing a development team that’s just gone full remote, accept the fact that you might not have all the answers. This might be as new to you as everyone else, and even if you have experience of remote working before it probably wasn’t during a global pandemic. By all means, show a strong sense of leadership and implement a solid plan of action, but be humble enough to accept that it might not be a perfect plan.
Show your humility by being open to feedback from your team members. They are having to adjust to a new lifestyle that may require new strategies to deal with. You might consider flexible working hours, or reassessing your tools or communications strategy. Figure this out as a team and you’re much more likely to keep morale up and not sacrifice any productivity.
Embrace The New Normal
Most importantly, don’t spend your time waiting for things to go back to normal. Treating this period as a brief interruption to your normal working schedule will stop you from fully committing to new strategies and tools to help you produce good work right now. It will show in your products, and if your remote working period lasts longer than you’d expected it will mess up your production schedule. For now, this is the new normal: embrace that and start with your best foot forward.