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Leading remote teams needs new skills and intentionality. Phil Isle shares honest, practical lessons for managing people effectively in a virtual environment.

I have always thought leading people to be one of the most challenging things an organisation asks anyone to do. People are a complicated, illogical, unpredictable, ever-changing, bundle of drives and emotions, and leaders are asked to bring 3, 7 or 17 of them together to deliver results. Add into that mix the dynamics between people in the team, and between any team and all the other parts of the organisation. If you are a leader, your role is to get the best from each member of your team, and they are small parts of a large, complex and messy, open social system. And for the most part leaders do a pretty good job given all the plates they have to juggle. Except that now it’s just got a whole lot harder. Now you aren’t in the office, or the store or the factory with them; you are on the end of a phone, or behind a screen or you tapping at your phone sending group WhatsApp messages. Over the past couple of weeks as lockdowns have rolled into place across the world I have noticed tons of advice about working from home. Most have it has been useful and valid and I also noticed a void to assist leaders who are trying to lead from home. Here are my thoughts.
Think for a moment about how often should you connect with your people now. Double it. Maybe even more. In crises which are totally new and unpredictable everyone is concerned, destabilised, and maybe even scared. They have personal matters to deal with; children, elderly or sick friends and relatives, getting food etc. So for them its not ‘business as usual’, and its not for you either. First of all, your team members are people first and employees second. They always have been but at this moment in time you really need to treat them that way. Share your own thoughts, feelings and vulnerabilities person to person, be honest with them about what is in your head and heart. Role model a deeper way of sharing and encourage them to do so too. Everyone is in this together and your team are looking to you to set the tone and lead them through this together. You will have to trust people. And I mean everyone in the team. Even the ones you had doubts about before. It’s likely that you prefer your team to be close by as its easier for all kinds of reasons. However it’s not possible now and these circumstances will test your belief.
When things change exponentially trying to adapt what you used to do to fit a new world order is counter-productive. You will have to find new routines. The old ones won’t work. This means being flexible, trying things and changing them quickly if they aren’t working and letting a new way of working emerge over time. The first thing to do is to set out how the team will communicate, keep in touch, make decisions and pass information around. Remember, that tacit way of sharing information, meaning and opinion that happened in the workplace is gone. Your team won’t necessarily get how important it is – you need to replace it before it causes issues.
The main tool a leader has to achieve things is what they say and how they say it; the power of their voice. Speaking up, motivating, delegating, coaching, giving direction all have words at their core. Except things are different now. Making your words count really counts right now. You aren’t close to your team, they aren’t even in the same building or room; they can’t see your whole body, they can’t feel the emotion or energy as deeply, and they are likely to hear less from you. So making those moments you are connected to your team really matter, and thinking about what you say and how you say it is important. Not in a contrived way but in a thoughtful, natural way.
Most of us have worked from home from time to time. Some of us have done it regularly. And the smart money is on it staying around after the crisis subsides. Employees might prefer it; the flexibility, reduced commuting time, lower travel costs, more family time, being home to feed the dog, let the plumber in, etc. And they also get more work done! So post-lockdown leading people will not be like it is now. Use this time as a ‘testing ground’.
It appears as though we will be entering what may come to be known as Work 5.0 – a different way of working brought on by a viral pandemic. It came out of nowhere but will leave a mark everywhere in our society. For leaders you have a golden opportunity to co-create a blueprint for this new world of work that you can test without being challenged. Treat the current situation as if it is a learning problem and set yourself and the team the challenge, “How are we going to learn how to work with excellence given the parameters and resources we have now?” The times ahead might be challenging, are certainly filled with anxiety and uncertainty, and it will bring the worst out of some and hopefully the best out of most of us. However in any change or crisis that has happened to date new opportunities emerged and this is one of them. An opportunity for leaders to behave with more humanity, greater connectedness and trust. An opportunity for you to really care about people in an inclusive and equal manner that shows the best of you and brings out the best from your team. It’s a personal opportunity to disrupt yourself; to discover how you want to lead people post lockdown. Don’t miss it.