Three years after lockdown, the workplace is a very different environment. Fully remote or hybrid working models are the norm in many organisations.

Juggling the demands of an office-based and a remote workforce can be difficult for organisations. Recently, we’ve been contacted by organisations worried about disconnected online team members.

Our Leading Hybrid Teams with Ease course helps managers motivate and engage hybrid workforces. It has a particular focus on protecting the wellbeing of remote workers.

These tips may help if you’re struggling to engage your hybrid teams.

Key to successful hybrid working

Successful hybrid working has to be based on effective communication. Everyone should feel part of the team, regardless of where they’re sat. That means making sure that people

  • Can contribute meaningfully to team meetings and events
  • Feel connected to their colleagues
  • Are acknowledged and rewarded for the work they do
  • Feel supported when they’re going through difficult times
  • Can keep effective boundaries between their work and home lives

Managing hybrid meetings

Once some team members are onsite, it’s easy to slip back into old ways of communicating, with a focus on in-person meetings.

Team members dialling into these meetings can feel left out and disconnected. Your hybrid meetings can go much more smoothly if you

  • Ensure people at home can hear people in the room—ask speakers to sit close to the laptop or invest in microphones
  • Use a big screen so that team members at home are visible to those in the room
  • Rotate between hybrid meetings where some people are in the room and online meetings where everyone joins from their desk
  • Keep checking with your online team members and asking for questions and input
  • Regularly ask people how they feel hybrid meetings are going and implement feedback where you can

Improving connections between hybrid teams

Allow your hybrid teams time to goof off and chat. Many remote workers miss the opportunity to have fun with colleagues.

  • Encourage staff to schedule in time to relax, chat and catch up with each others’ news
  • Consider scheduling online tea-breaks and catch ups—but know that these may seem like ‘organised fun’
  • Managers’ presence during online meetups can stymie fun—try reserving these for team members and asking for feedback
  • Ask your team what would make them feel more connected, and don’t be defensive about the suggestions

Rewarding and motivating remote workers

Your team should feel trusted, not under suspicion. Good managers focus on outcomes and results, rather than on a person’s visibility or availability.

Your team members may feel more motivated and appreciated if

  • You take their preferences onboard when asking how much contact time they want or need
  • You notice the work they’ve done and thank them for it
  • You highlight and reward their achievements

Supporting remote workers through difficult times

It can be difficult for managers to know how to best support someone going through a difficult time. It’s even harder when that person is working from home. Home-working setups can magnify your worries about intruding on someone’s privacy.

Remote workers can struggle with loneliness and motivation after trauma, loss or illness. They may feel isolated, unsupported and pressured to get back to normal.

You can support remote workers who have been through tough times by

  • Finding out what they need and want from you, especially regarding what is shared with colleagues
  • Letting them know what support is available—check your employee assistance programme
  • Relaxing your expectations and removing some of the person’s responsibilities while they recover
  • Keeping an eye on how they’re doing and looking for signs of distress—your first concern should be their wellbeing and not their output

Inspire provides training to help managers and team members cope with grief and loss.

Respecting boundaries for remote workers

Not everyone who works from home has the luxury of a home office. You may work from your kitchen, bedroom or living room.

Letting colleagues see the private spaces of your home life is a lot to ask. Some people will be reluctant to turn cameras on in meetings. For others, the lack of a defined workspace can blur the boundaries between work and home. They may feel as though they’re permanently on-call.

You can help to reinforce the boundary between work and home life by

  • Talking privately to team members who don’t turn their cameras on—find out why this is
  • Checking in with colleagues who appear to be working outside core work hours
  • Developing agile or hybrid working policies that explain your approach to remote work
  • Checking in with team members to see how they’re doing and focusing these conversations on wellbeing, not performance

The right support for your team

Whether it’s helping managers lead hybrid teams, supporting team members at difficult points in their lives or helping your organisation come up with a wellbeing strategy that works for remote workers, Inspire can help.

Contact your account manager or Tanya Neeson, our Business Development Executive to discuss your needs.

 

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