Today, we are going to share ten best practices to maximize collaboration, productivity and teamwork as a remote marketing team.
In fact: we use these exact same tips, tricks, and principles every single day with our in-the-trenches remote team here at Loomly.
Let’s dive right in:
Research shows psychological safety is a key component of collaboration: the more safety a team experiences, the more likely they are to collaborate effectively.
This is especially true for remote marketing teams.
In a work environment where face-to-face interactions are seldom, and text-based communications can often be misinterpreted, establishing psychological safety is paramount.
You want to cultivate a culture where elements like the ones below are seen in a positive light:
Furthermore, remote marketing teams must feel they can do this without feeling embarrassed, shunned, judged, or at risk of losing their jobs.
Now:
You do not need to create a soft-spoken environment where employees can say and do what they like without repercussions. In fact, the inverse is actually true.
Professor Amy C. Edmondson, in her book The Fearless Organization: Creating Psychological Safety in the Workplace for Learning, Innovation, and Growth, explains that healthy conflict can actually promote psychological safety.
Writing for Quartz, she says:
“Psychological safety is about candor, about making it possible for productive disagreement and the free exchange of ideas. […] these are vital to learning and innovation. Conflict inevitably arises in any workplace. Psychological safety enables people on different sides of a conflict to speak candidly about what is bothering them.”
While psychological safety creates an environment where team members feel safe sharing, they must also feel safe to challenge others’ ideas (or have their own challenged.)
How you choose to create psychological safety in your remote marketing team is highly personal. But, there are five options we recommend you:
Culture is everything your team does: it is the combined values, and the subsequent actions of every team member.
However: when the distances between companies and employees are great, it is often hard for team members — especially newcomers — to know what the culture actually is.
The expectations in their home office might be a world away from those held by you and the rest of your remote team.
This is where creating a culture deck can help.
Culture decks are documents that outline your organization’s:
They are a roadmap for the kind of culture you want to create with key information about the ideal behaviors and expectations of employees.
Here is the Loomly Culture Deck to illustrate what we mean (and how we define company culture at Loomly):
Better still, you can work with members of your remote marketing team to craft the culture deck. To get their insights on the kind of culture they want to operate within.
Remote workers may struggle to feel included as part of the wider team.
There are two main reasons for this:
Effective communication can solve both of these problems. Why?
Well, on the one hand, it is hard to develop or maintain a relationship with a colleague when you do not interact with each other. There are no chance meetings at the water cooler online!
Having open channels of communication — especially for casual conversations — can create stronger feelings of trust, camaraderie, and being part of one larger team.
Studies show that the “water cooler effect” can:
At Loomly, we use Slack to replicate this effect with our #watercooler channel:
You can also increase levels of inclusion by:
You might be familiar with the phrase:
“It is nice to put a face to a name.”
This is something we find ourselves saying more and more in the online world. We all have those people we only know online, who have become great real-life friends:
Credit: @david_perell
There are also those people with whom we have communicated online, but outside of a thumbnail image, we have never seen, heard or met.
For a remote marketing team, these people may very well be their colleagues.
As such, it is important to promote face-to-face interactions. Why?
Because face-to-face interactions have been shown to:
These are all factors that positively influence collaboration. Video calls, then, are the next best thing to in-person interactions with each other.
Speaking of which:
Remote marketing team retreats are a great way to foster collaboration and create connections.
They are a common theme amongst highly-effective remote teams, like those at:
These companies use remote team retreats as a way to bring employees together, make them feel valued, and take advantage of that all-important in-person collaboration.
If you have time to invest in team-building activities, you could also see a boost in morale and enjoyment at work.
So, make time to bring your remote marketing team together under one roof.
Remote teams often suffer from an information imbalance.
This is because:
However, this information is not always distributed to the rest of the remote team. Often leaving people who should be in the know, feeling a little clueless.
To ensure everyone has enough (relevant) information about what is going on, it is good practice to keep a written record of everything that has been said.
This could involve:
The documents should then be shared in an accessible place for team members to read.
Doing this helps to ensure transparency, offer peace of mind, and provide context for the current decision-making process.
When we asked Loomly employees what made them happy in the remote workplace, almost all of them came back with the same answer:
They liked working in small teams.
Specifically, small enough to fit in a booth at their favorite restaurant. Why?
Because working in small teams:
This desire to work in a small team stretches far beyond our Loomly team, too.
Research shows that:
You can also supercharge this effect by making your teams diverse.
Remote work presents a great opportunity to bring people together from different:
Research from McKinsey shows that putting together a diverse team can result in a 35% increase in creativity.
So:
If you want to maximize the collaboration between your online workers, keep teams small enough to split two pizzas, and diverse enough to want lots of different toppings.
While we are on the topic of diversity:
In this article, we have discussed two important concepts:
If you want to create a highly-effective, collaborative remote marketing team, these are paramount.
However:
The success of these concepts is driven, predominantly, by having inclusive leaders.
Inclusive leaders are those who:
As such, leaders can be both the glue that holds people together, and the driving force behind productivity, collaboration, and psychological safety.
As a member of our Customer Success Manager eloquently put it:
“The encouragement and support of a team leader, with proper guidance and mentorship, can make or break a role. A team leader who helps you professionally and teaches you new things is very important.”
There is also research to back this up.
Harvard Business Review’s analysis of teams with inclusive leaders found they are:
So, having inclusive leaders brings benefits you simply cannot ignore.
When you are looking to hire a leader, though, it is worth knowing that people are pretty poor at self-rating their own inclusiveness.
In self-analysis:
As such, it is better to rely on direct-reporting data and testimonies from their previous teams or employers.
The final two tips on this list work together.
The first is to set clear expectations and boundaries.
Ideally, you want to make sure that everyone on your remote marketing team is on the same page.
If you have created a culture deck you will already have a good framework for this in place. However, here we are looking more at the day-to-day specifics.
You will want to ensure that everyone on the remote team knows:
It can also be useful to outline:
Google’s research found that setting boundaries and “clear norms” for remote reams avoid confusion and makes collaboration much easier.
When employees have clarity of vision, culture, and expectations they can create great work within the set boundaries.
Which brings us to the final tip:
Boundaries and expectations are a crucial part of remote work.
But, within those boundaries, remote workers must feel empowered and in control.
They need to know that:
The American Psychological Association found lower levels of stress and anxiety in workers who feel in control of their workload and schedule.
Many people are remote workers because they have found a system of doing work that works for them: they are self-aware and want to be empowered to do their best work.
The more you can do this, the more doors to collaboration will be open.
In this article, we have outlined ten tips to help you build a more collaborative and productive remote marketing team. Let’s quickly recap them: