Ask HN: How to make remote work a success?
When starting to work remotely for a company where you were previously a local team member, what are the things to look out for?
I'm mainly thinking along the lines of how one can ensure proper motivation and discipline, but also adequate communication and still having the feeling to be part of something.
What are your experiences ? What worked and what didn't ?
12 comments
[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 45.9 ms ] threadFor working remote, what I found that was the best was making a place in your house or apartment that is the office. Try to do everything in that part and only do work there. It will help you get into a work mode at home.
The most important thing is communications, definitely.
The best results I had were on a fully remote team, using Slack heavily.
I'm currently on a half U.S. based / half remote team, and it's harder, as much of the stuff communicated on the U.S. side doesn't reach us. We do have weekly meetings over GoToMeeting.
Some very good articles on the subject are Scott Hanselman´s, and Jeff Atwood's and Stack Overflow:
http://www.hanselman.com/blog/BeingARemoteWorkerSucksLongLiv...
http://www.hanselman.com/blog/30TipsForSuccessfulCommunicati...
https://blog.stackoverflow.com/2013/02/why-we-still-believe-...
See also:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9198345
http://engineering.datadoghq.com/9-ways-to-make-working-remo...
For some people, that means getting dressed up. Keeping a dedicated home office. Strict time routines, etc. The what doesn't matter so much, as long it provides you with familiar structure.
The key in the beginning is to over-emphasize discipline (and communication) until you find a good balance.
(I've been working remotely for 10+ years)
Any suggestions with regards to what works when communicating ?
There is a similar thread here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12788080
For convenience, here is my post to that thread:
First, discipline is critical to what you mentioned. Figuring out how to develop habits that avoid procrastination or other problems with your productivity are wildly different for each individual. Some people work well with a TV on, while others are completely distracted by it, and up paying attention to the TV instead of being productive. Some people take 15-20 minute naps and wake up ready to rock. Others, fall asleep for long periods of time, don't reboot and waste a day. You have to know which one you are and tailor your routine around you. Having a routine is important.
Additionally, here are a couple of things that you might consider hacks that have worked for me:
1) Front-load your day - I start my day at 4am and I start work immediately. This has a couple of benefits. For me I know I am most productive the first half of my day. Starting early eliminates a long list of distractions and interruptions simply because no one else is up to bother me. Plus, if I find myself dragging between 4pm and 6pm I don't feel guilty about cutting out because I have already put in a pretty solid day overall. This is something I read not to long ago that validated what I was already doing: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12346307
2) Walk - Any time I am feeling distracted or stressed I take a walk outside. It reboots my mind and I come back refreshed. If something was eluding me before the walk it typically reveals itself quickly after returning from the walk.
3) Diet - This is from my response to this post (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12684180): "In order of volume and priority...Coffee, leafy greens(in all forms, especially cabbage - all types, kale, napa, green, etc.) and protein in all forms, diversity is important, animal and vegetable sources. I mix in other fruits and vegetables for flavoring and variety. Also, I eliminated salt and that relieved my stress in a significant, noticeable way. I start my day at 4am, if I eat heavier, carb-based items, I notice a crash somewhere around 3 or 4 pm and the last few hours of my day are a struggle. If I stick to what I listed above, I power through the afternoon and feel more balanced when I end my day."
What time do you go to sleep at to make starting work a 4am feasible?