To create a positive experience for remote employees, you can focus on the five key factors that impact remote employee experience:
1. Set reasonable productivity standards
Reasonable productivity standards ensure team members complete tasks on time, with the right level of quality, and at the right speed.
The crucial elements of productivity standards are 1) deadline flexibility and 2) reasonable due dates for projects. Be sure you’re working within your team’s schedules, PTO, parental leave, or religious observance. If you’re calculating productivity and leaving out flexibility for vacation or sick time, you’ll stress your team out.
2. Create a sustainable work-life balance for remote teams
Remote work inherently creates an environment where employees can seamlessly manage their work and personal lives.
Starting a load of laundry while you wait for a document to upload or having the ability to drop your kids off at school instead of spending time commuting are priceless benefits of remote work.
One danger of hybrid or remote work is the need for proper boundaries between work hours and personal time. Use clear PTO expectations, communication policies, and OOO notifications to ensure employees are keeping their work and home lives separate in healthy ways.
3. Help your team manage work-related stress and anxiety
Work-related stress doesn’t disappear with remote work (though it is greatly alleviated). As a manager, you must ensure fair and flexible deadlines and expectations to reduce unnecessary anxiety for your team. Understand how your employees feel and adapt to this.
Creating a sense of psychological safety can help your team feel comfortable sharing their feedback, concerns, or suggestions.
4. Instill a sense of belonging among employees
The sense of belonging is one area where remote work can falter. To counteract this, use team-building activities and employee retreats to help your team interact outside the work context.
At Hubstaff, we’ve created an internal Slack channel called “Hubstars,” where employees can publicly highlight their co-workers who are exceeding expectations.
5. Ensure your team is happy with their remote working arrangement
While you aren’t directly controlling your employee’s remote work environment, you can help them create a comfortable and productive setting.
With the money you save on providing a physical workspace, create a bonus system that improves employees’ home office space. Some companies offer in-home cleaning services or discounts on home internet as perks. Others provide subscription gift boxes or coworking space memberships.
At Hubstaff, we offer professionally taught classes about ergonomic work conditions. We also offer bonuses to help our professionals buy chairs, desks, and other home office equipment. Professional development is not just a way to improve skills or run virtual meetings better. It also includes protecting employee mental health and the environment.
6. Reinforce the relationship between team members and leaders
Don’t forget to have team building efforts create a positive relationship between people and their managers or leaders. Uncover how employees feel and get everyone on the same page.
Direct managers are your front line in spotting burnout and overwork. They’re also the perfect people to bring ideas to leadership when staff have issues. Train managers on interpersonal skills so they are an active part of creating a supportive, inclusive work culture.
Managers should also have specified times and goals for talking to their team about their company’s REX efforts. This communication can be more impactful than a company-wide email.
Individual leaders have the most direct impact on our work days. If your company puts out a message of caring about personal success and development, people only believe it if their manager regularly reinforces it.
7. Expand bidirectional communication
How can team members express their joy at work or frustrations with a task?
If that’s not a simple answer, it’s time to improve communication channels. These are essential to a positive REX because feedback is how you can evaluate it. Make it easy for people to tell you what they enjoy and what is improving their experience.
These conversations are designed to help people connect with work and policies directly impacting REX.
This bidirectional communication should happen between managers and team members. It is their opportunity to give public feedback and make a case specific to their work. Virtual employees need remote meetings that highlight their concerns and even thoughts on professional development opportunities.
Surveys, mentioned below in the sentiment tracking section, can provide a way for anonymous feedback that is more a report than a conversation.
8. Regularly reinforce transparency commitments
Trust and transparency must be the pillars of your commitment to team members. The goal is to balance productivity and individual privacy. People need to understand how they’re evaluated and monitored.
We’ve put together the Hubstaff guiding principles to help you think about this structure. Your transparency communications should focus on big-picture ideas and individual practices you use to show these. For instance, we put team members’ privacy first, which is why we don’t log keystrokes or monitor email.
Have your senior leadership or C-suite executives create and share this commitment for greater impact and visibility.
9. Track sentiment and other valuable metrics
REX work needs continuous feedback and review to ensure your practices are on track. Sentiment is the most crucial aspect you can measure for the employee experience.
Track sentiment by running polls of your entire workforce and individual teams. You want multiple opportunities to see how people feel about your company and their respective roles. Keep surveys short so that they’re easy to compare over time.
Advanced workforce analytics and remote work tools can help you understand these trends. There are also specific EX tools that you can try to find what your people respond to best. Test how people feel about key initiatives and if they’re adopting the platforms you require or trying to work around them.
10. Visibly act on the feedback
The other elements above won’t mean much unless you act on your team members' feedback.
People will stop offering those opinions if you take suggestions or comments but never follow up. When companies punish people due to feedback, they start lying on questionnaires.
Companies can’t respond to every piece of feedback. So, you’ll need to pick elements that are important to REX and actionable. Then, as you decide what steps to take, share this with the company. Highlight the changes being made due to employee feedback.
Action shows people that you value their opinions and work. These demonstrations encourage employees to engage. You’ll see a better employee experience, whether remote, hybrid, or in-office.