Mike English wrote a post on Remote-First Communication that a friend shared with me, so I’m pulling together my little backlog of workplace-related articles.
Mike’s thoughts on the benefits of using written communication first in your team processes echo things I’ve said over the last years. The attendance-obsessed, lets-schedule-a-meeting, memory-hole incompetents that populate a lot of middle management love in-person communication, because they aren’t accountable, can change what they say from context to context, and whatever their small value add to the organization is, you can only get it from them in real time, face-to-face, so they get to bill you for it on each use. On the other hand, if you have actual work to do and value to provide the company, doing it in text allows you to clearly communicate one time and allow that information or decision to keep being used for every subsequent need. What a relief! That it also completely enables time- and place-shifting is aa super bonus.
Why is that a bonus? Rob Reynolds discusses a number of the advantages to a business of allowing remote work. For myself, I don’t love remote work because I hate going to work (although I hate the office space I currently work in–trying to code with the sales guys shouting jokes at each other next to your cube is AWESOME!!!). I am a big fan of remote work because of the people I get to work with that way. Successful remote workers are often the really competent collaborators. I like working with them. Also, the number of possible smart and driven people in the world is larger than the number of smart and driven people willing to put up with the commute time from their home to my office. Let’s hire better talent! Sucky employees cost way too much!
Rob says “The bottom line is that you keep your workers happy, and they are much less likely to leave your organization. Turnover costs are huge to a company. If you are not making your employees happy, they are talking to others about not working for you. They have their ears open to new opportunities. They are likely looking for other jobs as you read this…Your best people outperform your middle of the line folks by ten times.” I think of the failures of middle management to optimize developer happiness as fraud against the company. Millions of dollars spent for nothing. It’s a crime.
How do you keep those developers happy? How about having a way of rewarding them and promoting them at work without forcing them to change careers? Lizthedeveloper writes how to reward developers based on her work for Simple Financial in creating a talent path for senior developers.
On a lighter note, Eric Farr writes up a simple description of his team’s move from Scrum to Kanban. Really not painful, and it solves some of the pain points of a too-heavy process that was simpler than Waterfall in it’s time, but is handcuffs today.