about the show

Building a remote culture that enables your team is no easy feat. If you succeed you’ll unlock the agency and autonomy that comes with a well managed remote operation. If you don’t succeed you end up burning out from bad habits.

In this biweekly podcast you'll hear, from both Alix and guests, all about remote teamwork from a zillion different angles. It'll be focused on fresh perspectives, and always include suggestions for you to put new practices into place.

Let us know what you think, and hope you enjoy!

Hosted by Alix Dunn

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Episode 10 | Better remote onboarding with Dave Chan

E10
/
August 2, 2023

This week’s episode is all about setting the right tone for new team members through remote onboarding. Alix is joined by onboarding aficionado Dave Chan to dig into the dos-and-don'ts of remote orientations.

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about the episode

First impressions count, especially when it comes to new hires. This week’s episode is all about setting the right tone for new team members through remote onboarding. Alix is joined by onboarding aficionado Dave Chan to dig into the dos-and-don'ts of remote orientations, from meetings to documentation and everything in between.

Passionate about getting remote onboarding right, Dave is currently helping build Sono, an all-in-one platform for creating engaging onboarding experiences in minutes. You can find him and say hello here.

*This interview was originally recorded as part of the 2022 Remote Culture Intensive, a course for remote teams to rebuild their culture, while Dave was working at Shopify.

our key takeaways

1. Learn by doing

Dave suggests that a great way to kickstart remote onboarding is to assign new hires a low-lift first project. Diving into work can help new folks connect across the organization and figure out the right questions to ask, and an early win can also help fight isolation and imposter syndrome, two far-too-common realities of remote work. Supporting new hires to learn by doing - rather than by back-to-back meetings or endless docs - can bring them up to speed faster and far more happily.

2. Structure onboarding humanely

Onboarding sets the tone of an employee’s experience. As such, it’s a critical part of creating and reinforcing a team’s culture. So if you want a warm and welcoming team, you need to create a warm and welcoming onboarding! To do this well, think about a humane onboarding schedule that allows time for connection and collaboration as well as for reading and learning.

One easy way to make your onboarding more accessible and inviting? Instead of sending one giant doc to rule them all, consider sending a shorter document at the beginning of each week for the first month or so of a new hire’s tenure. Instead of being lost in a sea of links and info, your new team member will get timely information as they’re ready for it.

3. Onboarding is a process

Whether in-person or remote, onboarding isn’t a one-and-done thing. Rather, it’s an ongoing process that can take a year or more (seriously!). In a remote setting, thinking about a longer term onboarding strategy is particularly critical, as it can take longer for remote new hires to feel connected and fully informed. Remote is all the more difficult because the absence of body language and social context can make it really difficult for managers to know how a new team member is doing, so schedule those 1:1 check-ins early and often well beyond the first few weeks of onboarding.

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Get your free Remote Ready starter kit.

Discover the 5 states of remote (and which one you’re in)

Find out the #1 dynamic that holds teams back

Get a sneak peek of our signature course

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.