HACKER Q&A
📣 NoboruWataya

Good books on managing a hybrid/remote team?


Hi HN,

I am going through a promotion process at work and a large part of the interview process centres around solving the challenges of hybrid working (which in this context means that each team member will spend some days in the office and some WFH). To complicate matters I am based in a different office to the rest of my team so even when I'm in the office I am working remotely.

I'd like to read some expert insights about how to manage this situation. Can anyone recommend some good books by business leaders or management experts about how to approach management in a remote working or hybrid working environment? I'm not in a STEM field so it doesn't need to focus on STEM (and in fact would rather it is not too closely tied to STEM or any particular industry).

Thanks in advance!


  👤 awb Accepted Answer ✓
I’ve managed remote teams since 2008. Never read any books, but here are a few tips I learned along the way:

* 1on1s are very important - There is no water cooler for remote teams, so you have to manufacture it. Take 30min with each team member each week to just chat without an agenda. If the conversation gravitates towards work, fine. If it doesn’t that’s fine too. But I would take an interest in my employee’s life outside of work. I would make it a point to know what their hobbies were, their family’s names, their life story, etc.

* Protect your work time - Each Slack message is an interruption. Have at least a couple hours a day where notifications are muted so you and your team can get into a “deep work” state. If something is urgent, pick up the phone.

* Trust your team daily, hold them accountable weekly - Don’t micromanage your employees and ask what they did each day (outside of a daily virtual standup if they like that, where they post 1 message about what they’re working on and what they might need help with). But at the end of the week, evaluate their performance and adjust your management style to fit. With remote work, it is possible for folks to push the envelope on work/life balance, so be ready for that, but don’t assume it or be so worried about it that your policies become stifling.

I’m sure there are more, but those are a few that served me well through the years.

Good luck!


👤 kaycebasques
The GitLab Handbook: https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/

👤 tough
I'd just go with remote-first async material from companies like Gitlab, etc

The hybrid just means you also get the nice parts of going to the office, but for any remote work to work, async remote kinda needs to be default for the whole company, and the office are just perks


👤 stefanoco
Not sure if this is under your scope/radar, but working hybrid IMMO benefits a lot from two focused improvements in a team or company: shared culture, and clearly recognised framework (ceremonies). And I can’t think of a better way for improving both aspects than studying, understanding its foundations and applying Agile. I particularly recommend Scrum both for STEM and outside of STEM. So any book or advice on this would help a lot in my opinion. Also following the huge amount of podcast interviews by Vasco Duarte.

👤 haney
I liked "The Long Distance Leader" by Kevin Eikenberry. It had several tactical tricks related to communication medium that I found useful.

👤 salvan

👤 aetherane
I imagine that "best practices" will evolve a lot over the next few years

👤 techno_modus
"Remote: Office Not Required", David Heinemeier Hansson, Jason Fried (the authors of ReWork: Change the Way You Work Forever). It is an old book but still very applicable to today (or maybe even more applicable).

👤 activitypea
Some good thoughts on hybrid teams: https://youtu.be/kvUcyFcA6Bo

👤 agumonkey
All this reminds me of the workflow era (and the 2008 revival), I wonder if people have bpem based async helpers to manage operations.

👤 thenerdhead
Just consider a remote first mentality in everything you do. That means doing synchronous things asynchronously where it makes sense. It is the most flexible from the hybrid perspective. Accommodating both is an uphill battle. DHH books, Atwood/Spolsky blogs, and a few management / communication books will go a long way.

Every team will work differently in a remote fashion, so I would actually say the books will give you ideas, but just talk to your peers to see how they want to ideally work.