While I absolutely do not make light of the COVID-19 pandemic, typing this post while in self-isolation as the world locks down and millions fight for their lives, I am sitting here on my back porch, pondering the irony of how an acute virus is forcing billions into remote work.
At times of panic, I find comfort in clutching “handles” I can reach, while navigating the multiple conflicting thoughts that ravage my brain’s natural processes.
As a non-academic, yet deeply mindful person, turning to history seems like a solid alternative in navigating the chaos. Interesting Engineering describes revolutions as “a result of humankind’s desire to develop, expand, and grow.” The Industrial Revolution “brought about radical change that was directly needed.” The 4th Industrial Revolution, or the digital revolution as some of us refer to it, has been building since the middle of the last century. It’s crazy to think that despite this, so few companies are equipped to run thriving virtual teams.
Some think of digital transformation as the future of work; the reality, however, is that it’s the present.
I grew up with my dad telling me, time and time again, “If something is broken it needs fixing.” Every time I’d sweep this statement under the proverbial carpet, it would sneak its way back into my life, morphed into some new shape or form. He’d remind me that as long as I kept treating only the symptoms, I’d still experience the root problem.
Dare I say that it was only in my thirties when his advice finally hit home (sorry dad!). I was stuck on a highway, some mega distance away from my usual neighborhood, at the upside of a hill, in bumper to bumper traffic. Not knowing much (anything) about cars, I was getting absolutely no engine response as I turned my key in the ignition.
The car was dead and I was going nowhere. The years of this lesson hit me like a high tension whack in the face:
“If your car is not running smoothly—perhaps it’s sluggish or there’s a constant rattle in the rear right; maybe there’s a hole in your exhaust and you’ve got trouble starting it in the mornings; or there are great plumes of smoke gushing out the back when you accelerate—these are signs that something is wrong.” For the record, all of this has happened to me in the past.
He would go on to teach me: “If you patch it, tape it, or ignore it completely, those symptoms will keep coming back, louder and louder until one day your engine seizes entirely and you’re left without transport.”
Such is the world of work. Right now, it’s broken and we need to fix it.
There’s no bandaid solution to the issues preventing a brick-and-mortar business of a previous revolution from becoming the virtual company required for our current economy. In the 18th century, if the workforce did not migrate to the busy cities and instead chose to remain in their rural homelands, the mass production lines would not have developed.
As we go back to a “rural” way of working, we need to fully embrace the new world of work. That comes with deep changes across entire organizations in terms of Leadership, Systems & Processes, Individuals.
Let’s start by getting everyone onboard:
From a leader’s point of view:
At WNDYR we use a framework to help us think thoroughly. It’s a change management methodology which ensures teams tackle questions or circumstances from multiple angles. We refer to it as the thinking framework.
Aside from this, we have a pretty awesome, dare I say so myself, senior leadership team. Claire, Prasoon, Jeff, Bret, and I pooled our thoughts on the top benefits of remote work through our respective lenses—not the normal ones you’d expect to see of course, but some unique and favorite ones.
For the record, it’s important to state that our teams are fully remote, disbursed over 8 countries and various zones. Some of us have teenagers; others have babies, toddlers, and/or young kids. We have pet rabbits and dogs and cats (always lots of cats). Our hobbies are vast and include downhill mountain biking, art classes, rock climbing, cooking, and flying. To build out the profile a bit, three of us are in Texas, USA, one is in London, UK, and I am in a small town just outside Cape Town, South Africa. We all work from our own home offices.
For many it has taken the COVID-19 crisis to kick butts into gear and shift into a very new world of working and living.