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Remote and Async Work

Remote work is far more than "home office". True efficiency only emerges by shifting from synchronous (meetings, phone calls) to asynchronous communication (tickets, documents, recorded videos). This enables deeper concentration and makes knowledge permanently accessible across the entire organization.

In a globalized world, the ability to work asynchronously across time zones and locations is a decisive competitive advantage — for recruiting and for operational impact.

Anti-Patterns: The Pitfalls of Hybrid Work

  • Meeting Madness: The calendar is packed with "status updates" that an email or a ticket would have handled just as well.
  • Knowledge Monopolies: Important information gets shared in coffee-break chats and hallway conversations — remote team members are left out.
  • Presenteeism: Performance is measured by online status or office attendance, not by results (output).

Async as the Default

  1. Write it down: Every decision, every meeting outcome, every process must be documented in writing. "If it's not written down, it didn't happen."
  2. Default to Public: Communication happens in public channels, not private chats. This democratizes access to information.
  3. Meetings as Exception: Meetings are for social connection or complex problem-solving — not for exchanging information. Every meeting needs an agenda and written notes.
  4. Result Orientation: Leadership works through goals and outcomes (e.g., OKRs), not through monitoring working hours.
  5. Standardized Toolchain: Everyone uses the same tools for task management, documentation, and communication.

The Advantage: Deep Work

Async communication reduces interruptions and gives developers and knowledge workers longer stretches of highly focused work.

FAQ

Won't company culture be lost in the process?

No — culture shifts. Trust and transparency become the foundation. Social connection is cultivated intentionally through Offsites and informal video calls.

Does that mean you just write documents all day?

You write more, but you spend less time in unnecessary meetings. The written word is more precise and more scalable than the spoken one.

Reference Guide

  • GitLab Remote Playbook: A comprehensive guide for All-Remote organizations. GitLab
  • Deep Work: Cal Newport on the importance of focused work. Cal Newport
  • Remote: Jason Fried and David Heinemeier Hansson (Basecamp) on working without an office. Basecamp

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