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Agency Operations - Top 3 Tools You Need to Manage Remote Workers

Posted By IIAW Staff, Monday, July 6, 2020
Updated: Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Virtual Team Meeting

By: WAHVE Work at Home Vintage Experts 

 

This article was originally featured in our July Wisconsin Independent Agent Magazine. Click here to read the full issue. 

 

Today’s employees Zoom, Skype, Jabber, FaceTime, GoToMeetings and chat in Google Hangouts and Webexes. When they’re not videoconferencing, they’re emailing, collaborating in Microsoft Teams, and instant chatting on Slack. They’ve already got the tech tools they need to make it easy and more convenient to work remotely, but do you have the right management tools in place to keep your remote employees engaged?

 

There’s no doubt that hiring remote employees can benefit your insurance business by bringing in critical skills that you don’t have or can’t easily find. Remote workers can be a boon to recruiting, productivity, business continuity, and improved customer service. But relying on a traditional management style to keep a dispersed workforce motivated and moving forward won’t cut it.

 

So, what are the best ways to keep employees you rarely see motivated? 

 

Build a Virtual Water Cooler

 

The cornerstone to keeping remote employees engaged is proactive communication. When you can’t simply stop by an employee’s desk to chat, grab a cup of coffee, or 

physically sit with them in a conference room, it’s important to make a concentrated effort to make time for casual conversation. It’s not enough to schedule a few

one-hour meetings per week. Communication with remote employees should be fluid, spontaneous and regular. Create a virtual water cooler by continually chatting with people to find out what they did during the weekend, how their family is doing, and what their plans are for time away from work. 

 

Establish Some “WAHVY Gravy”

When employees are out of sight, it can be easy to unintentionally exclude them, making them feel isolated. And when people feel isolated and not a part of the work

community, productivity suffers.

 

Go beyond relying on virtual meetings to establish community. If you have an intranet, create a space where people can share news, tips, or pictures of their pets. Many companies dedicate specific Slack channels to support socializing.  Others use virtual coffee breaks, book clubs, TED talks, or online learning courses that everyone participates in to encourage a deeper sense of community.

 

Another strategy is to incorporate a few minutes for team members to share something personal at the end of meetings. At WAHVE, we call this “WAHVY gravy.” We ask people to share something that’s important to them – whether it be pictures of their artwork, hobbies, or stories about recent vacations. Another idea is to ask employees to share an “ah ha” or an “appreciation” – something they recently learned or someone they’d like to acknowledge. The important thing is to make it fun and personal. This changes how people interact with each other at a human level and builds interest and empathy for one another.

 

Don’t Forget Face Time

 

Despite all of the fancy tech tools, there’s still no substitute for face time. When you’re managing a remote team, no matter the size, it’s important to bring the entire team together when you can. Doing this shows on site and remote workers how much you appreciate them, and it builds connection. At WAHVE, we bring our staff together

bi-annually, and we find that these events are invaluable to help the team bond, strengthen our culture, and share goals and future direction with everyone physically present.  

 

According to an analysis by FlexJobs and Global Workplace Analytics, remote work has grown 44% over the last five years and 91% over the past 10 years. It’s a trend that will likely continue to rise, so there’s no time like the present to adapt your management style to support remote workers, and in turn, the success of your business.

Tags:  agency operations  COVID-19  digital agency  insuring Wisconsin  remote work  virtual teams  wisconsin independent insurance association  wisconsin insurance agency help  wisconsin insurance blog  work from home 

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Agency Operations - Key Leadership Practices for Virtual Teams

Posted By IIAW Staff, Wednesday, May 13, 2020
Updated: Thursday, April 30, 2020

By: Donna J. Dennis, Ph.D. | Virtual Team Leadership Expert

 

*This article was featured in our May 2020 Wisconsin Independent Agent Magazine. Click here to read the full May 2020 issue. 

 

Virtual Team Meeting

 

We are living in an environment where circumstance forces change!  Work teams everywhere have been forced to shift quickly to a work from home setting.  

 

The MyAgencyCampus team reached out to virtual team leadership expert Donna Dennis, PhD to learn more about “Key Leadership Practices for Virtual Teams.”  See below for some just-in-time recommendations.

 

Both leaders and team members must cope with many 

other challenges. A study conducted by the Business 

Research Consortium (BRC) in association with American Management Association survey of 1,500 individuals 

revealed the following seven suggestions for companies that want to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of their virtual teams. 

 

1. Remember that good leadership is different.

 

It is tempting to believe that traditional leadership qualities are so general that they easily translate to virtual team 

leadership. Unfortunately, that is just not true.  

 

2. Emphasize communication even more

 

Yes, nearly every leader has been told to “communicate, communicate, and then communicate some more.” What is true for leaders in general is doubly true for virtual leaders. In fact, it’s usually true for all virtual team members. 

 

 

Fully 72% of respondents to the BRC survey strongly agreed with the idea that virtual teams require more team 

communication than do co-located teams. 

 

3. Adjust to the medium. 

 

The study shows that team member engagement is 

strongly influenced by the degree of visual feedback 

members are getting. For example, participants in voice-only virtual meetings (the kind so common in the corporate world today) are much less likely to be engaged than participants in face-to-face meetings and in meetings with high-quality videoconferencing. Without a visual 

element, leaders must do things such as: 

 

           Pick up on more subtle cues (such as tone of voice)

 

           Know nuances of cross-cultural communication

 

           Ask more questions to get to a common under               standing of a problem or issue

 

4. Do more to establish trust.  

 

Because virtual team members often lack the time and opportunities to talk to each other informally, trust can be hard to build. The best virtual leaders tend to build “swift” trust, knowing that distance makes it more difficult. They provide goals, roles, responsibilities, strategies, and a 

vision to create a common purpose and shared objectives. 

 

They establish agreements and make expectations clear so that all team members understand responsibilities and proper etiquette.

 

5. Develop robust processes and, where needed, 

    structures.

 

Not only must virtual leaders make expectations clear, they also must establish more checkpoints with explicit 

guidelines. 

 

6. Reduce or avoid “storming” when possible. 

 

Back in the 1960s, Professor Bruce Tuckman developed the idea that teams need to go through four stages: forming, storming, norming, and performing. Virtual teams are 

different in that the “storming” stage (during which 

different members strive for a time to put forward their ideas) is often curtailed. This does not mean virtual teams need to avoid all disagreements and conflicts, only that leaders and members should be proactive and handle 

different perspectives right away, as opposed to letting them linger. 

 

7. Devote resources to development. 

 

Most organizations do not develop leaders and other employees in the art of virtual teaming. Yet, the BRC study indicates that a lack of experience among members of virtual teams is a serious challenge. 

Therefore, we think it pays to educate not only leaders but also potential team members about how to thrive in a virtual team environment. The study also indicates that first-level and middle managers tend to have fewer virtual leadership skills than senior managers and project 

managers.

 

About Donna J. Dennis, Ph.D.

Donna is a leadership development professional 

specializing in solutions for leaders working in virtual and remote teams. Earlier in her career, Donna worked for, Chubb and Son, Inc as well as other corporations in various leadership development positions. Donna’s teaching academia experience includes The Wharton Business School, the University of Pennsylvania and Rider University.  

 

MyAgencyCampus:

Online courses for training agents and brokers including property and casualty new hire curricula, business skills for sales and service team members and upskilling new

 leaders. Visit www.myagencycampus.com  (An offering from New Level Partners LLC).

 

If you are interested in scheduling a webinar on Virtual Team Leadership, please contact aschroeder@newlevelpartners.com.

Tags:  Agency Operations  digital agency  leadership  virtual teams 

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