Tag: smallbusiness

  • Study Finds More Than Half of U.S. SMB Owners Believe Working Remotely is Here to Stay Post-Pandemic

    Embracing remote work has been a love-hate relationship for many small and medium-sized business (SMB) owners. With new technology allowing workers to work from wherever and whenever more than ever before, employers have had to balance this reality against having the peace of mind that frequently comes from being in the same physical space as your employees. As owners try and adapt to this new tech reality, more and more companies have been adopting a hybrid approach—offering the option for some remote work but not fully committing.

    Now, we’re living in a different reality. The coronavirus has made it abundantly clear that the need to work remotely is no longer a perk or a convenience – it’s a necessity. But thanks to the technology that has been enabling more productive and collaborative remote work in recent years, notably unified communications tools, the ability to stand up a remote work environment can be very easy, fast, and affordable.

    And yet, anything new, especially something that happens so rapidly such as the need to shift the majority if not all of a company’s workforce from centralized to remote, can certainly cause issues and concerns. So, to better understand how businesses are adapting to remote working and to gauge how prevalent remote work may be post pandemic, Intermedia commissioned a survey of 250 small and medium-sized business owners or senior decision-makers that employ between five to 250 people. These respondents had to have at least 50% of their workforce in office-based roles.

    Of those businesses surveyed, nearly 85% of their employees worked in a centralized office pre pandemic. That number has, not surprisingly, decreased dramatically – to 26% – once social distancing and shelter in place orders went into effect.

    Highlights of the Findings

    Ready to have everyone head back to the office? Not so fast.

    Early findings from the report reveal that of the SMB owners who increased remote working as a result of social distancing, 57% said they will likely maintain increased remote working options for employees in the long-term. This indicates a shift not only in the way businesses operate but also how business owners, employees, and customers will engage with one another in the future. Among the biggest benefits of shifting to remote work, SMB owners have found that employee availability (up 19%), job (up 15%), and life satisfaction (up 7%) have all increased, while overheard costs have gone down.

    Respondents offered real-world examples with comments like “workers attitudes have improved” and employees are “happier” and “more productive.” There are obvious pressures from the shelter in place protocols, but workers specifically noted their reduction in stress was due to no longer dealing with stresses around office work, commuting, time away from family, and the costs associated with being in a physical location, seem to result in workers that are more engaged and ready to make a difference.

    Business owners still see the value of in-person meetings, but video conferencing is on the rise

    One of the top concerns voiced by those surveyed was the ability to engage with new prospects and continuing to serve existing customers while Coronavirus-related interaction restrictions are in place. Almost all SMB owners (94%) said in-person interactions have been essential to conducting new business in the last two years. Additionally, 72% said that the current restrictions on face-to-face meetings will play a significant role in their team’s ability to continue business as usual. Technology however, was not cited as a top concern, implying that getting the right tools deployed in order to keep their businesses running was not a barrier.

    In fact, survey findings indicate that companies are turning to technology to help deliver face-to-face interactions once reserved for in-person meetings. 57% of respondents indicated a reliance on video conferencing pre-pandemic, while that reliance has jumped to 84% currently – an increase of 27%, the most significant jump across all communications channels covered within the survey (including phone, email, chat, and others).

    Remote Work Isn’t Just a Temporary Fix

    Remote work has been expanding considerably over the past few years. It’s allowed companies to have a larger pool of candidates and reduce costs. Workers crave a more flexible lifestyle that balances work and play, which often means they want the option to work from anywhere. Plus, technology now provides a perfect foundation for employees to work from any location with total accessibility, easy collaboration, and robust security.

    COVID-19 has certainly made us reexamine the entire concept of work, illustrating that many jobs can be done remotely without sacrificing productively. As more business owners realize that employee availability and job satisfaction can remain high, if not increase, within a remote working environment, the findings of this survey indicate an increase to remote working will remain well after the pandemic passes.

    Methodology

    This survey was conducted among 250 business owners or senior decision makers, from organizations employing between 5 and 250 people. Respondents belong to organizations where at least 50% of staff are normally office based but there has been a reduction in office-based working since Covid-19. All interviews were conducted online by Sapio Research, in partnership with Intermedia, in April 2020 using an email invitation and an online survey.

  • Lighting & Camera Angle: Looking Your Best

    We’re spending more time on camera than we could have ever imaged just two months ago. Some of us are accustomed to it. For others, it is new and we still feel awkward seeing ourselves in the almost non-stop video conferences and meetings.
    Here’s a video we came across that is full of great information on how to look good on camera.

  • How to Look Great on a Video Conference Call

    Working remotely doesn’t mean you have to be isolated. That is what’s so great about video conferencing platforms. Face to face communication is now possible without being in the same place. The same connection can be created even if you’re thousands of miles away. While it’s very easy to set up in theory, you always want to look your best and a little prework is needed to do so. Here are 9 tips on how to look great on a video conference call.
    Video conferencing is an essential tool for remote working. Whether you are just transitioning to working from home or have been a long-time remote employee, how you look and sound matters. To ensure that you are optimizing your video calls and creating connections, we’re sharing some quick things you can do to be a master of virtual meetings.

    Follow these tips to ensure your video conference call is a success.

    1. Get the lighting right: Overhead lights are the worst kind of lighting for video calls as they create shadows under your eyes. Bad lighting can put a damper on how you appear. Natural lighting is the best option here. If that’s not possible, use soft light behind your webcam.
    2. Make sure audio quality is crisp: Better audio translates to better image quality. The space you use should have things that can absorb sound like furniture. If you are in an empty room, there could be an echo or reverb.
    3. Show more than just your head: A lot of communication is nonverbal. We often use our hands to make gestures or emphasize things. If possible, move back from your webcam so those on the other end can see you.
    4. Pay attention to angles: In addition to sharing more than just your head on the video call, it’s also a good idea to test your angles. Ideally, your webcam should be at eye level. If you are using the camera on your laptop, then you can use a few books to prop it up so that it’s at eye level.
    5. Test with and without a headset mic: Most video conference call attendees use a headset for audio. Without it, you’ll feel and look more natural. Test both options to see if using your computer’s mic and speakers is sufficient. However, without a headset, you’ll need to have a quiet space with a closed door so other noises aren’t picked up.
    6. Look sharp: Looking presentable on a video call doesn’t mean you need to be ready for Hollywood. It does mean, that when your colleagues see you, you shouldn’t look like you just rolled out of bed. While you may not need a suit and tie, don’t go below business casual. Also, take a peak at yourself in the mirror before that video call, just in case there is a piece of spinach stuck in your teeth from lunch.
    7. Consider your background as well: The webcam’s range will include more than just you, so what’s in the background matters. Junk and clutter in the background will be distracting and could have other attendees thinking you are unprofessional. If possible, ensure the background is tidy and there’s a clean wall behind you with nothing inappropriate.
    8. Be as distraction-free as possible: With so many people juggling family life and work, there are bound to be distractions during meetings. While internal meetings might be more casual, and your co-workers won’t mind if your dog makes a special appearance, video calls with clients and partners should be as distraction-free as possible, which means having a door to close. If that’s not an option, then try to make sure other family members stay in other parts of the house.
    9. Maintain eye contact: Looking someone in the eye while you speak with them shows them you are paying attention. Maintaining eye contact translates to video calls as well. Being able to do this is dependent upon your ability to angle the camera correctly.

    Look Your Best with the Right Technology

    The video conferencing tool you use matters as well. Make sure you have all the functionality you need to look your best. Check out how NTELogic Elevate offers you all the benefits of video conferencing and so much more for remote work.

  • 12 Tips for Managing Remote Teams

    How do you manage remote teams?

    First, take comfort in knowing that managers around the globe, in companies of all sizes, have successfully led entire teams of distributed groups and individuals. If you’ve only led teams who are physically located in the same office, the notion of extending to a distributed team environment can open a lot of new opportunities for you, as the manager. New resources are available if you’re open to a broader geographic area.  Lower cost locations become available, allowing you to allocate resources better. Business continuity is at hand when trusted employees announce a lifestyle change that includes residence in a new location.
    What’s different about remote management is the way you, as a manager, approach team culture, communications, and collaboration. If any of those three elements drop from your management recipe, then team productivity is at risk. When leading a remote team, none of the elements need to be left behind, but in keeping team effectiveness at its pinnacle, the manager must approach some aspects of leadership differently. Below are 12 tips for managing remote workers:

    1. Humanize each team-member – Ensure all team members have their photos entered into your email, chat, and conferencing systems. It may sound trite but in a distributed environment, using every opportunity to humanize each team member is important.
    2. Use video conferencing – Distributed teams tend to require a lot more meetings. That’s because the impromptu water-cooler discussions and white-boarding sessions don’t take place when the team isn’t physically in the office. When you do meet, lead with a culture of video conferencing over voice only. Nothing matches facial expressions and eye contact, even if across a network environment, for understanding and connection. Not everyone is used to video conferencing but by leading by example, video will quickly becomes the norm.
    3. Host team meetings (voice or video) – In addition to individual conversations and group-based discussions, make it a priority to host regular audio and/or video meetings for your team. I host a one-hour meeting with my direct reports weekly and an all-hands every month.
    4. Schedule regular check-ins at all levels – In a distributed environment, you’ll notice that you interact with some employees a lot and a lot of employees a little. When you’re not able to walk by a desk and stop for a quick chat, those who you don’t have a lot of direct contact with may fade into the background for you. For them, it could mean a feeling of disconnectedness with the team.  Make it your responsibility to check in with employees across the team at regular intervals and do so with a phone call. Text via email or chat applications may help to identify an action but voice or video is best for reconnecting. When you do so, be sure to compliment the individual on something accomplished at work and ask for feedback in general or on a specific topic. You may not see it, but doing this simple act is important for remote workers.
    5. Create casual Team building – In several teams that I’ve been a part of, a creative individual has typically come up with a fun virtual team building idea. One employee featured a different team member every two weeks in a humorous write up that she called ‘the blawg’. Another company had a full intranet area for pet owners to share stories and photos. One employee hosted a ‘guess where I am’ photo area that garnered a lot of conversation across the teams. Since you can’t take your distributed team out to lunch or dinner for bonding, these casual team-building exercises, only if they are natural and authentic, tend to bring out personalities and provide more color to the virtual team.
    6. Don’t forget, simple touches matter – Nothing beats receiving a gift or a hand-written note in the mail. For those who worked hard to achieve something great, send them a gift card, and award or something else. Always include a hand-written note along with whatever you send. Over the holidays, get hand-written holiday cards out to everyone. Simple touches are often overlooked in distributed environments but if you want someone to feel appreciated, make the effort to appreciate them.
    7. Don’t multi-task – When you have more meetings with your team-members and colleagues (because you will have more meetings in a distributed environment) it is tempting and easy to multi-task during your calls. Don’t do it. If you’ve made the time to discuss a topic with your team or an individual – be present. When the conversation stops and your name is mentioned, the silence from lack of following the conversation sets a tone of irreverence and discourtesy. Treat virtual conversations the very same way you’d treat an in-person conversation.
    8. Set working hours and expectations – Employees who are physically in the office have much more of a feeling that their presence or absence, is noticeable. Some remote employees, on the other hand, who are more self-managed, may begin exercising flexible or creative working hours. It is up to the manager to set expectations for business hours and availability. In the eventual case where an individual is consistently offline for several business hours, a 1:1 conversation to reinforce expectations may be needed.
    9. Require meeting objectives – As humans naturally gravitate toward social interaction, a remote work environment often blossoms into far more meetings scheduled than a physical office environment. While interactions are good for teambuilding, too many meetings may drain the hours for acting rather than talking. One way to manage the meeting volume is to require meeting objectives. The most productive meetings are those focused on solving problems and making decisions. The meetings types that tend to proliferate coming with no objections, focusing on reporting out, exchanging information or data gathering. Drive to a culture where meetings are welcomed but must come with a clear objective that is action oriented.
    10. Model the right meeting behavior – As the most productive meetings begin with clear objectives and conclude with documented actions (owner, deliverable, and date), many meeting owners may not be aware of effective meeting management practices. As the manager or management team, conduct your meetings in this manner so that others can understand what effective meeting management looks like and then encourage them to do the same.
    11. Track actions – Without the ability to check in on progress with a quick walk-by, tracking actions becomes much more important for the team leader in a distributed team. One way for everyone to stay aligned on actions and priorities is to maintain a shared project plan and action list.  Always make sure the action list includes the action owner, deliverable, and due date. I like to include a simple green, yellow, red next to each action so everyone is clear where actions stand and push to get deliverables in by the due date. Another hint from years of doing this, watch for those who just keep changing the due date when they don’t deliver on their initial date. If task owners agree on their deliverable and date, short of a discussion that changes expectations, individual accountability is important for an action-driven team.
    12. Make sure you have the right tools – If the company is embracing a remote work environment, it is your responsibility to ensure they are set up with the right work environment. Aside from the chair and desk they’ll provide, you need to arm them with a good PC, screen, video conferencing, chat, email, business phone system, file sharing, and collaboration tools. Employees without the right tools will not be able to put their best foot forward and will soon get frustrated with their work environment. They need the basics.

    NTELogic offers the right communications and collaboration tools for effective remote and distributed team management. Learn how our full office in the cloud suite can help.

  • Top 10 Tips for Keeping Virtual Meetings Engaging

    By leveraging video conferencing technology, you can lead meetings where it’s easy to connect and collaborate. The ability to offer remote work opportunities for your team can be one of the most valuable decisions you make. It means that your employees can work together seamlessly without being there.
    If you want those attending to stay focused and foster collaboration, consider these tips.

    1. Use an agenda: Put your agenda up as your first presentation in your video conference. It’s also a good idea to send it before the meeting as part of the invitation. By creating a schedule, you’ve documented what needs to be discussed and who needs to share information, inviting better organization into your meeting.
    2. Start with a welcome: Before you get moving on the agenda items, make any necessary introductions and state what role those on the call play in the project. This is also a time when you can set ground rules like staying mute if not talking and using the chat for questions so you can gather them in one place before going through them.
    3. Make sure there are no technical issues: You’ll want to check all aspects of your video conferencing setup before the meeting so that technical problems don’t bog you down. Your setup run-through should include checking your webcam, removing background distractions, checking your headset, and practicing screen sharing.
    4. Take notes and share them post-call: Appoint someone in the group as a note-taker to quickly summarize the points made and ideas discussed. Post-meeting, you can flesh these out and include the next steps. Then share them with the participants so that everyone has clarity on what was decided during the meeting.
    5. Avoid multitasking: Virtual meetings still require your undivided attention, so don’t try to multitask or eat lunch. You need to be present for the meeting, which means more than just showing up. Concentrate on the topic of the meeting at hand, and you’ll find it takes less time to resolve than if there were interruptions from distractions.
    6. Share what’s relevant: While you want to keep your audience on point, don’t share content that’s not relevant to the discussion. This could cause you to get off topic and waste time. Plan ahead on what you’ll share and how it brings value to the meeting.
    7. Steer clear of small spreadsheets: If you need to share content in a spreadsheet, think about how it will look on screen. You may have a nice size monitor, but others may be viewing from laptops and tablets. They won’t be able to see small spreadsheets. Alternatively, you could break up the spreadsheet into smaller pieces to highlight what’s necessary. Or, you could take those numbers and create a chart to illustrate the data.
    8. Keep meetings small if possible: The more people you add to the meeting, the more likely it is to take longer and go off-topic. It doesn’t mean you should avoid large meetings; just be sure that everyone attending has a role to play. If others can make do with a summary or recap from their managers, then go this route.
    9. Use mute when not talking: This tip is essential to keeping conversations on track because if you aren’t on mute, then everyone else can hear you typing or any background noise. This causes distractions. Mute is your friend when you are in a virtual meeting to ensure that you don’t miss out on what is being presented.
    10. Employ virtual brainstorming tactics: You don’t have to be in the same room to have a group think session. Most brainstorming exercises can transfer to a virtual meeting setting. With the screen share feature, you can begin mapping out ideas on the screen as others chime in with ideas. Seeing things on the screen will help your attendees stay focused and energized.