Search
Close this search box.
Search
Close this search box.
Search
Close this search box.

Under Siege

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp

Working from Home in Coronavirus Days

The coronavirus has sent many people that on regular days are working from the office to work from home. This is a big change for many teams that need to establish new ways of working.

Here are some tips for managers that are relevant for these days (which are relevant for regular times as well):

Video calls are highly recommended: they keep people engaged and focused on the meeting, reducing multi-tasking and keeping meetings short and fluent. There should be a very good reason not to have a video call.

* If there are expected network issues, management needs to provide direction and solutions. Don’t have meetings longer than 1 hour without a break. recommended 10 mins break every 1 hour.

managers should pay extra attention to keeping team spirit and togetherness feeling.

* Decide with the team on an agreed hour when the day starts (9:30? or 10:00?). By this time people are expected to “come to the office” (= connect).
* Open Teams/Zoom/any other tool you use/ meetings all day, recommended with video, to let people connect and stay connected just as they would have come to the office. After good morning greetings, some small talk, etc. the team can mute themselves until they need someone, but this platform will
allow them to see and communicate faster and more intuitively than only chat/emails.
* Have virtual coffee breaks with the team – every 1/1.5 hours. Suggest that everyone will go grab a drink and/or snack and join back together for a video chat just like you were in the office kitchenette.
* Towards the end of a day (let’s say 15:30/16:00), have a daily recap and closure meeting. See if there are special needs or any changes towards tomorrow, and check how is the team’s spirit. Treat it like saying goodbye at the end of the day with a dash of retrospective.

How to conduct remote meetings.

* Meeting organizer to join the meeting 2 mins before the meeting starts in order to make sure start on time.
* When the meeting starts, everyone goes on Mute (reduces background noise that prevents people from following the meeting).
* No more than 1 person speaking at a given time.
* Meeting organizer should make sure all participants are engaged and involved in the meeting: actively ask less vocal people questions, and make sure
no one takes over the talk.
* Ask people that are distracted/need to leave for a few mins to inform them before leaving so that people will not talk to or wait for them.

Daily meetings

* Review team progress by using the team’s Virtual Board (Jira/Rally/Azure/VersionOne/etc) and burndown chart, to keep everyone aligned on the progress.
* Make sure people understand the importance of keeping the board updated.
* Keep the meeting as focused and as short as possible.

Adjust the capacity of your sprint

* Take into consideration the impact of working from home on capacity: people WFH with family around them (and maybe other distractions) are working with lower capacity than usual.
* Discuss this at the beginning of sprint planning and identify who has full capacity and whose capacity is impacted due to WFH.

No need to wait for the end of the sprint in order to change something in the way the team works. Have non-official retrospective(s) during the sprint and
agree on adjustments as needed.

Respect lunchtime – don’t set meetings between 12-13 (unless agreed otherwise in advance!).

And last but not least: you are the leaders of your groups. people look up to you. Keep setting a positive example, be flexible, and remember to be empathic
and supportive of others.

And who knows, these challenging days may turn out to be empowering days that will grow your teams and bring them to new heights…

Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

LAB
Team Flow
Kaizen Workshop
Agility
An Appreciative Retrospective
SPC
Presentation
Nexus
User stories
Agile Product Development
Large Scale Scrum
Keith Sawyer
Agile Release Planning
Jira Cloud
The Kanban Method
Releases Using Lean
Principles of Lean-Agile Leadership
WIP
Lean Software Development
Engineering Practices
SAFe DevOps
Process Improvement
ART Success
RSA
Continuous Integration
GanttBan
Nexus and SAFe
Lean Agile Management
Jira Plans
Lean-Agile Software Development
Scrum Guide
Lean Agile Leadership
Tips
Coaching Agile Teams
Agile and DevOps Journey
DevOps
Scrum Values
Jira admin
Lean Risk Management
System Integration Environments
Agile Project Management
Accelerate Value Delivery At Scale
Scrum Master
Agile Outsourcing
Amdocs
Implementation of Lean and Agile
Covid19
Perfection Game
LeSS
Acceptance Test-Driven Development
RTE Role
Agile Release Management
Kanban Kickstart Example
Portfolio for Jira
Lean Startup
Agile Mindset
Sprint Iteration
Nexus vs SAFe
Reading List
Artificial Intelligence
BDD
Agile Israel
Professional Scrum Product Owner
Agile Product Ownership
chatgpt
Managing Projects
PI Objectives
Professional Scrum Master
Continuous Improvement
Nexus Integration Team
Risk Management on Agile Projects
Hybrid Work
QA
Agile Basics
Continuous Delivery
Lean Agile Basics
Atlaassian
Professional Scrum with Kanban
Certification
Kaizen
Legacy Code
RTE
Nexus and Kanban
lean agile change management
Operational Value Stream
Advanced Roadmaps
Lean Agile
NIT
Self-organization
SAFe
Built-In Quality
Daily Scrum
Program Increment
Frameworks
Development Value Streams
Atlassian
LPM
Agile India
ROI
Introduction to Test Driven Development
Lean and Agile Techniques
Agile Program
Value Streams
PI Planning
Sprint Retrospectives
Kanban 101
A Kanban System for Software Engineering
Effective Agile Retrospectives
Software Development Estimation
What Is Kanban
speed @ scale
Scrum and XP
Certified SAFe
Implementing SAFe
Code
Risk-aware Product Development
Scrum Primer
Product Ownership
Kanban Basics
EOS®
ATDD vs. BDD
Software Development
Video
Kanban
Scrum.org
Test Driven Development
AgileSparks
Product Management
speed at scale
Kanban Game
ATDD
Scrum With Kanban
Slides
TDD
Scrum
SAFe Release Planning
AI
Quality Assurance
predictability
Enterprise DevOps
ScrumMaster Tales
Agile Risk Management
IT Operations
Tools
Achieve Business Agility
System Team
Applying Agile Methodology
Continuous Deployment
Planning
Agile Contracts Best Practices
Lean and Agile Principles and Practices
Risk Management in Kanban
agileisrael
Business Agility
Release Train Engineer
Lean Budgeting
Agile Marketing
Agile Assembly Architecture
Agile Project
Games and Exercises
Agile Games and Exercises
Agile Exercises
Sprint Planning
Spotify
Scrum Master Role
Webinar
ARTs
Change Management
Agile in the Enterprise
Systems Thinking
Lean Agile Organization
Story Slicing
Agile
Elastic Leadership
Limiting Work in Progress
Agile for Embedded Systems
Legacy Enterprise
Iterative Incremental Development
Introduction to ATDD
Lean-Agile Budgeting
Manage Budget Creation
Entrepreneurial Operating System®
Rapid RTC
Agile Testing Practices
ALM Tools
Managing Risk on Agile Projects
POPM
AI Artificial Intelligence
System Archetypes
Pomodoro Technique
Agile Games
Continuous Planning
Jira
Agile Techniques
Agile Development
Agile Israel Events
Agile Delivery
The Agile Coach
Scaled Agile Framework
Agile Community
AgileSparks
Logo
Enable registration in settings - general

Contact Us

Request for additional information and prices

AgileSparks Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter, and stay updated on the latest Agile news and events

This website uses Cookies to provide a better experience
Shopping cart