Collaboration Platforms for Remote Teams

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  • View profile for Jeremy Connell-Waite
    Jeremy Connell-Waite Jeremy Connell-Waite is an Influencer

    Global Communications Designer 👁️ 🐝 Ⓜ️ | Author of “The 109 Rules of Storytelling”

    89,029 followers

    PRESENTING VIRTUALLY and engaging a remote audience is hard. The pandemic made us all work differently and years later, many of us are still struggling to be at our best online. That's why I really enjoyed this little book VIRTUAL EI from Harvard Business Review which digs into the science of online attention, engagement and digital mindfulness.   The book addresses issues like “WFH is Corroding Our Trust in Each Other”, “The Endless Digital Workday” and “What Psychological Safety Looks Like in a Hybrid Workplace”.   Here’s a few of my takeaways:   🙈 Traditional meeting styles may not work the same for all types of workers. 90% extroverts say virtual meetings are effective but only 70% of introverts agree.   ❓ Too many acronyms or names you don't know? Google increased productivity by 2% (around $400M) by regularly encouraging new hires to “Ask questions, LOTS of questions – and actively solicit feedback on virtual presentations, don’t just wait for it”.   💬 Talking about NOTHING is important. Screen-fatigue is rampant. We need to create space for small talk before (and after?) meetings. Small talk should be an agenda item and not an afterthought.   👂🏽 “Deep listening” is generous. Don’t always jump to an answer. If you’re one of those people who just waits for a gap in the conversation to provide a solution, try stopping yourself. Suspend your own agenda and listen to others more often.   🦜 It’s hard to engage disconnected audiences. Virtual presenters need to be like birds! (I like this one). Virtual presenters should deliberately and compellingly call and elicit a response. Simulate back-and-forth conversations by asking more rhetorical questions. eg. “Are you ready to try something new?”   A Few Ways to Make a Virtual Presentation Interactive: • Use an icebreaker • Keep it simple (10 slides max?) • Ask the audience • Have an interesting background • Try a quiz • Use humour • Make eye contact (with the camera not just the screen) • Don’t forget body language • Make use of effective language • Be aware of 10-15 minute attention spans • Add in some visual and audio effects • Use video • Have a keylight to highlight your face • Let the audience answer anonymously • Get your audience moving • Turn control over to the audience It’s a good book (for your commute?) which you can read in under 90 minutes. And at £11 it’s cheaper than 1 issue of Harvard Business Review magazine.  

  • View profile for Nancy Duarte
    Nancy Duarte Nancy Duarte is an Influencer
    222,192 followers

    Regardless of how great your ideas are in your virtual sales pitch, webinar, or team meeting… People are most likely checking their email, browsing social media, or working on other things while you present. How can you prevent that and actually get your audience to pay attention? Here are 4 of the most powerful techniques we use for our own virtual training courses: 1. Win the first five seconds According to research from the University of Toronto, people need only five seconds to gauge your charisma and leadership as a speaker. In virtual environments, this first impression is even more critical. To establish instant rapport: - Keep your posture open and inviting (avoid fidgeting, crossed arms, and closed-off postures) - Use open gestures that welcome the audience into your space - Gesture with your palms showing at a 45-degree angle - Speak with clear articulation and energy from the very first word The quickest way to lose your audience? Starting with tentative body language that signals you’re unsure or unprepared. 2. Design your presentation for virtual viewing When designing slides, assume varied viewing conditions. Design for the smallest likely device and the slowest likely Internet speed. Make your slides accessible by: - Using larger fonts (24-32pt) - Applying higher contrast colors - Limiting each slide to ONE clear idea - Adding more space between lines when using smaller text - Stripping excess content (you can provide additional information in a separate document) 3. Vary your delivery Our research shows the optimal length for linear presentations is just 16-30 minutes, while interactive ones can maintain engagement for 30-45 minutes. People’s attention will go through peaks and valleys during that time, so try these techniques to keep their attention: - Vary your speaking pace (faster to convey urgency, slower to express gravity) - Use intentional pauses to let key points land - Adjust your vocal tone (lower pitch for authority, higher for approachability) - Shift between slides, stories, and data at regular intervals Each change helps reset your audience’s attention and signals importance. 4. Build in structured interaction Don’t make your audience wait until the end of your presentation to interact. According to our research, presentations that incorporate audience engagement through polls, chat responses, or breakout discussions maintain attention longer. For the highest engagement: - Use a variety of interaction types throughout your presentation - Incorporate breakout rooms for small-group discussions - Switch modalities regularly to keep it interesting Remember: In virtual environments, you need to recreate the natural engagement that happens in person. Your virtual presentation success isn’t measured by perfection…it’s measured by action. Master these techniques and your audience won’t just pay attention, they’ll respond. #VirtualPresentations #CorporateTraining #WorkplaceLearning

  • View profile for Stuart Andrews

    The Leadership Capability Architect™ | Author -The Leadership Shift | Architecting Leadership Systems for CEOs, CHROs & CPOs | Leadership Pipelines • Executive Team Alignment • Executive Coaching • Leadership Development

    174,485 followers

    Remote work is amazing. Until your living room starts feeling like a boardroom and your workday never really ends. Sound familiar? While remote work offers flexibility, it also comes with unique challenges like blurred boundaries, screen fatigue, and the struggle to truly disconnect. The key? Intentionality. I dive into the 7 biggest challenges of remote work and share strategies to overcome them: 1️⃣ Blurred Boundaries 👉 Challenge: When your home becomes your office, the lines between work and personal life often vanish. 💡 Solution: Set clear working hours and communicate them to your team. Create a dedicated workspace to mentally “leave work” at the end of the day. 2️⃣ Feeling Always ‘On’ 👉 Challenge: The convenience of technology means work can follow you everywhere—into meals, weekends, and even vacations. 💡 Solution: Use “Do Not Disturb” settings on your devices and schedule intentional breaks. Protect evenings and weekends by turning off work notifications outside your set hours. 3️⃣ Isolation 👉 Challenge: Without the energy of a shared office space, many remote workers experience loneliness or disconnection from their teams, affecting morale and mental health. 💡 Solution: Schedule regular virtual coffee chats with colleagues to nurture relationships. Consider joining local co-working spaces or community groups for social interaction. 4️⃣ Overlapping Roles 👉 Challenge: Balancing work responsibilities with household duties—like childcare, cooking, or chores—can create stress and distract from focused work. 💡 Solution: Communicate with family or roommates about your work schedule and boundaries. Use tools like time-blocking to separate work and home duties effectively. 5️⃣ Technology Overload 👉 Challenge: Spending hours on video calls, emails, and digital tools can lead to screen fatigue and overwhelm. 💡 Solution: Build screen-free breaks into your schedule and evaluate which meetings can be replaced with emails or asynchronous updates. 6️⃣ Lack of Routine 👉 Challenge: Without the structure of a commute or office rituals, days can feel unanchored. 💡 Solution: Establish a consistent morning routine that signals the start of the workday. Incorporate rituals like exercise, journaling, or a designated start time to set the tone. 7️⃣ Difficulty Unwinding 👉 Challenge: When your workspace is just a few steps away, it can be tempting to keep working—or hard to stop thinking about unfinished tasks. 💡 Solution: Create an end-of-day ritual to signal the workday is over. This could be going for a walk, tidying your workspace, or planning the next day’s tasks. Balance isn’t about perfection. It’s about making space for what truly matters. How have you tackled these challenges in your remote work journey? Share your thoughts or tips below! 👇

  • View profile for Sandra Kiel

    🚀Microsoft MVP | Revolutionizing brand engagement through Gaming by using Minecraft, Roblox, and Fortnite. | AI Innovator

    14,951 followers

    ✅ 𝙼𝚒𝚌𝚛𝚘𝚜𝚘𝚏𝚝 𝙼𝚎𝚜𝚑 𝚒𝚜 𝚛𝚎𝚟𝚘𝚕𝚞𝚝𝚒𝚘𝚗𝚒𝚣𝚒𝚗𝚐 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝚠𝚊𝚢 𝚠𝚎 𝚠𝚘𝚛𝚔, 𝚊𝚗𝚍 𝙸'𝚖 𝚛𝚒𝚐𝚑𝚝 𝚒𝚗 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝚝𝚑𝚒𝚌𝚔 𝚘𝚏 𝚒𝚝. Here's how I'm embracing the future of immersive workspaces: I use #Microsoft #Mesh every day. Just last days, I spent an hour creating a virtual collaboration space. I'm passionate about immersive technology. So let me share my hands-on experience: 🚀 Microsoft Mesh isn't just another tech trend; it's a transformative tool, merging AI, 3D workspaces, and spatial audio to redefine team interactions. ♻️ Built on the Azure platform, it offers features like avatars, co-presence, and rich virtual environments, making remote collaboration more engaging and effective. But what's the real magic of Microsoft Mesh? ➡️ For starters, it's about making remote work less isolating, more interactive. 🔝 I've seen firsthand how it builds stronger team bonds and boosts productivity. Let me show you: -- 𝗛𝗼𝘄 𝗜 𝗹𝗲𝘃𝗲𝗿𝗮𝗴𝗲 𝗠𝗶𝗰𝗿𝗼𝘀𝗼𝗳𝘁 𝗠𝗲𝘀𝗵: 🗝️ Start with a clear objective for your virtual space. 🗝️ Use Mesh's intuitive tools to create immersive environments. 🗝️ Integrate Mesh with Microsoft Teams for seamless collaboration. 🗝️ Engage in more natural and meaningful virtual meetings with spatial audio. 🗝️ Leverage avatars to maintain presence in digital meetings without video fatigue. 🗝️ Customize and use 3D environments for various business needs. 🗝️ Utilize Mesh's no-code editor for rapid event creation. ➡️ For developers: tap into Unity for fully customized immersive experiences. Explore the vast possibilities, from onboarding to virtual museums. Remember, it's about enhancing human connections, even remotely. These steps are more than just a process; they're a journey into the future of work. But if you're looking for more. 📌 Dive deeper into the technical aspects. 📌 Check out real-world applications and early adopters as highlighted in the Microsoft Tech Community. 📌 Visit the Microsoft 365 Blog for the latest on Mesh's capabilities and integration with Teams. 📌 This isn't just about following a trend. It's about shaping the future of collaboration and workplace dynamics. 📌 Microsoft Mesh is more than a tool; it's a game-changer. And I'm here to help you navigate this exciting new landscape. Want to see how Mesh transforms a typical workday? Follow me for more insights in 2024. 👉 Together with Engin Eser we plan a row of LinkedIn Lives to deep dive into Mesh.

  • View profile for Antonina Panchenko

    Learning Experience Designer | Learning & Development Consultant | Instructional Designer

    13,854 followers

    Many people believe live trainings work better simply because people can talk to each other face‑to‑face, but that’s not the real reason. In reality, their effectiveness comes from something else entirely, they naturally follow a powerful learning rhythm. Great offline trainings follow one simple logic: action → reflection → understanding → application. This is Kolb’s Cycle. And it’s incredibly powerful. The problem? It was almost impossible to implement it in online learning. That’s why 90% of online courses look like “interactive lectures”: nice slides, videos, quizzes. But that’s content consumption, not transformation. And now - the unexpected twist. For the first time, online learning has caught up with offline experiences. Because AI removed the main barrier: it finally allows learners to get experience, reflection, and practice in a personalized way. Here’s how Kolb’s Cycle looks in modern learning design: 1️⃣ Concrete Experience — action Essence: the learner must do something, live through a situation, face a task — ideally experiencing difficulty or making a mistake that shows their current model doesn’t work. How online: role-based dialogue, scenario simulation. 2️⃣ Reflective Observation — reflection Essence: pause and think — what happened, what actions were taken, and why the result turned out this way. How online: interactive reflection prompts; AI coach provides feedback based on performance and the learner’s own reflections. 3️⃣ Abstract Conceptualisation — understanding Essence: form a new behavioural model — concepts, principles, algorithms that explain how to act more effectively. How online: short video lecture, model breakdown, interactive frameworks, checklists, interactive infographics. 4️⃣ Active Experimentation — application Essence: try the new model in a safe environment and observe the result. How online: AI-based simulation, situational exercise, case-solving with the new approach; AI coach supports and adjusts. The outcome? Online learning stops being “content” and becomes a behaviour tracker. A course becomes a training simulator, not a film. Kolb’s Cycle finally becomes real in digital learning. Do you use this framework? What results have you seen?

  • View profile for Novie M.

    Go-To-Market & Project Manager | Community Builder | Remote Work Advocate |

    8,873 followers

    Miscommunication in remote teams isn't just annoying - it's expensive. A project that should take two weeks stretches to six. A simple feature becomes a complete rebuild. Team morale drops because everyone feels like they're working in isolation. I see this pattern constantly with Indonesia's remote teams. The problem isn't language barriers or time zones. It's assuming everyone interprets communication the same way. What "sounds clear" to someone in Singapore might feel completely different to someone in Jakarta. The hidden costs add up: → Rework because requirements weren't clear → Missed deadlines from assumptions → Team frustration leading to turnover → Client relationships suffering from inconsistent delivery But here's what actually works: Build emotional trust and skill trust from day one - something HarvardX emphasizes in remote leadership. During my work in simon-systems.com, I involve my core team in final-stage interviews. When candidates present their case study solutions, my team listens and gives their input. If they feel they can carry this person with them, I hire. This approach prevents miscommunication before it starts. Your team already has buy-in on new hires. Write everything down, even if it feels excessive. "We discussed this on the call" doesn't help when someone needs clarity. Confirm understanding, don't assume it. "Does this make sense?" gets different answers than "Can you walk me through your approach?" a mistake I learn expensively. Create feedback loops that work across cultures. Some team members will speak up immediately, others need safe spaces to raise concerns. Invest in relationship building beyond work tasks. Understanding how your teammates communicate personally helps with professional collaboration. Good remote communication isn't about more meetings. It's about clearer systems that work for everyone on your team. What communication challenges have you faced with remote teams in Southeast Asia? 🤔 #RemoteWork #Communication #TeamManagement #SoutheastAsia #StartupLife 📷 : jaman yours trully masih tengil, masih suka diomelin karena molor deadline dan suka alasan cari inspirasi di cafe.

  • View profile for Deborah Riegel

    Wharton, Columbia, and Duke faculty; Harvard Business Review columnist; Speaker, facilitator, coach; bestselling author, “Aim High and Bounce Back: A Successful Woman’s Guide to Rethinking and Rising Up from Failure”

    41,148 followers

    Ever notice how some leaders seem to have a sixth sense for meeting dynamics while others plow through their agenda oblivious to glazed eyes, side conversations, or everyone needing several "bio breaks" over the course of an hour? Research tells us executives consider 67% of virtual meetings failures, and a staggering 92% of employees admit to multitasking during meetings. After facilitating hundreds of in-person, virtual, and hybrid sessions, I've developed my "6 E's Framework" to transform the abstract concept of "reading the room" into concrete skills anyone can master. (This is exactly what I teach leaders and teams who want to dramatically improve their meeting and presentation effectiveness.) Here's what to look for and what to do: 1. Eye Contact: Notice where people are looking (or not looking). Are they making eye contact with you or staring at their devices? Position yourself strategically, be inclusive with your gaze, and respectfully acknowledge what you observe: "I notice several people checking watches, so I'll pick up the pace." 2. Energy: Feel the vibe - is it friendly, tense, distracted? Conduct quick energy check-ins ("On a scale of 1-10, what's your energy right now?"), pivot to more engaging topics when needed, and don't hesitate to amplify your own energy through voice modulation and expressive gestures. 3. Expectations: Regularly check if you're delivering what people expected. Start with clear objectives, check in throughout ("Am I addressing what you hoped we'd cover?"), and make progress visible by acknowledging completed agenda items. 4. Extraneous Activities: What are people doing besides paying attention? Get curious about side conversations without defensiveness: "I see some of you discussing something - I'd love to address those thoughts." Break up presentations with interactive elements like polls or small group discussions. 5. Explicit Feedback: Listen when someone directly tells you "we're confused" or "this is exactly what we needed." Remember, one vocal participant often represents others' unspoken feelings. Thank people for honest feedback and actively solicit input from quieter participants. 6. Engagement: Monitor who's participating and how. Create varied opportunities for people to engage with you, the content, and each other. Proactively invite (but don't force) participation from those less likely to speak up. I've shared my complete framework in the article in the comments below. In my coaching and workshops with executives and teams worldwide, I've seen these skills transform even the most dysfunctional meeting cultures -- and I'd be thrilled to help your company's speakers and meeting leaders, too. What meeting dynamics challenge do you find most difficult to navigate? I'd love to hear your experiences in the comments! #presentationskills #virualmeetings #engagement

  • View profile for Manish Khanolkar

    HR Consultant | HR Leader | Career Strategy for HR Professionals

    8,546 followers

    Designing training programs that actually transform learners? Start with this timeless truth: People don’t learn just by listening. They learn by doing. One of the models I often use while designing development interventions is the 70-20-10 model of learning. Originally developed by McCall, Eichinger, and Lombardo, this framework continues to remain relevant — even in an age of AI-driven learning and digital platforms. Here’s how it breaks down: 1) 70% – Experiential Learning - Learning by doing. On-the-job tasks, stretch assignments, simulations, and real-life decision-making. This is where actual transformation happens. It’s the space where knowledge turns into capability. 2) 20% – Social Learning - Learning from people. Through feedback, coaching, mentoring, peer discussions — we learn by observing, reflecting, and engaging with others. It deepens context and creates community. 3) 10% – Formal Learning - Learning from structured content. Workshops, courses, textbooks, instructional videos. Still important — but only a small piece of the bigger puzzle. When I design workshops, I treat this model not as a formula — but as a design principle. The formal workshops (10%) introduce key concepts. The social components (20%) reinforce it through feedback and peer exchange. But it’s the on-the-job application (70%) that brings the real shift. Because people don’t remember slides — they remember experiences. The 70-20-10 model is a reminder that learning isn’t an event. It’s a process. Transformation doesn’t come from knowing… it comes from doing. If you're building learning programs for your organization, start by asking: “Where will this show up in their real work?” That’s where learning becomes meaningful. #LearningAndDevelopment #CorporateTraining #ManishKhanolkar

  • View profile for Jen Bokoff

    Connector. Agitator. Idea Mover. Strategist.

    8,012 followers

    I’ve been thinking a lot about the 90 minute virtual meeting paradox. We spend the first 30 minutes on welcoming everyone and introductions, the next 15 on framing, and then a few people share thoughts. Then, just when the conversation gets meaningful, the host abruptly announces "We're out of time!” and throws a few rushed closing thoughts and announcements together. Sound familiar? We crave deep, meaningful, trust-based exchanges in virtual meeting environments that feel both tiring and rushed. It seems like as soon as momentum builds and insights emerge, it’s time to wrap up. Share-outs become a regurgitation of top-level ideas—usually focused on the most soundbite-ready insights and omitting those seeds of ideas that didn’t have time to be explored further. And sometimes, we even cite these meetings as examples of participation in a process, even when that participation is only surface level to check the participation box.  After facilitating and attending hundreds (thousands?) of virtual meetings, I've found four practices that create space for more engagement and depth: 1. Send a thoughtful and focused pre-work prompt at least a few days ahead of time that invites reflection before gathering. When participants arrive having already engaged with the core question(s), it’s much easier to jump right into conversation. Consider who designs these prompts and whose perspectives they center. 2. Replace round-robin introductions with a focused check-in question that directly connects to the meeting's purpose. "What's one tension you're navigating in this work?" for example yields more insight than sharing organizational affiliations. Be mindful of who speaks first and how difference cultural communication styles may influence participation.  3. Structure the agenda with intentionally expanding time blocks—start tight (and facilitate accordingly), and then create more spaciousness as the meeting progresses. This honors the natural rhythm of how trust and dialogue develop, and allows for varying approaches to processing and sharing.  4. Prioritize accessibility and inclusion in every aspect of the meeting. Anticipating and designing for participants needs means you’re thinking about language justice, technology and materials accessibility, neurodivergence, power dynamics, and content framing. Asking “What do you need to fully participate in this meeting?” ahead of time invites participants to share their needs. These meeting suggestions aren’t just about efficiency—they’re about creating spaces where authentic relationships and useful conversations can actually develop. Especially at times when people are exhausted and working hard to manage their own energy, a well-designed meeting can be a welcome space to engage. I’m curious to hear from others: What's your most effective strategy for holding substantive meetings in time-constrained virtual spaces? What meeting structures have you seen that actually work?

  • View profile for Matthijs Welle

    CEO @ Mews

    47,283 followers

    While I usually rave about being remote-first, the one thing we still struggle with are departmental meetings. When you have more than 50 people on a call, it often turns into a very one sided PowerPoint exercise and rather than being a value-add, it becomes a value-drain. This week I casually dropped into our People Team meeting, because I was surprised to see they blocked not just 1 hour, but 1,5 hours with 50+ people online. Of course, I should not have worried. 😃 It was incredible to see how teams at Mews have learned in the last 3 years to move away from soul-sucking-PowerPoint, to leveraging digital tools to keep a highly engaged audience, adding real value. What did they do in this specific meeting? 1️⃣ The meeting is run by the department Chief of Staff, and she spends several hours preparing for the meeting. Better to have 1 person spend several hours, than 50 people waste 1,5 hour each. 2️⃣ The call kicked off with a poll, asking people how they are feeling, getting a sense of the temperature in the room and how people are showing up. 3️⃣ New team members have to then intro themselves through 2 truths and 1 lie, and then we use a poll to get everyone to vote. A really small thing, but by using polls you ensure people stay fully engaged. 4️⃣ To engage the team on key KPI’s and achievements, we leveraged the chat. Here a number was shown and everyone had to guess/comment what business metric it represented. Another way to get everyone thinking about the metrics that matter most. 5️⃣ Then the group broke out into virtual breakout rooms, each group getting a different assignment, discussing things we got wrong or right in the past month. The small groups ensure we hear everyone’s input and voice. 6️⃣ Throughout all, the chat was where the real fun happened. The team was highly engaged and celebrating each other’s success. we really used digital tools to the max for all elements. 7️⃣ The Chief People Officer trusted her team to run the meeting, because she expects her team leaders to have their own voice and vision. She reserved 5 minutes at the end where she shared her insights and some inspiration. True leaders, really do eat last. Getting remote-first right is really hard work, but we are seriously committed to learning and constantly changing when things don’t work for us. Thank you Naomi Trickey for allowing me to creep into your team meeting this week. 😂 🥰

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