Skills to Highlight for Remote Work

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  • View profile for Victoria Repa

    #1 Female Creator Worldwide 🌎 | CEO & Founder of BetterMe, Health Coach, Harvard Guest Speaker, Forbes 30 Under 30. On a mission to create an inclusive, healthier world

    497,317 followers

    Your title doesn’t make you a leader. How you communicate with your team does. Here are 12 tips top leaders use email to create clarity, show respect, and drive results: 1. Acknowledge Delays with Gratitude, Not Apology ❌ "Sorry for the late reply..." ✅ "Thank you for your patience." 2. Respond Thoughtfully, Not Reactively ❌ "This is wrong." ✅ "I see your point. Have you considered trying [alternative]?" 3. Use Subject Lines That Get to the Point ❌ "Update" ✅ "Project X: Status Update & Next Steps" 4. Set the Tone with Your First Line ❌ "Hey, quick question..." ✅ "Hi [Name], I appreciate your time. I wanted to ask about…" 5. Show Appreciation, Not Just Acknowledgment ❌ "Noted." ✅ "Thanks for sharing this—I appreciate your insights." 6. Frame Feedback Positively ❌ "This isn't good enough." ✅ "This is a great start. Let’s refine [specific area] further." 7. Lead with Confidence ❌ "Maybe you could take a look…" ✅ "We need [specific task] completed by [specific date]." 8. Clarify Priorities Instead of Overloading ❌ "We need to do this ASAP." ✅ "Let’s prioritize [specific task] first to meet our deadline." 9. Make Requests Easy to Process ❌ "Can you take a look at this?" ✅ "Can you review this and share your feedback by [date]?" 10. Be Clear About Next Steps ❌ "Let’s figure it out later." ✅ "Next steps: I’ll handle X, and you can confirm Y by [deadline]." 11. Follow Up with Purpose, Not Pressure ❌ "Just checking in again." ✅ "I wanted to follow up on this. Do you need any additional details from me?" 12. Avoid Passive-Aggressive Language ❌ "As I mentioned before…" ✅ "Just bringing this back to your attention in case it got missed." Key Point: Effective email communication isn’t about being perfect. It’s about being intentional, clear, and respectful. Choose your words carefully. Your emails can either open doors or close them. ♻️ Repost to inspire your network! And follow Victoria Repa for more.

  • View profile for Josue Valles

    Founder, CurationLabs

    129,788 followers

    Found this 1980 ad about writing clearly. 65 years later, it's still the best writing advice I've ever seen: 1) Know exactly what you want to say before you start Most people start writing and figure it out as they go. That's why most writing sucks. Thompson says outline first, write second. Revolutionary concept, apparently. 2) Start where your readers are, not where you are Don't assume people know what you know. Meet them at their level of understanding, then bring them along. Most "experts" write for other experts and wonder why nobody gets it. 3) Use familiar word combinations Thompson's example: A scientist wrote "The biota exhibited a one hundred percent mortality response." Translation: "All the fish died." Stop trying to sound smart. Start trying to be clear. 4) Arrange your points logically Put the most important stuff first. Then the next most important. Then the least important. Seems obvious, but most people do it backwards. 5) Use "first-degree" words Thompson says some words bring immediate images to mind. Others need to be "translated" through first-degree words before you see them. "Precipitation" => "Rain" "Utilize" => "Use" "Facilitate" => "Help" 6) Cut the jargon Thompson warns against words and phrases "known only to people with specific knowledge or interests." If your mom wouldn't understand it, rewrite it. 7) Think like your reader, not like yourself Thompson asks: "Do they detract from clarity?" Most writers ask: "Do I sound professional?" Wrong question. TAKEAWAY: This ad is from 1960. The internet didn't exist. Social media wasn't even a concept. But the principles of clear communication haven't changed. Most people still can't write clearly because they're trying to impress instead of express.

  • View profile for Diksha Arora
    Diksha Arora Diksha Arora is an Influencer

    Interview Coach | 2 Million+ on Instagram | Helping you Land Your Dream Job | 50,000+ Candidates Placed

    268,048 followers

    If you are searching for a job (working from home), you should know these facts: 1/ 56% of jobs can be done remotely. 2/ Remote opportunities have grown by 1100% since 2021. 3/ Companies with remote work see happier employees and lower turnover. However, the problem is that many candidates struggle to stand out in interviews for remote jobs. Here’s how you can prepare: 📌 Focus on results, not hours Employers care about what you achieve, not how long you work. Example: “In my last role, I worked remotely and improved project delivery by 20% using better planning tools.” 📌 Highlight remote-friendly skills Talk about things like: – Clear communication: How you keep everyone updated through tools like Slack or Zoom. – Time management: How you organize your day to stay productive. – Tech knowledge: The apps and tools you use to collaborate effectively. 📌 Be proactive Show how you take charge in a remote setup. Example: “I use Trello to keep my manager updated on tasks and deadlines without waiting to be asked.” 📌 Answer the big question: “Why this job?” If remote or hybrid work is offered, show why it works for you: “I’m excited to join a company with a flexible work culture where I can deliver great results.” 📌 Be ready for tough questions “How do you stay productive at home?” “How do you connect with team members online?” Share examples of how you’ve done it before, like setting up virtual coffee chats or sticking to a schedule. Lastly, remember that it’s not about where you work—it’s about what you deliver. #interviewquestions #interviewpreparation #interview #linkedinforcreators #job

  • View profile for Stuart Andrews

    The Leadership Capability Architect™ | I Build Leadership Systems That Scale Organisations | Trusted by CEOs, CHROs and CPOs Globally | Executive Leadership Coach | Creator of the Leadership Capability Architecture™

    170,664 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 Rony Rozen
    Rony Rozen Rony Rozen is an Influencer

    Senior TPM @ Google | Stop Helping. Start Owning. | Turning Invisible Work into Strategic Impact | AI & Tech Leadership

    13,720 followers

    The 'Out of Sight, Out of Mind' Trap: How to Conquer the Distance Google is a global company with offices all over the world, and while this diversity is a strength, it also presents unique challenges for communication and collaboration. Especially when your key stakeholders and decision-makers are continents away! Those hallway conversations, spontaneous coffee chats, and quick desk drop-bys that teams at HQ take for granted? Yeah, those aren't happening when you're separated by oceans and time zones. And that can lead to a disconnect. Your team's amazing work might get overlooked, your challenges might go unnoticed, and your stakeholders might feel out of the loop. But fear not, fellow remote leads! Here are a few strategies I've learned along the way: ‣ Tailor your communication approach: Every leader has their preferred communication style. Some love detailed reports, others prefer concise bullet points, and some just want the TL;DR. It's your job to adapt and deliver information in the way they'll best receive it. ‣ Embrace Radical Transparency: The worst thing that can happen is your leadership feeling blindsided by a problem or a missed deadline. Over-communicate! Share updates regularly, highlight both wins and challenges, and don't be afraid to ask for help when needed. ‣ Educate Your Leads: Help them understand the unique challenges of leading a remote team in a different location. Explain why you might need more proactive communication or different approaches to stay connected and aligned. ‣ Build Relationships Beyond Email: Travel when possible. Occasional visits to the main office can be invaluable for building relationships and understanding the nuances of the company culture. ‣ Celebrate Wins: Make sure your stakeholders are aware of your team's accomplishments, both big and small. This reinforces the value of your team and keeps them top-of-mind. ‣ Iterate and Improve: What works for one lead might not work for another. Experiment with different communication styles, ask for feedback, and continuously refine your approach. Leading a local team in a remote site requires extra effort and intention. By mastering the art of communication and building strong relationships with your stakeholders, you can ensure your team's success, no matter where you are in the world! What are your favorite tips for leading remote teams across continents? Share your insights in the comments! 👇 #RemoteLeadership #Communication #TechLeadership #lifeAtGoogle

  • View profile for Carlos Silva

    Leading Content Production at Semrush | AI Content Strategy & SEO | Remote Work Mentor & LinkedIn Top Voice | Helping Marketers Land Remote Jobs

    38,927 followers

    90% of remote job applications get rejected for one reason. It has nothing to do with qualifications. They're applying for remote work like it's office work. Remote employers don't just want skilled people. They want people who can thrive without supervision, communicate clearly in writing, and manage their own productivity. Most applications miss this completely. Instead of showcasing remote-specific skills, candidates highlight: - Years of experience - Technical certifications - Office-based achievements But remote employers really care about: - Async communication skills - Self-directed work examples - Home office professionalism - Cultural fit for distributed teams The shift requires rethinking everything from your resume to interview prep.

  • View profile for Yanislava Hristova 🌎

    AI, FinTech & Web3 Talent Partner | Helping Global Teams Hire Top-Tier Remote Engineers | Top 100 Voice in Remote Work | Industry Thought Leader & Speaker

    25,802 followers

    After 10+ years of building fully remote teams across Europe, I realised something important: Technical skills tell you what a person can do. Remote-readiness tells you whether they can actually thrive in a distributed environment. And these two things are not the same. Here is the framework I use with every engineer we screen - regardless of seniority, tech stack or industry. 1️⃣ Ownership Remote work collapses if people wait to be told what to do. You need someone who naturally moves projects forward. 2️⃣ Written communication Most remote collaboration is written. If someone can’t explain their thinking clearly, the team slows down. 3️⃣ Asynchronous discipline People who can’t manage their time, or need constant supervision, struggle in remote-first setups. 4️⃣ Decision autonomy Remote teams rely on engineers who can unblock themselves without three meetings and five approvals. 5️⃣ Emotional maturity This one is overlooked. Remote work exposes how you handle uncertainty, feedback, silence, conflict and self-management. These traits matter more than people think. A brilliant engineer without remote readiness becomes a bottleneck. A strong remote-ready engineer becomes a multiplier. This is why our process works so well we match not just skills, but the ability to thrive in the environment founders actually offer. If you want to strengthen your remote hiring in 2026, this framework is a great place to start.

  • View profile for Tania Zapata

    Chairwoman of Bunny Inc. | Entrepreneur | Investor | Advisor | Helping Businesses Grow and Scale

    12,263 followers

    Remote work challenge: How do you build a connected culture when teams are miles apart? At Bunny Studio we’ve discovered that intentional connection is the foundation of our remote culture. This means consistently reinforcing our values while creating spaces where every team member feels seen and valued. Four initiatives that have transformed our remote culture: 🔸 Weekly Town Halls where teams showcase their impact, creating visibility across departments. 🔸 Digital Recognition through our dedicated Slack “kudos” channel, celebrating wins both big and small. 🔸 Random Coffee Connections via Donut, pairing colleagues for 15-minute conversations that break down silos. 🔸 Strategic Bonding Events that pull us away from routines to build genuine connections. Beyond these programs, we’ve learned two critical lessons: 1. Hiring people who thrive in collaborative environments is non-negotiable. 2. Avoiding rigid specialization prevents isolation and encourages cross-functional thinking. The strongest organizational cultures aren’t imposed from above—they’re co-created by everyone. In a remote environment, this co-creation requires deliberate, consistent effort. 🤝 What’s working in your remote culture? I’d love to hear your strategies.

  • View profile for Prof. Amanda Kirby MBBS MRCGP PhD FCGI
    Prof. Amanda Kirby MBBS MRCGP PhD FCGI Prof. Amanda Kirby MBBS MRCGP PhD FCGI is an Influencer

    Honorary/Emeritus Professor; Doctor | PhD, Multi award winning;Neurodivergent; CEO of tech/good company

    139,900 followers

    Getting Email Etiquette Right: Clear, Neuroinclusive Communication Email can be a minefield—too short and it seems abrupt, too long and it’s overwhelming. Have you read into an email and thought it was rude, abrupt or said something completely different to what it actually said? Did you find it hard to know what to do next? For some neurodivergent people, unclear language, implied meanings, or hidden expectations can make emails a source of stress. Here’s how to keep communication clear and more neuroinclusive: Be direct, not vague – Say what you mean. Instead of “Let’s catch up soon,” try “Are you free on Thursday at 2 PM for a 15-minute call?” Avoid reading between the lines – Not everyone picks up on subtle cues. If you need something, state it explicitly rather than hinting. Structure matters – Use bullet points, short paragraphs, and clear subject lines to make emails easier to process. Clarity over politeness overload – While greetings and sign-offs are important, excessive niceties (“Just checking in, hope you’re well, no rush but…”) can dilute the key message. Set expectations – If a response is needed, say when: “Please reply by Wednesday.” If not urgent, make that clear to reduce pressure. Neuroinclusive emails benefit everyone—less stress, fewer misunderstandings, and clearer communication. What would you add to the list?

  • View profile for Arjun Vijay

    COO of Giottus | Advocating Crypto for India | Ambassador for Blockchain Literacy and Adoption

    11,820 followers

    My secret to managing remote teams without losing efficiency. Remote work isn’t about trusting blindly or micromanaging every move. It’s about setting the right systems. We focus on two things: hiring people with high ownership and tracking both input and output. Ownership means we don’t have to chase people to get things done. They take accountability without constant follow-ups. But that doesn’t mean there’s no structure. Metrics like average handling time, response time, and missed calls help us track performance without invasive monitoring. People know they have the freedom to manage their time, but they’re also aware that performance is measured. That balance is key. It removes room for procrastination and ensures that results speak for themselves. This approach has also helped us access top talent, especially people who can’t relocate for work but thrive in a structured remote setup. A well-managed remote team is about creating an environment where autonomy, accountability and efficiency work together. What’s your biggest challenge in managing remote teams? #RemoteWork #Leadership #Startups #WorkCulture #TeamManagement #Efficiency

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