Virtual Collaboration Productivity

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  • View profile for Reno Perry

    #1 for Career Coaching on LinkedIn. I help senior-level ICs & people leaders grow their salaries and land fulfilling $200K-$500K jobs —> 300+ placed at top companies.

    565,939 followers

    Your to-do list shouldn't control your life. 6 methods that kept me from losing my mind: (And doubled my output) 1. The Two-Minute Rule If something takes less than two minutes, do it immediately. Not later. Not tomorrow. But now. This simple rule prevents small tasks from snowballing into overwhelming anxiety. --- 2. Never Miss Another Detail I used to scramble taking notes during meetings + interviews, missing key points and action items. Now, I use Rev’s VoiceHub to auto-record and transcribe everything. It’s more accurate than alternatives like OtterAI and it’s easy to share the info with my team. --- 3. The Focus Formula 3 hours of deep work beats 8 hours of shallow work every time. Block your calendar, turn off notifications, set a timer, and just start. Watch your output soar. --- 4. Energy Management > Time Management Stop planning your day around the clock. Instead, match tasks to your natural rhythms – creative work in the morning, meetings after lunch, admin work when energy dips. Work with your body, not against it. --- 5. The Weekly Reset Ritual Every Sunday, clear your inbox, plan your priorities, set three main goals, and prepare your workspace. This turns Monday from a bottleneck into a launchpad. --- 6. Automate Everything Possible If you do something more than twice, automate it. From email templates to calendar scheduling, let tech handle the routine so you can focus on what matters. --- These tools & techniques will help you stay organized, manage your time better, and maintain your sanity. Try them out and see which ones work best for you. Reshare ♻ to help others. And follow me for more posts like this.

  • View profile for Nancy Duarte
    Nancy Duarte Nancy Duarte is an Influencer
    220,894 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 Vanessa Van Edwards

    Bestselling Author, International Speaker, Creator of People School & Instructor at Harvard University

    147,773 followers

    If you’re tired of team exercises that feel forced, try the Start / Stop / Continue ritual that actually builds team bonding. Here’s how to do it: Step 1: Pick a topic Choose one specific area you want to improve. You can do this as a team (like marketing strategy, branding, or workflow) or even as a couple or family (like health habits or household routines). When my team did this for our marketing strategy, we asked: “What’s working? What’s not? What should we try next?” Step 2: Sticky it up Give everyone a stack of sticky notes. Each person writes down every task they do related to that topic (one per note). Then, color-code: • Different colors for different people (for transparency) • Or all one color if you want to keep feedback anonymous This part alone often surprises people. We realize how many invisible tasks we’re doing, and how much effort goes unnoticed. Step 3: Place the tasks Draw three columns on the board: 🟢 Start – New ideas or things worth trying 🔴 Stop – Tasks that drain time or add no real value 🟡 Continue – What’s working and worth doubling down on Then, together, sort each sticky. When we did this at Science of People, we learned: • We wanted to start experimenting with Medium and LinkedIn posts • We needed to stop wasting time on low-return platforms (sorry, X) • And we should continue doing more of what was driving real results (YouTube, email newsletters, and blog writing) If you disagree on something (like we did about Medium), place it in between columns as a trial. Set a test period. For example, “Let’s try this for 2 months and then review.” Step 4: Create a safe space This is a critical step. Start / Stop / Continue only works when feedback feels safe. You’re talking about the task, not the person. We even use different colored stickies to separate ideas from ownership. That way, no one feels attacked. When people feel psychologically safe, they share the truth, and that’s when real improvement happens. Step 5: Assign and act Insight without action is just decoration. So before you finish, assign ownership: • Who’s starting the new tasks? • Who’s stopping or phasing out the old ones? And for the “Continue” column, ask: “Can we make this even better?” A bonus: It works outside of work, too I even do this exercise with my husband once a year, for our health and habits. We’ve listed things like: • Start: Morning protein shakes, evening routines • Stop: Buying soda, eating out too often •Continue: Yoga and weekend soccer We walk away feeling more connected and intentional. The takeaway: When you pause to ask, “What should we start, stop, and continue?” you give yourself (and your team) permission to refocus energy where it truly matters.

  • View profile for Richa Singh

    Founder-Resume Allianz | Resume Writer | LinkedIn Top Voice | 10x LinkedIn Community Top Voice | University Gold Medalist | Interview Prep | Job Search Strategist | Soft Skills Trainer | Nature Photographer

    68,105 followers

    𝟏𝟐 𝐒𝐮𝐫𝐞 𝐒𝐡𝐨𝐭 𝐖𝐚𝐲𝐬 𝐓𝐨 𝐂𝐮𝐭 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐂𝐥𝐮𝐭𝐭𝐞𝐫 𝐓𝐨 𝐈𝐧𝐜𝐫𝐞𝐚𝐬𝐞 𝐏𝐫𝐨𝐝𝐮𝐜𝐭𝐢𝐯𝐢𝐭𝐲: 𝐓𝐢𝐦𝐞 𝐌𝐚𝐧𝐚𝐠𝐞𝐦𝐞𝐧𝐭 Cutting clutter and managing your time effectively is essential for productivity and overall well-being. Here are some strategies to help you cut down on clutter and make the most of your #time: ✅ 1. Set Clear Goals: Define your short-term and long-term #goals. This clarity helps you prioritize tasks and avoid distractions that don’t align with your objectives. ✅ 2. Prioritize Tasks: Use methods like the Eisenhower matrix (urgent-important matrix) to categorize tasks into four quadrants: urgent and important, important but not urgent, urgent but not important, neither urgent nor important. Focus on tasks in the important but not urgent quadrant to prevent last-minute rushes. ✅ 3. Declutter Your Physical Space: A clutter-free environment promotes focus. Regularly clean and organize your #workspace. Get rid of items you don’t need, and keep only what's essential. ✅ 4. Digital Decluttering: Organize your #digital files, emails, and apps. Unsubscribe from unnecessary email lists, delete apps you don’t use, and organize your files into folders for easy access. ✅5. Time Blocking: Allocate specific blocks of time for different tasks. Avoid #multitasking, as it often leads to inefficiency and mistakes. Concentrate on one task during each time block. ✅ 6. Learn to Say No: Don’t overcommit yourself. Learn to decline requests or tasks that don’t align with your priorities or goals. ✅ 7. Limit Distractions: Identify common distractions and find ways to limit them. This might mean turning off social media notifications, setting specific times for checking emails. ✅8. Practice Mindfulness: Mindfulness techniques, such as meditation, can enhance your focus and help you stay present. Regular #mindfulness practice can reduce mental clutter and improve your decision-making skills. ✅. 9. Regular Review: Regularly assess your goals and tasks. What worked yesterday might not work today. Be willing to #adapt and change your strategies based on what helps you be more productive. ✅ 10. Delegate and Outsource: Don’t be afraid to #delegate tasks if you have the option. Outsource tasks that are time-consuming but not necessarily within your expertise. This can free up your time for tasks that are more valuable to you. ✅ 11. Continuous Learning: Stay updated with productivity techniques and tools. Continuous learning helps you discover new methods to manage your time and reduce clutter effectively. ✅ 12. Practice Self-Care: Ensure you get enough rest, exercise, and relaxation. A healthy #lifestyle contributes significantly to your ability to manage clutter and time effectively. Cutting the clutter and managing time is an ongoing process. It requires consistent #effort and a willingness to #adapt. Start with small #changes, and over time, you'll find a routine that works best for you. #timemanagement

  • View profile for Santosh Rudrawar

    Group CHRO | Sanjay Ghodawat Group | Building One SGG | People, Culture & Business Transformation | Vision 2030

    11,576 followers

    During my career, I had the opportunity to build a team dedicated to supporting learning needs for a global audience. For the first time, I collaborated with someone who operated fully remotely. Our first in-person meeting took place nearly two years later, but by then, we had already formed a strong team. Despite our different time zones, we consistently met our commitments together. This experience is truly unforgettable for me. Oncourse, managing a diverse team with both remote and in-office members can be quite a balancing act. It's essential to ensure that everyone feels connected, engaged, and empowered to give their best. Here are a few approaches that have worked well for me: 📍Clear Communication: Regular, transparent communication is key. Leveraging various tech tools keeps everyone informed and connected. 📍Flexible Work Arrangements: Promoting a flexible work style allows team members to adapt to their schedules while feeling fully supported. 📍Team-Building Activities: Organizing virtual or in-person events helps build camaraderie and strengthen team relationships. 📍Recognition and Appreciation: Celebrating achievements, no matter the location, boosts morale significantly. A little acknowledgment can make a big difference. 📍Trust and empowerment: Trust your team members to handle their responsibilities. Empowering them to make decisions and take ownership fosters a positive work environment. What strategies do you find effective for managing a hybrid workforce? Let’s share insights and learn from one another!

  • View profile for Michael Girdley

    Business builder and investor. 12+ businesses founded. Exited 5. 30+ years of experience. 300K+ readers. Helping US businesses hire amazing talent from LatAm.

    34,488 followers

    I have made and saved a lot of money using remote teams across all of my companies.  Here’s how you do it: Almost every business could use at least some remote talent. It’s a great way to access a broader talent pool than your local area. You can also lower overhead costs — less office space, lower bills, and even hire talent from other countries. So how do you get the most out of a team that you don’t see face to face? Step 1: Define your objectives and needs Nail down your biggest reason for building a remote team. Broaden your hiring pool? More flexibility? Lower costs? Your main goal guides your future decisions. Then, assess which of your positions are suitable for remote or hybrid work. — Step 2: Develop a remote work policy A solid policy sets the tone and expectations for your team. Try to answer all questions ahead of time. Clarify Scope and Purpose: •  Who is eligible to work remotely? • For hybrid, how many days? • Is there a distance requirement? Set Communication Standards: • When should people be online and available? • What communication tools should they use? Security Protocols: Password manager?  VPN? Are you providing work equipment or expecting BYOD? — Step 3: Update your hiring process Build remote-specific job descriptions: Highlight skills like self-discipline and communication. Use diverse recruitment channels: Remote-specific job boards and communities. Tailor interviews for remote readiness: Include video calls and assess their home office setup. — Step 4: Find the right tools & technology Equip your team with tools that support collaboration and productivity. You’ll probably need: • An async communication hub (like Slack) • A video call platform (Google Meet) • A project management tool (Asana or Trello) • Hardware/software support Provide equipment or offer a stipend. — Step 5: Establish clear communication guidelines Effective communication is the backbone of remote work. Do you need people to: • Set online statuses? • Post daily updates? • Follow a response time rule? • When do you need people available for video calls? Make sure to set regular meetings and check-ins. Weekly stand-ups and monthly all-hands help keep everyone aligned. — Step 6: Build a strong team culture Strong remote teams thrive on culture and connection. Start with thorough virtual onboarding. Set up meet and greets and mentoring sessions. Add regular team activities: • Virtual coffee breaks • Game time • Casual Slack channels Celebrate everything: • Individual and team wins • Holidays • Company milestones — Step 7: Keep tabs on performance Address concerns head-on with clear goals and regular feedback. Set SMART goals: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound. Schedule quarterly reviews. Focus on outcomes — not hours worked. — If you’re interested in remote staff for your teams. Comment below or message me and I’ll get you connected.

  • View profile for Dave Crenshaw

    Productive Leadership Author & Keynote Speaker | Over 10 Million Students Worldwide | Top LinkedIn Learning Course Instructor on Time Management, Focus, and Entrepreneurship

    135,989 followers

    Is time getting away from you at the office? Chaos-proof your calendar so interruptions can’t hijack your focus. The goal is to reduce switchtasking—what most people call multitasking—so you can actually do your best work. My system boils down to three simple categories:  1️⃣ Space: Limit where unfinished work gathers. Fewer gathering points = fewer attention switches.  2️⃣ Mind: Capture decisions and clear mental clutter so your brain isn’t a holding bin for tasks.  3️⃣ Time: Use your calendar as a tool: block weekly processing time (~5 hrs), schedule large MVA (Most Valuable Activity) focus blocks, and protect buffers and short checking windows. What makes it different: it’s plain, habit-based, and built for messy, real-world days. It's the system I designed for me and my coaching clients after I was diagnosed with “off-the-charts ADHD,” so it actually works for even the most chaotic among us. Download the one-page PDF below by clicking “Open in Acrobat” in the upper-right to save it. 👇 Use it as your weekly guide to protect the work that matters most. #timemanagement #adhd

  • View profile for Adeline Tiah
    Adeline Tiah Adeline Tiah is an Influencer

    I Help Leaders Build Cultures Where it’s Safe to Speak Up, so it’s Safe to Scale Up | Leadership & Team Coach | Speaker | Startup Advisor | Author: REINVENT 4.0 | LinkedIn Top Voice

    27,109 followers

    When you put a room full of women leaders into an online team game over breakfast, you can expect fun and laughter. But we got more than that. We uncovered leadership blindspots that suddenly become impossible to ignore. I just facilitated a morning workshop at the first session of PHOENIXUS Breakfast Club - and everyone leaned in, highly focused in their game. Through an interactive multiplayer game, we watched something fascinating unfold: all those things leaders 𝘬𝘯𝘰𝘸 in theory but struggle with in practice? They showed up. In real time. On screen. Here's what became visible as we played together: 🎯 How quickly we default to "someone will tell us what to do" even when we're the ones supposed to be leading 🎯 That trust isn't just nice to have. Without it, teams freeze 🎯 How easily things derail when communication breaks down (even when everyone thinks they're being clear) 🎯That sometimes the goal isn't obvious. And sometimes it changes mid-game. Sound familiar? 🎯 How hard it is to move forward without guarantees but progress requires trying anyway 🎯 That the strongest teams aren't made of people who think alike 🎯 That real success happens when people actually care about each other, not just the outcome 🎯 And maybe the biggest one: we stumble. We reset. We even fail a little. That's how we learn. There were moments of confusion. Recalibration. "Is this the right decision?" And yet, the teams kept moving. Together. What's powerful about using games like this? 📌 𝗜𝘁'𝘀 𝗲𝗻𝗴𝗮𝗴𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗳𝗿𝗼𝗺 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝘀𝘁𝗮𝗿𝘁. The tech-enabled format is immersive and genuinely fun. People get involved as there Is a competitive element in this to solve a problem 📌 𝗜𝘁 𝗿𝗲𝘃𝗲𝗮𝗹𝘀 𝗿𝗲𝗮𝗹-𝘁𝗶𝗺𝗲 𝗱𝘆𝗻𝗮𝗺𝗶𝗰𝘀. While teams play, their natural patterns surface: who speaks up, who waits, how they make decisions under pressure. 📌 𝗜𝘁 𝗰𝗿𝗲𝗮𝘁𝗲𝘀 𝗮 𝗺𝗶𝗿𝗿𝗼𝗿. Teams see their own communication styles, decision-making, and collaboration gaps as they happen. Lots of leadership blindspot unpacked. This is #Teamforging literally. Want to bring this kind of experience to your team? Let's talk.

  • View profile for Jayant Ghosh
    Jayant Ghosh Jayant Ghosh is an Influencer

    From Scaling Businesses to Leading Transformation | Sales, Growth, GTM & P&L Leadership | SaaS, AI/ML, IoT | CXO Partnerships | Building Future-Ready Businesses

    10,995 followers

    9 ways to combat loneliness in your virtual team. Virtual teams are becoming the norm across industries. While this shift offers numerous benefits, it also presents a unique challenge. Remote teams grapple with an invisible adversary: 𝗟𝗼𝗻𝗲𝗹𝗶𝗻𝗲𝘀𝘀. Loneliness occurs because- - Isolation from Team Dynamics - Lack of spontaneous interactions - Reduced sense of shared experiences - Absence of non-verbal cues in communication - Blurred boundaries between work and personal life - Difficulty in building trust without face-to-face interactions This social isolation causes ↳ feelings of detachment, ↳ a drop in productivity, ↳ loss of motivation, ↳ struggles with teamwork, ↳ increased risk of burnout, and ↳ even anxiety. Loneliness in virtual teams is a growing concern. Here are 9 ways to combat loneliness in your virtual team: 1) Embrace Casual Connections: ▶ Schedule casual talks, like online coffee breaks or game nights. 2) Regular Check-Ins: ▶ Schedule regular one-on-one and team check-ins to promote communication and connection. 3) Mentorship Programs: ▶ Partner with team members for mentoring or skill swapping. A structured approach to foster deeper one-on-one bonding within the team. 4) Celebrate Wins (Big and Small):  ▶ Acknowledge and praise accomplishments. A brief team chat message or virtual cheer is impactful. 5) Prioritize Video Calls: ▶ Use video calls for teamwork, ideas, or casual chats. They create a stronger sense of being together than texts or calls. 6) Invest in Team Building Activities: ▶ Schedule online team-building activities. Options include games, trivia, or shared brainstorming on non-work subjects. 7) Encourage virtual "watercooler moments": ▶ Create dedicated online channels for non-work-related discussions, fostering a sense of community and shared interests. 8) Lead by example:  ▶ Managers engage in team-building activities and virtual social events. Prioritize the team's well-being. 9) Support Mental Health:  ▶ Offer mental health aid, like counselling access and wellness plans. --------- Connecting virtual teams reduces loneliness, fostering productivity, innovation, and organisational resilience. What tips will you add? --------------- I am Jayant, a big supporter of raising awareness about #MentalHealth. This week (Mon/Wed/Fri) on #JayThoughts (follow it), ▶ we focus on #Loneliness. You can follow me and then press the bell 🔔to receive new post notifications. #Culture #Leadership

  • View profile for Megan Gill

    Community | Talent | Social Impact | Women in Tech

    20,990 followers

    At TAP we typically only work with remote-first companies which for the most part have a lot of these structures in place, however in some cases we have companies so keen to work with our talent that they open up remote roles specifically (we have an EOR service to help this work as smooth as possible - yep, I did that purposefully add another USP here for your attention). When companies do this we know it can be a shift in ways of working, and requires some patience and new learnings, which is why we built this guide. Some highlights: 1. Establish Clear Communication Channels Set communication guidelines: Clearly define which tools to use for different types of communication (e.g., urgent issues via messaging, long-form updates via email) to avoid confusion and ensure smooth collaboration. 2. Build a Strong Team Culture Virtual team-building activities: Regular virtual coffee breaks, online games, or team workouts can help build camaraderie. We use donut - biweekly we get matched with random people in the company to get to know each other. 3. Implement Flexible Yet Structured Work Policies Set clear expectations: Define core working hours when everyone must be available and set deadlines for projects to ensure team members are aligned with their tasks and responsibilities. 4. Focus on Outcomes, Not Activity Setting clear objectives and key results (OKRs): Define measurable goals for team members to strive towards. 5. Provide Regular Feedback and Support Weekly or bi-weekly one-on-ones: Use these meetings to discuss progress, address concerns, and offer support. Happy to lend more insights on how we do this at TAP for anyone interested in making the shift to remote.

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