In today’s modern work environment, company culture is vital. According to a Glassdoor survey, 56% of employees find a good workplace culture to be more important than salary.
Your company culture is the heart of your organization–a combination of your business’s values, mission, and goals. It is not built overnight, but rather, it’s a participatory effort from your employees, HR, and leadership.
But when employees work remotely, building a company culture that reaches everyone across their various locations is even more challenging. HR needs to cultivate an environment of productivity and belonging that brings the entire team together, even if everyone is scattered around the globe.
Best practices for maintaining company culture remotely
Whether your organization already includes remote workers or is making the transition, company culture is essential to your success. Read on for tips HR can use to foster a positive culture for remote employees.
Share your company values
A big part of your company culture is your values. They are the core pillars guiding your organization and need to be at the forefront of your employees’ minds.
For remote employees, your company values are a concrete understanding of how your organization operates and how you create a positive work environment. Check out these creative ways to share and uphold your values with remote employees:
- Incorporate values from day one: Add your values to the company website and ask value-centric questions during the hiring process.
- Start a weekly round-up: Create a weekly email for employees to share how they integrated the company values into their workflow.
- Establish digital peer-to-peer recognition: Let employees nominate co-workers they feel exude company values and award weekly kudos to those individuals.
Improve communication
One of the biggest obstacles to remote culture is communication. Because everyone is working from different locations, it’s easy for things to fall through the cracks. Simple fixes require more time and follow-up.
Establish communication norms to ensure clarity, including chat best practices, response time frames, and email etiquette. Setting communication standards will prevent people getting barraged with messages, reduce interruptions, and make communication easier.
Try these strategies to improve communication to help you build and maintain your remote culture.
- Develop a company-wide newsletter: Shares the happenings, goals, and achievements of different departments to bring the entire organization together.
- Send a survey for feedback: Give employees the opportunity to share what they do and don’t like about the current culture and ways to improve it.
- Leverage the right technology: Equip employees with appropriate hardware, project management software, and real-time chat applications to make communication a breeze.