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Remote Team Management: Done RightRemote Team Management: Done Right

New processes, policies, and solutions are critical to support a telecommuting team and keep them aligned.

Frances Horner

April 7, 2020

2 Min Read
Young man working at home
Image: Elnur - stock.adobe.com

Work-from-home is no longer an option. With the coronavirus (COVID-19) shelter-in-place order, this strategy is vital to business continuity and compliance. Contact center software vendors have done a great job responding to the pandemic by offering turnkey cloud solutions to customers, and in some cases, for free. But, there is a big disconnect between implementing a solution and operationalizing the processes to support working remotely. As I’ve been getting tapped to write operational processes for newly formed remote teams, I researched companies that successfully manage remote teams for guidance and relied on experts in human resources.

 

Many organizations already have a telecommuting policy and procedures that allow employees to work at home or some other off‐site location for all or some of their regularly scheduled work hours. Most policies include eligibility requirements, such as employee tenure and past performance. But, COVID-19 requires modification to those agreements to provide greater flexibility to adjust to the ever-changing situation. Technology, equipment, a home safety checklist, and approval processes have all become streamlined to accommodate a quick setup for remote agents.

 

Taking a page from companies that successfully manage and run 100% remote teams, new processes are critical to support remote team management. Right now may be the first time managers have had to lead teams remotely. While employees are still expected to do their job, clarifying tasks and processes is important to ensure everyone understands who does what and when. Clear communications and effective meeting management are the basics of good management regardless of where the work gets done.

 

Monitoring team members’ activities and keeping track of work progress remains unchanged, but data transparency is important to keep remote teams aligned. Workforce management monitors workers as if they’re on the desk right next to you. Quality monitoring tools that include using screen capture, and recordings, go beyond productivity and efficiency of the agents. They ensure that calls are being handled properly. Real-time dashboards and scheduled reports provide all the data needed despite working in separate locations. This information needs to be shared, published, and communicated, now more than ever.

 

Finally, putting extra effort into building a culture of accountability through trust is key. Working remote means trusting your employees to do their jobs and giving them the support they need to do it right. Allow your remote workers to discuss the aspects of their new work life, address those concerns, and build a feedback loop for organizational transparency. Help them feel more connected to their work, the team, and the organization, and we will get through this together.

 

Stay safe, stay healthy, and stay connected.

 

SCTC Perspective" is written by members of the Society of Communications Technology Consultants, an international organization of independent information and communications technology professionals serving clients in all business sectors and government worldwide.

About the Author

Frances Horner

Fran Horner is a contact center visionary with a track record of helping healthcare organizations dramatically improve the patient and physician experience. As a strategic leader, she understands the importance of embedding customer engagement into corporate vision. As an expert in operations, Fran has a proven ability deploy the latest technology, relationship management tools, evidence-based metrics and Voice of the Customer (VoC) techniques to develop fully integrated contact centers that improve patient access and patient engagement.

 

Fran has more than 28 years of experience in contact center operations, with 15 of those in healthcare. Clients rely on her to develop solutions to some of their most challenges issues, from building a new patient engagement center to optimizing contact center efficiencies. She is skilled at driving change and implementing cost-effective solutions while enhancing the customer experience.

 

As senior director of patient access at a large academic health system, Fran created and implemented the vision for an omni-channel contact center that centralized hospital and physician scheduling, physician referrals, registration and insurance verification. As an Epic Principal Trainer for ADT, she developed project plans and training calculators, created content for training and collateral materials, and conducted train-the-trainer sessions to ensure patient-centric processes and workflows. Fran has also worked with global companies such as ABB Impell, British Steel and NEC to redesign their customer experiences and ultimately drive top-line revenue.

 

In 2009, Fran was named a “1to1 Customer Champion” by 1to1 Media in recognition of her commitment to building a customer-centric business that exceeds patient expectations while driving bottom-line results. In 2012, she co-founded Singola Consulting, a strategic healthcare consulting firm. In 2017, Fran launched VoC Consulting Group to help healthcare organizations streamline processes and leverage technology to improve the patient experience and make it easier for patients to access comprehensive, quality healthcare when it matters most.

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