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Don’t Let Remote Work Stop Your Creative Collaboration

For many workers in creative industries, working from home can be a challenge. After all, how can you collaborate with your team or department to make a product when you can’t all huddle in a conference room together? Well, here are a few tips and resources that may help your teams.
Online Whiteboards
When working in the office, it can be very useful to throw all the thoughts and ideas up on a whiteboard so the entire team can see where the conversation is going and doesn’t rely on one person’s memory. Thankfully this option is widely available online. If utilizing Zoom for your conference calls, they have a whiteboard built straight into the screen sharing ability! If your company already utilizes a different conferencing tool, you are not out of luck! Our teams have had luck utilizing the AWW board, an online whiteboard that allows you to do everything from typing straight on to the board, to post it notes and drawing shapes/arrows. This board can be exported as a PDF or PNG after your brainstorming, allowing you to look back on ideas as you continue through your project!
Quick Chats
This suggestion doesn’t involve a change in process, but more a change in mindset. When working with creative minds, it is very important to voice thoughts and ideas when they arrive. For remote workers, there is not the ability to peek into a coworker’s office and ask if they have a minute to chat. These quick chats can helpful to sketch out ideas in the moment when ideas are flowing then scheduling and waiting for a meeting. At allsynx, we utilize ‘Meet Now’ on Microsoft Teams, an ability built straight into the chatting service. When we are all conversing in a thread, there is an option to start a call right there, and it will pull in everyone who was conversing in that chat. allsynx has put a lot of emphasis internally on checking an employee’s status in Microsoft Teams. If they are listed as ‘available’, then they are just that, available to chat.
Taking Full Use of Meetings
When you do take the time to schedule out of a brainstorming or feedback meeting, make sure that you are taking full advantage of everything you can get out of that time. One big way of doing this is to ensure that everyone who needs to be in the meeting is there. If you forget someone, you could try to pull them into the meeting just like you would do in the office, but you run the risk of them being away from their desk or on another call at the time of your meeting. Assigning a note taker is another way to make sure that none of the ideas thrown around are missed. In a creative environment, discussions can be fast paced, so it is important that the note taker be an outside source and not someone who is expected to contribute to the meeting.
Present in Meetings
Lastly, and this will come as no surprise, but utilizing video will help understanding and raise reception during your meeting. Being able to see someone’s facial expressions while they speak can avoid any misunderstandings and hurt feelings. Along this same line, giving everyone a chance to speak and throw their ideas into the ring is very important in any creative collaboration. It becomes very easy for someone to sit in the background of a call, especially if it is already a full meeting, so pausing for a minute before moving on to the next topic is a sure-fire way to give anyone a chance to speak up.
Do you have any other resources that you have found useful? Share them with us at learn@allsynx.com, and you might just find your suggestion featured in our next post!
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