Discover the benefits of remote working when people think of themselves as a unit.
This book breaks new ground into the art of remote working (the authors call it distributed collaboration). The authors propose that remote working, done right, yields many benefits on workers' well-being and personal freedom, reduction of carbon emissions via abatement of commuting and business travel, and general sanity of the workplace. With respect to other accounts of the same topic this one stands out in three respects.
First, it is not a book about digital tools: no techno-fetishism in sight. There is plenty of discussion of digital tools, but the authors prefer to highlight good organization practices over gizmos. Such practices can and should be supported by digital tools, but the book itself is agnostic over exactly which ones should be used.
Second, there is a key insight: remote working is about working together, emphasis on "together". To do it successfully, people need to think of themselves as a unit. Everybody takes steps to improve their co-workers' experience. Early in the book, monastic communities are evoked as an example of beautiful, highly efficient, long-term sustainable teams.
And third, you can feel the thickness of experience. The authors have been doing this for a long time, have tried and failed and tried again over the years. The company they founded has been cited as an innovator amongst a new breed of organisations started by digital natives who are now bypassing existing entities. Their projects have been featured in Wired, L’Echo, Stanford Social Innovation Review, La Repubblica.
Nadia Alter
Nadia Alter is a cofounder of Edgeryders, a globally distributed organisation and online community. As an engineer and user experience designer, she specialises in building platforms for businesses and policymakers operating under challenging economic and political contexts. She has designed and delivered programs for readiness assessment, training, and capacity building within private, public and third sector organisations.
Matthias Ansorg
Maker, software analyst and entrepreneur. Matthias is a German nerd trying to bring order and system to the world. He has more than nine years of experience building and running remote-only companies, where he mainly cares about IT, process development, and documentation.
Introduction
Our Story and Why You Need This Book
PART I An Epic Adventure in 8 Steps
PART II A Manual to Get You There
PART II A Manual to Get You There
Some General Advice
the Authors
Notes
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