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5 reasons why your company should be distributed

Добавлено: 10 мар 2010, 12:00
Marmot
Забавный пост: http://toni.org/2010/03/08/5-reasons-wh ... stributed/
Один к однму про нашу компашку... :)
I’ve noticed a new trend in Silicon Valley. More and more startups are beginning life as distributed companies, and investors and partners are starting to accept it as normal. Our company Automattic is distributed, and I’m ready to sing the praises of running a business in this way. BTW, I think distributed (“evenly spread throughout an area”) is a better description than the more commonly used virtual (“nearly real or simulated to be real”) for a company that has people working from all over the place instead of a centralized office. In Automattic’s case, we currently have over 50 employees spread across 12 US states and 10 countries.

Here are my top 5 reasons why you should consider the distributed model for your company:

1. Your employees will love it: I can’t overstate how much quality of life people get out of working for a distributed company. You get the best of working remotely – flexible hours, no commute, a personal work environment, much more time with friends and family – without the typical downsides – guilt about being away from the office, or missing out on hallway discussions. In addition, your employees get to live where they want, not where the job market dictates. We’ve had several people join Automattic and then move to places where they always wanted to live. We’ve also had people travel extensively while working from the road. This ability to move without having to worry about getting a different job is very freeing (even if you don’t end up moving, just having the option is nice). I’ve heard from many of our “Automatticians” that they simply can’t imagine going back to a “commute & cubicle” type job.

2. You can hire great people wherever you find them: Once your company is untethered from one physical location, your pool of available job applicants becomes the entire world. You can hire anyone who fits the culture and mission of your company wherever they live. You also get to better insulate yourself from the competition and ups and downs of a particular local job market, and you’ll automatically get better coverage of multiple time zones and languages when your team is more distributed. In our case, the first 4 employees were spread apart pretty widely. First was Donncha in Ireland, then Andy in Texas, Matt in San Francisco, and Ryan in San Jose (I was next, also in San Francisco). Those first 4 guys had already been working together on the WordPress open source project, so it was natural for them to join up and keep working remotely the way they had. And then we just kept adding people in this fashion, often working together first through an open source or consulting project, then joining forces full-time if things work out for both sides. BTW, we use AdminiStaff to deal with the payroll and tax complexities of hiring people all over the place.

3. You will use better communication tools: Communications is a challenge for every company and one that’s amplified for distributed ones because the communication channels are more narrow – a chat conversation is simply not as rich as a real life one. But there are advantages as well. A chat conversation can be archived, searchable, and visible to the entire team, whereas in person conversations in meetings and hallways are often lost to the ether. Being distributed is a good excuse to abolish inefficient meetings, conference calls, and email silos, and get the whole team to use better online collaboration tools. In our case, IRC was our preferred tool for the first year. It’s a real-time chat room for the company that we enhanced by keeping logs (to have searchable archives) and by running bots to automatically publish things like code commit notices into the chat stream. When the team got to about 15 people, the IRC channel got too busy and we split into several channels. We then took this concept a step further and developed a real-time group blogging theme for WordPress called P2 (similar tools are SocialCast and Yammer). P2 provides an activity stream for every project going on in the company. Today, we still have our IRC channel for real-time group chat, but the majority of company communications takes place on a couple dozen P2s (Matt has a great write-up on how P2 changed our company). We also use Skype and email, but only when necessary for one-on-one communication. Anything that isn’t strictly private, we push to P2s to make sure there’s an archive of the information accessible to everyone in the company.

4. You can still be social: Probably the biggest disadvantage to being distributed is the lack of social interaction. Online tools help make up for some of this, but most people like to spend some time together to make their work experience more enjoyable. The good news is that there are ways to compensate for this. We took inspiration from the MySQL team and started having in person meetups for the whole company every 6 months. These meetups last one week and we’ve had them in places like Arizona, Mexico, Canada, Stinson Beach and Colorado. Given how intensely we work together every day, there’s a lot of pent-up excitement by the time we meet in person and the week tends to fly by. During the initial meetups we just spent time hanging out and working our regular jobs side by side for the week. Along the way we refined the model. We now prepare for meetups by thinking up team projects that can be built and launched in a week. This turns our meetups into a kind of “hack week” with 2-3 person teams working on projects and demoing and launching them at the end of the week. We also spend a lot of time socializing, having fun excursions (hiking, golfing, go-kart racing, etc), and doing 10 minute lightning talks followed by Q&A (short talks by anyone in the company on whatever topic they feel like sharing). As we grow, we continue to look for ways to push the envelope on getting people together. We’ve started encouraging teams within the company to have their own mini-meetups, to come work from San Francisco for a while, and to congregate at various WordCamps.

5. Your offices will be more fun: A distributed company doesn’t have one, large centralized office but there are other office options available. Team members often work from home (or really from anywhere), but if there are several people near each other that’s a good reason to start up a co-working space. The key to those spaces is that they’re not permanent offices. No one has a desk that they have to go to every day. People come and go when they want and bring whatever they need to do the work – typically a laptop. It’s a great environment for social interaction (both within the company and with the larger business community in a given area) but it doesn’t undermine the rest of the distributed company because overall company decision-making and communication still happens online, accessible to everyone. We started Automattic with no office and stayed that way for about 18 months. After a while we noticed some weird looks from larger partners because we kept asking to meet at their place or at a coffee shop. So we rented a space on one of the piers in San Francisco for meetings and events. It’s set up like a “lounge” without any permanent desks or offices. Those of us who live in or are visiting San Francisco use it as a co-working space, and we use it often for WordPress meetups and make it available to other startups and tech organizations for events in our area.

So there it is. I know that the distributed model feels very strange to business people who are used to the traditional, centralized way of running a company. But I’m here to tell you that it works. It might even work a lot better than the traditional model for certain types of businesses. After all, distributed systems tend to work well in general (the internet itself being a prime example). If you try this model yourself, I think you will see clear benefits in employee happiness and hiring, and I recommend these core strategies that have worked for us: Have frequent company and team meetups to address the social challenges, use co-working and event spaces instead of traditional offices, and fully embrace new real-time, activity stream inspired communications tools like

Re: 5 reasons why your company should be distributed

Добавлено: 10 мар 2010, 12:52
PIX
Класс. Есть некоторые нюансы конечно но вцелом за этим будущее.

Какие вижу нюансы:
1) Человеку нужно место чтобы работать. Не всегда это реально осуществить в квартире. Могут мешать домашние.
2) Отсуствие дисциплины. Не все люди одинаково дисциплинированны и ответственны чтобы утром встать и работать до вечера за зп а не тв смотреть или в тырнете шляцо.

Re: 5 reasons why your company should be distributed

Добавлено: 10 мар 2010, 12:57
Marmot
PIX писал(а):Класс. Есть некоторые нюансы конечно но вцелом за этим будущее.
Ага, я тоже так думаю...

PIX писал(а):1) Человеку нужно место чтобы работать. Не всегда это реально осуществить в квартире. Могут мешать домашние.
Ну не знаю, у меня теща + сын 4-х лет, кондо 1100, вполне можно работать...
PIX писал(а):2) Отсуствие дисциплины. Не все люди одинаково дисциплинированны и ответственны чтобы утром встать и работать до вечера за зп а не тв смотреть или в тырнете шляцо.
А таких - в макдональдс ... :)

Re: 5 reasons why your company should be distributed

Добавлено: 10 мар 2010, 14:09
PIX
Marmot писал(а):Ну не знаю, у меня теща + сын 4-х лет, кондо 1100, вполне можно работать...
- Ну так наверное потому что теща поэтому и можно. Сын в садике небось.
- Конечно можно найти угол или даже комнату, но не всегда это возможно теоретически.

Я работаю из дому иногда - но это по вечерам или на выходные. мне нравиться. По сути я задумался - я делаю тоже самое что делал бы в офисе но в комфортной домашней обстановке. Замечу - также эффективно. В наше время VPN это вполне просто.
Marmot писал(а):А таких - в макдональдс .
- Да уж, люди они все разные и тут легко ошибиться при найме.