Async agile 1.0, is distributed agile 2.0!

This blog expands on the ideas from “The Async-First Playbook”. You can either browse through the posts using the grid below, or start at the very beginning. Alternatively, use the search bar below to find content across the site.

Culture, Leadership, Management, Knowledge sharing Sumeet Moghe Culture, Leadership, Management, Knowledge sharing Sumeet Moghe

It's urgent? So what?

Constant urgency is the enemy of deep work and an async-first culture. Often this means getting on meetings, and being ok with days full of IM interruptions. With enough of these “urgent” tasks, even the most motivated teams can slip back into their old, synchronous ways of working. In this post, I explain techniques to deal with urgency.

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Leadership, Strategy, Facilitating change, Obstacles Sumeet Moghe Leadership, Strategy, Facilitating change, Obstacles Sumeet Moghe

The risk of async islands of excellence

In large organisations, it’s tough for a small team to cling to its own subculture for too long. It’s not impossible to have an ‘async island of excellence’! It’s just hard. I want to use this post to reflect on the challenges your async-first team could face. In the process, I want to explain why it makes sense for the entire company to eventually go async-first.

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Communication, Leadership, Strategy Sumeet Moghe Communication, Leadership, Strategy Sumeet Moghe

An executive's guide to asynchronous company communication

Communication is a big part of an exec’s role. In fact, many people would argue that if an exec isn’t communicating, what are they doing? In today’s post I want to demystify asynchronous company communication for the executive. If you’re leading a department, or your own company, think of this as your guide to effective internal communication.

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Leadership, Management, People Sumeet Moghe Leadership, Management, People Sumeet Moghe

What are your people upto?

If you learned to be a manager in an office-centric setup, async-first remote work may seem like an opaque way to lead your people. How do you manage without walking around and listening? In this post, I’ll unpack the risks of leading unhappy, disengaged or struggling team members in remote teams and what you as a manager can do to pre-empt these problems.

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Obstacles, Leadership, Facilitating change, Ideation Sumeet Moghe Obstacles, Leadership, Facilitating change, Ideation Sumeet Moghe

5 superstitions we can't hang on to any more

Senior leaders are often victims to blind spots and corporate superstition. And just like in real life, superstition hurts at work as well. So, let’s examine some common superstitions we all face at work, with a critical lens. By the end of this post, we’ll know which of them hold up to logical scrutiny.

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Culture, Management, Leadership, Relationships Sumeet Moghe Culture, Management, Leadership, Relationships Sumeet Moghe

Don't let your virtual workplace become toxic

Every work model has its pitfalls. It’s not as if a remote workplace can’t go south. In today’s post I want to explore some anti-patterns I’ve seen in remote-first and “hybrid” organisations that can make your workplace toxic. When you know of these possibilities ahead of time, you’ll be able to pre-empt them and put the right guardrails in place for your team.

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Leadership, Management, People Sumeet Moghe Leadership, Management, People Sumeet Moghe

Manage your people with care

In an async-first culture, the role of a manager is crucial. If the company is the mother-ship, the manager’s the employee’s bridge to it. They should be the individuals that know the most about their people, their skills, abilities and strengths, their personalities and their aspirations. You need managers who lead with care. In this post, I want to address how you can show that care as a leader and a manager.

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Leadership, Strategy, Budgeting, Relationships, Cohesion Sumeet Moghe Leadership, Strategy, Budgeting, Relationships, Cohesion Sumeet Moghe

Smart money - spends that are worth their weight in gold

Depending on the level you operate at as a leader, you probably have some discretionary budgets available to you. When you spend that money, your company wants you to get the most bang for their buck. In this post, I want to explore four areas of expenditure that’ll make a big impact on your remote teams.

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Leadership, Strategy, Motivation, Culture, Cohesion Sumeet Moghe Leadership, Strategy, Motivation, Culture, Cohesion Sumeet Moghe

Foster a motivating environment for async agile

One sign of a healthy culture is that people feel motivated by the work they do. Yes, there’ll be good days and bad, but on the whole you want your people to enjoy the work they do. In today’s post, I want to examine autonomy, mastery and purpose as factors that help you create a motivating environment for the people you work with.

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Leadership, Management, Culture, Strategy, Cohesion Sumeet Moghe Leadership, Management, Culture, Strategy, Cohesion Sumeet Moghe

Create a culture for asynchronous work to thrive

As a leader, you’re responsible for much more than the mechanics of work. Depending on the size of your company you’re a custodian of culture, or the one who defines it, or someone in between. In today’s post, I want to share with you how you can foster a culture that supports async agile.

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Leadership, Knowledge sharing, Strategy Sumeet Moghe Leadership, Knowledge sharing, Strategy Sumeet Moghe

Here’s what you need, to “organise” serendipity and knowledge sharing

With the right systems and the right people in community management and curation roles, you can brew the perfect storm of “organised serendipity”. I daresay, that this can often work better than the proverbial water cooler meeting.

In this post, we’ll discuss how you can enhance your knowledge ecosystem by building on your existing collaboration stack. I’ll also go over how to create the right team of people to govern, curate and nurture that platform.

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Leadership, Strategy, Tools, Knowledge sharing Sumeet Moghe Leadership, Strategy, Tools, Knowledge sharing Sumeet Moghe

Farming tacit knowledge in a remote-first, asynchronous setup

Remote work would have renewed your organisation’s interest in knowledge management. Considering one can’t walk up to co-workers for a quick clarification, could we instead ask the system for an answer? In an asynchronous, remote-first culture, a solid knowledge strategy can be a productivity power up.

In this article and a few subsequent ones, I want to share my thoughts about creating a knowledge ecosystem that keeps pace with your people’s know-how.

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Leadership, DEI, Management Sumeet Moghe Leadership, DEI, Management Sumeet Moghe

How asynchronous work helps you be a champion for inclusion

As a manager or a leader in any tech firm today, I imagine you have a DEI agenda. Your people’s ability to work asynchronously can be a powerful tool to not just further that agenda, but also to differentiate you as a progressive leader.

In today’s post, I want to share a few notes about diversity and a few more about inclusion. I expect these perspectives will help you shape your organisation’s culture and eventual competitive advantage, starting of course with the people you influence.

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Leadership, Strategy, Management Sumeet Moghe Leadership, Strategy, Management Sumeet Moghe

The great hybrid kerfuffle

Remote and async first work is all set to be the standard way of working in the next decade. There’s still a window of opportunity for firms to be the early majority. Those that miss this window will lag the innovation curve in designing the workplace of the future. A misunderstanding of “hybrid” work can set organisations back in this journey. This is also counterproductive to async agile.

In today’s post I want to unpack the term “hybrid work” for you and I want to explain why misunderstanding this term is dangerous.

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Leadership, Management Sumeet Moghe Leadership, Management Sumeet Moghe

I get it love, but it won't work for me

When I speak to managers and leaders about asynchronous work, I receive a variety of responses. If they’re remote work naysayers, then there’s an obvious scepticism. Then there are the remote work believers who listen carefully. There are some who can immediately think of ways this “asynchronous work thing” would work for them and their teams. Many leaders, however, see the value for their people, or maybe “other people”, but claim it won’t work for them.

If you’re one of those leaders or managers, allow me to unpack asynchronous work for you. Who knows, you may find an idea or two to enrich your own work life.

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