It’s safe to say that the past 12+ months have been anything but business as usual. Besides uncertainty and challenges, last year has been a time of intense learning and adapting. Looking forward, we understand that the way we work, collaborate and do business has forever changed. 2020 also ended up being one of our most productive years yet.
So we wanted to take the opportunity to reflect on this experience and the lessons we carry with us moving forward.
Looking back, we can say it was both challenging and smooth at the same time.
It was smooth because most of our colleagues resumed their work from home following the lockdown, without noticeable interruptions. Our teams in the Software Engineering Services function as distributed teams for our clients, and they have a working setup designed for remote collaboration. They have all the tools in place to communicate instantly, to manage tasks, development and testing work. (Our colleagues in the Electronic Equipment Services had a slightly different experience but will touch on that in another story).
The difficult part was handling the situation on an emotional level, dealing with the unknown , and supporting each other through it all. While we managed to keep our cool and be proactive, the worry that one of us would get sick still lingered in the background.
We were also worried about our clients and how this new context was going to affect them. Were they going to pause some of the projects we developed together? Or drop them entirely? Those were the questions we had in mind at the very beginning.
Because none of us had worked entirely from home before the pandemics, we were expecting to see a dip in our colleagues’ productivity.
Managing work from home means more than just having all the tools & hardware needed. It involves getting into a working mindset, setting up a space to work in, and perhaps caring for your family at the same time.
Much to our surprise, we realised that some colleagues were now more productive - they became more focused and engaged with the work. On the flip side, we had other colleagues who could no longer work at the same pace. And few of them requested a break in the coming months to recover.
Perhaps the hardest aspect of working from home was maintaining the same level of communication, within the company as well as with our clients. Our company culture is rooted in collaboration, close interactions, team events and we value relationships and knowing the person you work with. Not being able to interact with people face-to-face urged us to adjust the way we were doing things.
We moved more towards a horizontal communication style, relying on a network of teams that “speak” to each other. We began organizing weekly meetings with our team leaders, to catch up on how they were doing and company updates. And in turn, encouraged team leaders to keep a closer communication with their teammates and also with our clients. In doing so their role in the company expanded and we could see how their sense of purpose and duty increased.
Maintaining a good communication with our clients was equally important, especially as we couldn’t travel for the foreseeable future. So to make up for the situation, our team leaders started to communicate more frequently with our clients, and that helped forge a sense of support and community.
Making our communication more engaging and bringing teams closer is something we are still working on. Some of the ideas we adopted are online team lunches and cocktails, delivering presents in person for different occasions, an internal newsletter and even online team buildings (trying activities such as hacking a system or escaping a scary room).
Being socially isolated, having to balance work and personal life from the same place and dealing with an increased amount of unknowns put a strain on everyone. And so we realised we needed extra support to navigate the situation. Starting with the fall of autumn 2020, we began organizing group therapy sessions for anyone who was going through a harder time and needed this kind of resource.
The first 3 months following the lockdown were filled with questions. We didn’t know how the situation would evolve, how our clients would be impacted, and how we will be affected. So we tried to think of several possible scenarios, build plans around them and be cautious with our spending and budgets.
While at times it felt like we were more conservative than needed, it was probably a wise approach and 2020 ended being our best year financially so far. We are also fortunate that after the initial shockwave passed, our clients picked up their activity and we got more work on our hands than before.
One of the most obvious areas we had to adjust was recruiting and onboarding new colleagues. We managed to successfully organize online interviews (and figured out it’s easier to arrange more online discussions if needed than in person) and bring new people to the team. Our team leaders were more involved in the onboarding process and that made the process easier for the new colleagues.
We moved our internship programs online - and despite fears of how our interns would be able to learn and bond, we managed to complete these programs and hire several interns at the end. We even developed an application that supports the candidate selection and testing process. With the risk of sounding like a brag, we’re very proud of making this step and not letting the situation affect our projects and plans.
In this entire process of changing and adapting, we feel that there are a number of things we got right from the beginning.
After a trying year for all of us, we can truly say that we’re looking to the future with a clearer perspective and we’ll keep to heart what we’ve learned during this time.
While we are looking forward to being able to resume travel, meeting clients and colleagues face to face, we know that some things will no longer be the same.
We need to constantly find new ways to transfer our values and culture online, and preserve a team spirit even from distance.
At the same time, we understand that there is no going back to the “old normal”. And so we are working to build a hybrid workplace, one where we can work remotely and also come into the office when we choose to.
We’ve learned the hard way what we weren’t ready for, what we did well, and what we can improve in the future but overall 2020 was a good year and we would’ve never expected that we could function so well in this totally unexpected context.