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Managing It All

Managing It All

Managing freelancers can be challenging, but with the right approach, it can also be highly effective. Traditional management tools like virtual training materials, regular communication, and clear assignments with realistic deadlines help build trust and foster productivity. Encourage personal growth by turning employee weaknesses into strengths and creating a supportive, flexible work environment. Ultimately, embrace the freedom of the digital space, making your virtual workplace unique and engaging.

Managing employees from your own office can prove to be challenging at times. When you are dealing with out-of-office-freelancers things can become even more difficult. Here are some ideas for using freelancers-as-employees to get your business off the ground.

Traditional Management Methods Still Work

You can set up training videos, corporate seminars, workbooks and manuals for your virtual business just as easily, if not more easily than you can in physical space. If you’ve spent a lot of time iterating and improving your training resources, they’ll effectively bring new hires and shifting employees into the fold quickly and easily.

Virtual training materials also drastically decrease production costs since everything is digital, so you can spend more time creating highly-valuable training material and pay for it with the savings you’re earning from not printing and publishing it all.

Communication is Key: Be Forward and Be Open

In a virtual work environment, your employees won’t have your constant supervision—no eyes peeking over their shoulders, no popping into a cubicle to see how things are going. You can still keep tabs on where your employees are in their workday, though, by adapting those supervision checks to your virtual space.

Use your communication outlets effectively and often, and message or email your employees regularly for a “mutual update,” where you’re not only checking in on what they’re up to, but you’re initiating an opportunity for them to get your attention and bring you up to speed on their own thoughts and concerns.

Communication is a two-way street, so keep your communication lines open.

Inspiring Trust Through Assignments and Mini-Deadlines

Happy employees are employees that feel like their responsibilities matter, and you can make every assignment count by simply trusting them with it rather than beating them over the head with constant checks and updates. You might be surprised at how differently your employees will interpret your assignments when you say “do this” as opposed to “I need this from you.”

Simple commands via text or email can make employees think you’re upset with them. Identifying your needs and implicitly trusting them to meet them makes your employees feel like they have your complete trust. That sense of trust is improved if you give a realistic, tangible deadline to the assignment to boot.

Setting your goalpost or deadline 24 or 48 hours in advance gives your employees the freedom to get it done on their own terms, whether it’s at 2pm or 2am.

Learn Your Employees’ Weaknesses, Help Them Turn Those Into Strengths

If you have a relatively small but growing base of employees, you can encourage personal growth as a part of growing your business by helping them learn how to do new things and reach outside their comfort zones. Give your employees an opportunity to identify their weaknesses and strengths, then let them build experience in those weak areas through their work for you.

Don’t just take advantage of what they’re already good at: give them an opportunity to impress you, and themselves as well. This is another great trust-building exercise that creates a sense of co-ownership of new achievements and successes between you and your employees. This is hard to scale to a large number of employees, but if you’re only dealing with a few individuals, you can create a tight-knit community within your virtual workplace this way.

Ultimately, your goals for building trust in a virtual workplace shouldn’t be to simply emulate physical workplace procedures and techniques. You should identify the strengths and weaknesses within your company at the individual and the team level.

Find interesting, unorthodox ways to address those with the online services and products you use for your everyday operations. Don’t ever hesitate to make your virtual workspace a personal space: instead of being stuffy and overly professional, be casual, easy to talk to, and understanding of others.

The Internet is a wild place, especially if it’s where you work. Don’t be afraid to embrace that: be unique, try new things, and let yourself and your employees enjoy the freedoms of working in a digital environment.

So what do you think? Give me your comments and feedback below. And, oh, by the way, don't forget to tell a friend if you like what you see! xo