Leading Remotely: How to Integrate New Team Members into a Team Culture

Leading remotely is a critical skill for all leaders to develop


Kendall Barndollar , Wed 28 August 2024
It is no secret that the Covid-19 pandemic significantly affected norms and traditions in the workplace. The transition to work from home and eventually hybrid work schedules sincerely impacted professionals' productivity and well-being. Yet, nearly 5 years later, many companies continue to struggle with promoting work-from-home productivity and mixing new members into team culture when welcoming new hires. 

In the pre-pandemic traditional office, team culture and expectations were effectively communicated to incoming team members face-to-face in offices and meetings. However finding the best way to communicate these objectives to new hires in a virtual environment is still paramount for establishing a well-oiled, productive team.

On the other hand, after a five-year stent of the work-from-home environment, leaders are now tasked with transitioning teams back into the office while maintaining a previously established culture or, even more difficult, adjusting to better-fit team culture. Managers face further challenges leading through change in welcoming new team members throughout this transition and establishing clear expectations whilst working to integrate new hires into the team or company culture. 

When new members join teams that exclusively work from home, how can leaders effectively acclimate them to their teams' culture?  How can managers continue to promote their ideal team culture in an entirely virtual or hybrid environment? 

Adding new members to a virtual team can create feelings of isolation and exclusion so fully integrating new hires is crucial to sustain their involvement with a team. However, this is a daunting task for managers in fully virtual and even hybrid environments. Here are three steps for leaders to better integrate new hires into a remote company culture:

  1. Building the Right Culture for a Team
Building the right culture can be a daunting task but, finding an adaptable, productive team culture based on values and expectations is crucial for the optimization of every team and the success of team members. In building a team culture representative of members' values, new virtual team members will be able to observe the importance and priorities of a team, making it easier to fuse with the culture. On the contrary, if the culture is not representative of members' values and demonstrated by current team members, new hires will have a challenging time following and joining the company culture. 

 To begin building a beneficial team culture, leaders and managers should focus on psychological safety and building genuine connections across a team. Leaders can establish a beneficial team culture through a variety of ways, including structured onboarding, social events, and, cross-team collaboration. However, a highly effective manner of building a strong culture is through leaders ‘living the values’ and principles that the culture is built on. Leading by example is the best way to demonstrate expectations. Through embodying company values, managers promote team culture and provide an informal opportunity for learning in both technical and relationship-based expectations. 

2. Encouraging Communication Across Teams
Through efficient and effective communication, leaders and managers can communicate expectations, norms, and roles that aid in building a productive team culture. Especially in the work-from-home environment, encouraging open communication is paramount to integrating new hires. Allowing open streams of communication that encourage asking questions and getting to know others will certainly demonstrate and welcome new team members. Specifically, leaders should promote collaboration and teamwork in the beginning of the role before focusing on more autonomous aspects of a new-hires responsibilities. Through open communication, productivity will skyrocket via efficient problem-solving and team members collaborating and participating in events with each other. Through open communication, new hires can observe team dynamics and norms that will help them better join the team or firm culture. 

3. Promoting Mentorship Across Levels
Promoting mentorship is a necessary tool for developing strong leaders and integrating team culture throughout different levels of the workplace. Mentorship can be implemented in professional atmospheres through a variety of ways but essentially should aid in the personal and professional development of younger generations from those with more experience in the industry. To establish a mentorship program in an office, leaders should focus on building connections and encouraging relationships throughout different levels. Additionally, managers should consider a formal mentorship program in which senior employees are paired with new hires or more junior employees to establish connections and provide guidance throughout their careers. Mentorship is a necessary tool aiding in the continuation of team culture across generations and organizational hierarchies. 

Managers and leaders seeking mentorship or guidance should consider joining an executive mastermind group to gain insights from other high-level professionals across industries. Executive mastermind groups create the opportunity for leaders across fields to learn from each other's experiences and expertise. Mentorship is crucial for development across all levels, not just for new hires or college recruits, and establishing strong mentor relations will serve individuals throughout their lifetime. 

4. Leveraging Technology in a Creative Way
Using technology in creative ways to encourage socialization is a pivotal tool in welcoming new hires into a team. Holding virtual events primarily focused on the social development and connection of a team is a primary way of integrating new hires. These meetings are an opportunity for everyone to relax and form genuine connections with their colleagues. In traditional in-person teams, professionals will take it upon themselves to personally connect with their colleagues in the lunch room or throughout the office whereas in a virtual environment, individuals do not necessarily take the initiative to socialize unless organized by leadership.

Leading through change is a critical aspect of management but certainly a very challenging aspect, especially in such significant changes such as work-from-home to in-office shifts. As always, leaders need to stay positive through times of change and understand that large transitions may take time and patience. Great leaders adapt to change and approach their teams with empathy and support through challenging adjustments. To best lead teams through change, managers should focus on transparency and building trusting relationships with their direct reports. More than anything, the best leaders serve as advocates for their teams, working to find the perfect medium of productivity and balance in the workplace that supports individuals in the office and their well-being outside of the office simultaneously.