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How to integrate telecommuters in an agile process?

How do you manage web developers remotely?

Agile development in a distributed team

I've recently taken on the position of software architect/lead developer for a .NET web app for a company that has three technical staff, all of whom are telecommuters:

  1. The software architect/lead developer (me) (GMT+2);
  2. The CTO/web security expert whom I report to, and has given me pretty much carte blanche to do what I want (GMT-5); and
  3. A talented web developer who knows a bit of .NET programming (GMT-5).

I'm anticipating that there will be some difficulties, especially with regard to the fact that we're not physically in each other's presence, and that I'm separated from the rest of the team by 7 hours.

If you've been in this kind of position before, and you'd care to share some of your experience by way of warnings, recommendations, tips & tricks or any other general kibitzes, I would appreciate it!

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Why is the question tagged language-agnostic? – ya23 Mar 26 at 14:43
This question is about software development in a distributed team. I think closing is done way too strict on SO which is a pity. – divo Mar 26 at 15:06
Vote for close as exact duplicate - See answer below stackoverflow.com/questions/686052/… – Adam Davis Mar 26 at 15:45
What the other questions are missing is tips for how to deal with a 7-hour time zone difference. Sorry you decided to close it; I found these answers very beneficial. – Shaul Mar 26 at 18:05

closed as exact duplicate by Neil Butterworth, Robert S., Rich B, Adam Davis, TheTXI Mar 26 at 15:47

5 Answers

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Your main problems will be getting to know your team members, and maintaining unambiguous, clear communication with them.

Spend a week working together in the same physical location so that you can establish rapport between yourself and the team, go out for dinner and drinks (if that's your thing) a couple of times.

This will reap huge dividends over time when you're faced with interpreting an email or IM later on that you think might be angry, or might be sarcastic, or might indicate that someone isn't pulling their weight.

Adjusting your working day by a couple of hours to maximise your overlap might be worth while as well.

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+1 for spending at least a week working together – Rick Hochstetler Mar 26 at 14:52
Yup, that's right - I already spent 10 days there getting to know everyone and wining and dining with them... :) – Shaul Mar 26 at 15:10
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7 hours difference is tough but I'd still try to get agreement from everyone that they will be working during at least the same 2 hour stretch everyday. More is better, but I think 2 hours is good enough.

Definitely utilize something in addition to email where you can all participate in an ongoing discussions.

I found one of the toughest things with a distributed team is making those little course corrections that are so important and so easy when the person is in the next cube. Anyway to foster communication is a good thing. Even trivial stuff, as long as it's not too often, is critical because it all goes towards building rapport.

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If you are separated from them by seven hours, roll your schedule. Live/work on their time. It will be a minor pain at first, but you'll get used to it and your ability to manage the team will benefit enormously. You'll also, perhaps surprisingly, see a new side of your community as well.

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Nice idea, but that would severely impact on my home/family life (I have one!) But I have rolled my hours a little later so I can overlap with them more. – Shaul Mar 26 at 15:12
It might not be as you might think (e.g., you might wind up sleeping while your kids are at school and your wife is at work, and working while their asleep. It depends a lot on the details of your situation, but I've found it quite doable. – MarkusQ Mar 26 at 15:33
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I also heard thoughts here why we don't work with far regions. It will take at least double-time to resolve the problem.

If you have a dev near you, you ask him to do something in the morning and can have it till the end of the day. In you situation you ask a dev to do something, whenever you go home he starts the work and first reads you request, then he does it till his evening and you see it in the next morning. So there will be no real communication like in team work. It's like downloading big files. if you have DSL, you can download it right now, if you use a dial-up you'll have to schedule it to work at night.

If you want real-time communication, one of you will have to sacrifice his private time. One of you will feel fresh and energized, the other one will already be snoring on the keyboard.

So, two key problems are: slowliness (time loss) and bad/no communication.

There might also be cultural differencies but that's another story.

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