How We Ran Our Best Virtual Offsite With 110 People

How We Ran Our Best Virtual Offsite With 110 People

Punta Mita. Key Largo. Lake Tahoe. These are a few of the places our company has been fortunate to call home — at least for a week. Every six months, our remote team travels to a beautiful destination to reflect on our achievements, plan for the future, and enjoy spending time together. But the pandemic presented a seemingly insurmountable problem. How could we facilitate team connections when none of us could safely meet face to face for well over a year?

Team connection is essential, but it becomes much more challenging to find ways to be together when everyone must be apart.

Aha!s are goal-first and high-performing. We are privileged to be able to help more than 5,000 companies create strategic plans and deliver breakthrough products. But in order for our team members to continue to achieve their best, each person needs to deeply understand company strategy and their role in achieving it. And we all need to be able to challenge each other's ideas and push for exceptional results.

So for the June 2020 onsite, we focused on what we thought were the essentials — strategy presentations, functional team meetings, and volunteer activities. But this streamlined approach did not capture the energy of a regular onsite. Folks told us they missed the feeling of closeness and camaraderie. The feedback was consistent. "I think direction is clear for the upcoming six months and the look back at the past six months was good," shared Bill Chaney, who is one of our engineering leads. "But I missed spending time with people and getting to know new hires."

Positive relationships are part of what enables us to do great work every day — but bonding does not happen without purposeful attention.

This is why we changed our approach for our December 2020 offsite. Our goal was to create space for people to forge meaningful connections in a compressed time frame. Above all, we wanted to ensure that the team felt committed to our company, connected to each other, and valued as a whole.

To accomplish this, we thought deeply about how to recreate the magic of our time together in person. We chose the theme "100 percent Aha!" — completely united despite being apart. Our People Success team put enormous effort and thought into making the agenda impactful. The week was full of learning, bonding, and fun. And our team experienced a renewed sense of purpose and excitement about our work.

Here is how we did it and your company can too:

Be intentional

Goals help you focus on what matters most. We set bonding between individuals, connection to the broader company, and service to others as our key pillars. This helped us decide which onsite traditions to continue — such as our rookie reception, volunteering, and book club discussion — and how to make them a fulfilling experience virtually.

Customer Success Specialist Rommy Shehadeh donates supplies to a food pantry in Orlando, Florida.

Customer Success Specialist Rommy Shehadeh donates supplies to a food pantry in Orlando, Florida.

Include everyone

It takes time and mental energy to get to know someone. But our team of more than 110 people works across nine time zones, from Hawaii to New Zealand. So we canceled standing internal meetings and built a schedule that allowed each person to participate in a few all-company sessions — no matter their location. We also chose activity options to appeal to a wide range of interests, from morning workouts and painting classes to chocolate and cheese tastings.

Principal software engineer Jeremy Wells took part in a group painting class.

Principal software engineer Jeremy Wells took part in a group painting class.

Create new memories

A strong culture relies on shared experiences. We wanted to give people the opportunity to form fresh memories that would sustain them over the next six months. (This is especially important for recent hires, most of whom have yet to meet their teammates in person.) So we introduced novel events such as a company-wide competition and evening magic shows. These activities gave us a shared vocabulary and made our time together that much more memorable.

A group of Aha! detectives celebrate cracking the case as part of a virtual game.

A group of Aha! detectives celebrate cracking the case as part of a virtual game.

Cultivate spontaneity

One of the most special aspects of an onsite is random encounters — running into someone in the hall or sitting with someone new at lunch. This feeling of spontaneity was one of the most difficult things to recreate virtually. But we managed to replicate it by hosting a series of organic, drop-in discussions. Folks could chat freely and ask questions about the different presentations they had just seen. We also assembled random coffee/tea groups so teammates could talk with people they might not otherwise interact with.

A group of Aha!s share lively conversation as part of a "random" coffee/tea meetup.

A group of Aha!s share lively conversation as part of a "random" coffee/tea meetup.

Share the experience

How do you feel together while apart? Seeing is believing. We encouraged everyone to show their faces on camera during meetings, and people shared group screenshots and selfies of themselves participating in the various activities. We closed the offsite with a slideshow of images and videos to celebrate our time together throughout the week.

The closing presentation gave us the chance to reflect on our time together.

The closing presentation gave us the chance to reflect on our time together.

We all learned that it is possible to create a virtual experience that people will love and remember for years to come.

When it was over, we sent out a lovability survey to see what people thought. The team scored the week 9.31 out of 10. And some of the comments were quite touching. "So many lovely memories. It was great to have a change of pace from regular work and I feel energized in the same way I do after onsites," said Claire George, who leads our product marketing team. "It was a perfect way to end the year together."

The relationships you share with your coworkers is significant. You likely spend more time with them each day than anyone else. When everyone is aligned around a shared goal and a plan for how to get there, you can all accomplish your best work. And building (and deepening) connections with teammates makes work joyful too.

How do you foster connection when you are apart from teammates?

About Brian and Aha!

Brian de Haaff seeks business and wilderness adventure. He is the co-founder and CEO of Aha! — the world’s #1 roadmap software and one of the fastest-growing companies in the U.S. He is also the author of the bestseller Lovability. Brian writes and speaks about product and company growth and the adventure of living a meaningful life.

Aha! is the world's #1 roadmap software. We help more than 5,000 companies and 400,000 users create strategic plans. The company was founded in 2013 by Silicon Valley veterans and product management experts Brian de Haaff and Dr. Chris Waters. Aha! is one of the fastest-growing software companies in the U.S. The company is self-funded and profitable, with an entirely remote team. Learn more at www.aha.io.

Melissa Dinwiddie

Empower your team to innovate on demand. I help tech leaders Create the Impossible? through playful, interactive keynotes, workshops, & retreats. Unlock breakthrough creativity today ??

4 年

Thanks for sharing this case study!

回复
Maralee S.

Inspirational Health and Safety Leader at Sartain Safety, LLC

4 年

Love this

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Brian de Haaff的更多文章

  • Do you have something to say?

    Do you have something to say?

    Dear adventurer, About one-third of the people in a meeting will never say a word. At least, that seems to be the…

    8 条评论
  • The real reason forcing people back to the office

    The real reason forcing people back to the office

    Dear adventurer, New year, new terms in the corporate lexicon. There is "hushed hybrid," which is when folks secretly…

    17 条评论
  • Are you really too busy for me?

    Are you really too busy for me?

    Dear adventurer, The feeling is somewhere between guilt and anxiety. I think most of us have experienced it, maybe even…

    11 条评论
  • PMs should stop worrying what others think

    PMs should stop worrying what others think

    Dear adventurer, I once had a boss who yelled at me for doing what she asked. Yes, you read that right.

    12 条评论
  • $4 million on trash strategy

    $4 million on trash strategy

    Dear adventurer, A strategy for trash? Or maybe a trash strategy. I recently read an article about how New York City…

    16 条评论
  • Finally, The Minimum Tolerable Process

    Finally, The Minimum Tolerable Process

    Dear adventurer, "Would you eat a can of cat food?" The question is Aha! lore at this point. I first brought this up in…

    2 条评论
  • How many meetings a day can a PM tolerate?

    How many meetings a day can a PM tolerate?

    Dear adventurer, Remember when "going agile" was the buzzy phrase on every exec's lips? When I first started writing on…

    9 条评论
  • The VP kept asking this

    The VP kept asking this

    Dear adventurer, How many questions do you get asked each day? In my experience, most questions come in a few…

    6 条评论
  • No more remote work?

    No more remote work?

    Dear adventurer, When did you first start working remotely? I ask because there is a high likelihood that you spent at…

    31 条评论
  • Do you want to know how Aha! works?

    Do you want to know how Aha! works?

    Dear adventurer, I have been writing the same thing for years. Let me explain.

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了