At this COVID-19 pandemic period, a lot of companies have been letting the employees working from home. Some of them will even let their employees work from home a little longer till the end of year, like Google and Facebook announced earlier this month.
And during this timing, business is still running, recruiting is still going on, and a lot of companies have came to ask me, how to onboard your new employee when we are all working remotely?
To do that, you must think through your process and orchestrate it with care.
Here are some tactics to help your remote onboarding process go smoothly:
1.Pre-boarding
During this time of uncertainty, the new member won’t have the luxury of getting up to speed and picking up context over coffee or lunch with their new peers and team. They need to digest information now, so plan your pre-boarding calls with them to do as much methodical knowledge transfer as you can.
Since, we have been working remotely for a while, many meetings have been held on video or calls, which it would be good to recorded some of the sessions and provide to your new employee if it’s pessary for them to review the past meetings. It will help them get up to speed about key topics as well as gain a sense of culture and language.
2.Thoughtfully orchestrate the first week
Since everything is remote now, the onboarding with the new employee would also turn a little different. Simply have to be more thoughtful about scheduling the right meetings and finding ways to start integrating your new hire formally and informally.
3.Embed social time
It’s always a nice gesture to take the new employee out for lunch, to listen to them share more about themselves. But since it’s hard to do that now, send them a lunch delivery, and do the lunch remotely with some colleagues. And it doesn’t have to be lunch, a coffee and dessert or happy hour drink would be good too.
4.Informal time
When we have questions, it’s always easier to just drop by peers offices to ask a quick question, if we are working in the office. But since a lot of us are working remotely right now, often time it seems we need to schedule formal meetings to reach out.
Find structured time for informal check-ins. You might want to set up a quick call with your new employee once or twice per week just to discuss what has come up, and how you can help them with that. Finding a onboarding buddy would also a good way for the new employee, so they have someone to go to with quick questions.
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Izza Lin
Recruiting Master, AppWoks
AppWorks is now accepting applications for AppWorks Accelerator #21. Be sure to apply before the final deadline of July 1st, 2020 >>> https://bit.ly/2T6m0vC
Article credit: https://bit.ly/2LAKRTT
Photo credit: unsplash
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[Is There Such a Thing As Founder Syndrome?: Testing a New Idea for Entrepreneurship]
As a lover of language, I often will obsess and delight in a phrase or a word that I think offers unique insight into humanity or experience.
Language can sometimes open up doors into understanding, not simply because a definition is precise, or taken literally. Used in an inventive way, you can see the world differently and perhaps understand something for its unique traits.
I find this to be the case with understanding and learning about founders. Founders tend to break the mold, as we say, but we tend to see them -- I say "we" meaning the general VC and startups ecosystem -- through a really traditional business lens, contrary to how unique they are.
In fact, I am not so sure you can see a founder's traits through a business lens, because what founders do is much different than simply running a business. I think you have to creatively see them in a new way.
This idea struck me deeply while I was in Japan, where I was relaxing with a memoir about the late neurologist Dr. Oliver Sacks, while my colleagues skied and snowboarded on a cloud-covered mountain in the snow. Sacks died in 2015, but spent a career curing neurological diseases by taking a unique approach.
I came across the word "syndrome."
It has a nice ring to it, but first, the context.
First of all, Sacks is famous for a medical experiment that "unlocked" patients who were frozen in a kind of living coma situation. You may have seen this in a movie called "Awakenings."
These patients would be frozen in a state of hibernation, awake, but not able to move. Sacks came up with the idea of dosing them with a chemical called L-DOPA, and the results were extraordinary. Almost overnight, these "vegetables," as he empathetically described him in his memoir, awakened. In one case, Sacks took a red ball he kept in his pocket and threw it at a seemingly unmovable patient, who immediately snapped to and caught the ball, threw it back, and then resumed his catatonic state.
Sacks was also something of an eccentric, who was notorious for doing things that probably a normal sane person would never do.
For example, as a medical intern in California, he once drank a vial of blood, washing it down with a glass of milk, simply because he felt compelled to understand what it tasted like. A lover of motorcycles, he quite recklessly "stepped off," as he put it, his bike traveling at 80mph, just to see what would happen. What happened? A few bruises and a torn leather jacket and pants. But nothing horrible.
In certain circles, he is still considered to be notorious and misunderstood. But his view of diagnoses centered on finding the "syndrome," and treating the syndrome as a kind of identity.
And here is our word of the day!
I am not suggesting that founders are sick people. I am saying that they are different, because they present a type of syndrome that other humans do not possess.
Syndrome, in the Greek etymology, means "a running together."
Often we look at disease as this kind of failure of the system. Something has invaded. Something has harmed the corpus of the human. But Sacks looked at syndrome issues quite literally as a grouping of things that made the patient unique.
Instead of instantly diagnosing and medicating neurological patients, he would sit and talk to them for hours, trying to understand the unique syndrome of their identity.
In one instance, he talked for four hours to a raving manic dementia patient, later concluding that there was something "inherently human about that identity in there."
Can the same be done with founders? Do they present a syndrome of entrepreneurship?
What are the characteristics of this founder syndrome?
I won't spend this whole post describing my idea, but I think a central and core attribute of a Founder Syndrome is that the discomfort that founders experience with reality is also the impetus and the catalyst that moves them to "solve" reality with their own attributes.
This syndrome manifests itself in an overarching belief that they can change the world. They are somewhat delusional and even maniacal in their approach to reality solutions. The world doesn't work for them, and rather than mire themselves in depression and disappointment in it, their syndrome rather creatively enables them to, in an expansive way, impact the lives of other people, and create things that shift reality.
Steve Jobs once said that you can only understand your journey by looking backwards, and connecting the dots after you have completed them. This is quite symptomatic of a founder syndrome.
There are no dots to connect, until you make them. A consciousness that sees the world for what it can be can seem to some like crazy talk. Just look at Elon Musk. For how long has he heard that his ideas are stupid, crazy, not worth the paper they are printed on?
Or Nikola Tesla, who died in poverty, not being believed?
Or Marie Curie, who obsessively hunted down invisible radioactivity, which killed her, but without whom we would not be able to treat cancer, or plausibly have nuclear energy?
All of these people have something of the Founder Syndrome, an ability to see what is not seen by others, and to manifest it into reality, creating incredulity until the new reality is undeniable.
Are you suffering from a syndrome, friend? If you would like to be part of our accelerator and invent what has not existed before, and if you would like to be around other unique people like you, track our application process at https://appworks.tw/accelerator
Our next cohort will start in the summer.
We would be glad to take your application when they launch later in the year. We will be accepting founders working in AI and Blockchain.
Doug Crets
Communications Master, AppWorks
Photo by Franck V. on Unsplash
unsplash running 在 每天為你讀一首詩 Facebook 的精選貼文
月光 ◎莎拉.蒂斯黛爾;無格譯
當我年老,就不再受傷
月光在奔騰的浪上燃燒
不再如銀蛇般螫傷我了;
時光將使我憂傷與冷
快樂之心破碎。
心之所求超出生命所能給予的
領悟這件事,就領悟了所有
一褶波浪破碎在華美的一褶上
美 是瞬息即逝的
當我年老,就不再為此受傷
--
(原文)
Moonlight /Sara Teasdale
It will not hurt me when I am old,
A running tide where moonlight burned
Will not sting me like silver snakes;
The years will make me sad and cold,
It is the happy heart that breaks.
The heart asks more than life can give,
When that is learned, then all is learned;
The waves break fold on jewelled fold,
But beauty itself is fugitive,
It will not hurt me when I am old.
--
◎作者簡介
莎拉.蒂斯黛爾(Sara Teasdale, 1884-1933),美國近代抒情詩人,出生於美國密蘇里州聖路易斯,幼年時期身體孱弱,十歲時才開始上學,先後進入洛克伍德夫人學校(Mrs. Lockwood's School)和瑪麗學院(Mary Institute)就讀,1899年轉入Hosmer Hall女子學院,1903年畢業。其詩集《戀歌》(Love Songs, 1917)於1918年獲得普立茲獎;主辦單位現在將蒂斯黛爾列為最早的普立茲詩歌獎(1922年設立)得主。
其著作等身,以簡練明晰的風格、古典高雅的形式和浪漫多情的主題著稱於世,作品語言貼近常民口語,同時富有精心設計的音樂性。1933年疑似服用過量安眠藥自殺身亡。
--
◎小編無格賞析
美,是許多人一心所嚮,更常是少男少女、詩人所追求的事物。然而其如浪易破,如快樂易碎,此種追求伴隨著想抓住稍縱即逝的焦慮,以及被螫傷的痛苦。對比偌珍貴瞬息,憂傷的時光卻是常態,無常也是常態。詩人追求的心像是月光燃燒在浪上的熱情、焦灼、脆弱,然而他複沓的說,「當我年老就不再為此受傷」,說服讀者,也嘗試說服自己,或許在時間的歷練之後會帶來成長,終於可以瞭解:一己所求是不可多得的。這是對自己的期許,它的反面,便是年輕心靈所要過的難關。
本詩收錄於詩集《火焰與影子》(Flame and Shadow, 1920)。Sara的詩圍繞在愛與悲傷的主題上,身受憂鬱情緒、破碎婚姻所苦的他,透露出對人生根本的悲觀與無奈。然而在作品之中,他雖然寫下迷惘,也試圖給予讀者力量:他總是溫柔的說,縱然如此,答案就在那裡。
Sara的生命沒能經歷年老,然而我認為,他的心靈是同時有青春與蒼老的。他既耽於瞬息的追求、喜愛人們靈魂純真的部分,亦嘆息生命短暫,但生命總是會留下些什麼。
--
美術設計:于玄
攝影來源:Unsplash
#每天為你讀一首詩 #火焰與影子 #Sara #少女詩 #抒情
https://cendalirit.blogspot.com/2019/07/blog-post_21.html
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