The Morning Call

There are 2 kinds of remote workers

You’ll get more done if you know which type you are

- By Jessica Stillman Inc.

Since the start of the pandemic, there have been about a million think pieces on the topic of remote work: Is it good or bad? Hurting our productivi­ty or increasing it? Hampering creativity or increasing focus?

While these are valuable questions to ask, they mask a simple truth: Remote work is different for different people. Not only do we have different home situations and career trajectori­es, we also have different personalit­ies.

And according to a recent post by Wharton professor Nancy Rothbard on the school’s Knowledge@Wharton site, our individual preference­s and quirks have a big impact on both how we handle remote work and how successful we are at it.

Rothbard divides people into two groups — integrator­s and segmentors — and says understand­ing which approach comes more naturally to you and to your team can help you all get more done, faster, with less stress.

Segmentors and an integrator­s

We all face the same essential challenge when we work from home (and even, to a lesser degree, when we work onsite): How do you divide your time, space and attention between competing demands? Segmentors and integrator­s answer that question very differentl­y.

Segmentors crave clear separation, spatially and temporally, between work and home. Working at the kitchen table with the kids drifting in and out of Zoom calls is definitely not for them. Give them a quiet garden shed and defined working hours any day.

Integrator­s gravitate toward the opposite approach. They don’t mind answering emails in between helping the kids with their schoolwork. A late-night call doesn’t faze them, but then neither does closing the laptop for a lunchtime run.

Much of the advice out there for remote work — get dressed each morning, break up the day with remote water cooler chat — applies more to one group than the other. Understand­ing which you belong to will help you sort out not only what advice will be useful for you, but also help you get more out of your team if you’re a leader.

Practical tips for your type

What sort of practical changes might understand­ing your type and the type of your team lead to? Rothbard offers loads of examples, including these actionable tips to ensure that both segmentors and integrator­s can make the most of their workdays:

Don’t pick sides. “Neither integrator­s nor segmentors are better or more committed than the other,” Rothbard reminds managers. Your life will be easier if you remember that and allow everybody to pursue the strategy that’s best for them.

Rotate the pain. Even if you respect everyone’s preference­s, you still have to work together. That likely will mean some team members compromisi­ng on how and when they work. Just make sure that you rotate the pain so it’s not always the segmentors or the integrator­s who are losing out.

Utilize rituals. Segmentors crave a bright line between work and home, but that can be hard to achieve in our current reality. Rituals can help. Even if you’re only going across the corridor to start your day, taking a walk around the garden first or setting aside a few minutes to plug back into work can help you keep things separate mentally.

Set boundaries. Integrator­s, on the other hand, often struggle to focus as they allow different demands to pull them in different directions. Thinking ahead about exactly what you will let distract you during different times of your workday can help keep your productivi­ty on track.

 ?? NARUEMON MONDEE/DREAMSTIME ??
NARUEMON MONDEE/DREAMSTIME

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