Remote workers are WAY more productive than in-office employees.
Here's why:
- Remote means fewer distractions (no random shoulder taps, noisy open-office interruptions, or unproductive commuting hours)
- Deep work thrives: uninterrupted blocks allow for substantial meaningful output (ever tried coding, designing, or planning strategy in continuous 60-90 minute chunks?)
- Autonomy drives motivation: Remote workers own their schedules—and people inherently thrive when they control their workflow.
But here's what's required to actually realize productivity gains:
1. Shift your mindset: measure outputs, not inputs (results are everything; “online” hours aren't).
2. Build clear async documentation: no scattered Slack messages—create dedicated, thoughtful documentation. Plus, it scales.
3. Create intentional connection: notice I didn't say zero meetings—just fewer, agenda-driven, camera-on video calls, replacing empty chatter.
4. Trust first: lead with trust, resist micromanaging, and watch productivity flourish.
Most objections to remote work stem from execution done wrong—not the model itself.
TAKEAWAY
Remote workers are not just slightly more productive—they are WAY more productive.
But to access this advantage, companies must fully adopt remote-first strategies and get rid of outdated office-centric habits.
Don't blame remote work if your execution is flawed.
Set up your teams well—and watch productivity soar.
What about you? Are you more productive in remote or in office?
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👋 Don't know me? I'm J.Y! I've been building things and making money online since 2017, and I share my entrepreneurial journey here on LinkedIn.