Expona
Context-trained AI agent delivering noise-free, cost-efficient conversational intelligence
The greatest challenge of a remote team is facilitating connections and building culture. Without culture and deep connections, teams are less efficient during good times and fall apart during tough times.
You miss those magical moments at the water cooler, those impromptu late-night struggles over a tough problem, or the casual chats at the lunch table. Plus, if you’re like me, you’re tired of spending so much time on Meet and Teams. You’re hesitant to add another forced 1-1 or team event.
We went fully remote due to Covid. Before that, we had a 10am daily standup in each of our offices. Like you, we were thrust into a remote setting during a chaotic time with unprecedented uncertainty. We continued this standup practice but switched to a “global” standup on Google Meet with all our US team members. It was a decent way to stay connected. Still, you can imagine the limitations of having 40+ team members on a Google Meet at once, and your team might be even larger.
During this bizarre time, one of our teammates (if I recall correctly, Michael Morrissey) came up with the brilliant idea of the “pod standup”.
We would continue our global standups on Mondays and Fridays, but for the rest of the week, we would break out into small “pods”. These pods would consist of 5-6 randomly assigned teammates. Each week, you would be grouped with four different teammates, some you may have met, and some you may not have.
These pod standups would last ~10 minutes and follow a simple agenda:
The icebreaker was a key way for us to get to know our colleagues. These prompts could be anything personal or professional.
We have had hundreds of prompts over the past 3.5 years of running these pod standups. A major shoutout to Jess Ramos and then Méon Graham for keeping these prompts fresh. Some of my favorites from last year were:
The magic of these pod standups is that we:
These standups are a small, but mighty tool to increase connections in a remote setting.