
The Remote Show
89 episodes — Page 1 of 2
Ep 89Dani Grant, CEO at Jam
Dani's Links:JamLinkedInX fka Twitter
Ep 88Mark Cruth, Modern Work Coach at Atlassian
Marks links:Personal SiteAtlassian Company SiteAtlassian PlaybookAtlassian University
Ep 87Jason Goldlist - CEO and Co-founder, Venue.live
Jason's Links:Marshall McLuhanVenue.liveLinkedInTwitterTech TO
Ep 86Amy Lynch - Founder, Mixing Babies and Business
Amy's Links:LinkedInMixing Babies And BusinessPodcastPersonal Site
Ep 85Sheila Repeta - SVP of People, TeamSnap
Sheila's links:TeamSnapLinkedInRadical Candor from Kim Scott
Ep 84Christelle Rohaut - CEO, Codi
Christelle's links:LinkedInTwitterCodi Company Website
Ep 83Shelby Wolpa - Founder, Shelby Wolpa Consulting
Shelby's links:WebsiteLinkedIn
Ep 82Valentina Thörner - Empress of Remote at Klaus
Valentina's Links:LinkTreeSubstackLinkedInWebsite Transcript:Valentina Thörner - Empress of Remote at Klaus[00:00:00]Tyler Sellhorn: Hello everyone. My name is Tyler Sellhorn, and welcome to another episode of The Remote Show where we discuss everything to do with remote work with the people who know it best. Thanks so much for listening. The Remote Show is brought to you by WeWork, remotely the largest community of remote workers in the world.With over 220,000 unique users per month, WeWork remotely is the most effective way to hire. Today we are blessed to be learning out loud with Valentina Turner. Valentina is the empress of remote at Klaus as a consultant for remote leader. Supporting companies that want to support their middle managers to be the best leaders they can be.Valentina assists companies with their remote policy so that their policies actually reflect reality. Tell us, Valentina, what problems are you trying to solve as the empress of remote?Valentina Thörner: Well, thanks for having me. So the biggest problem that I see is the inco in incoherence between what companies say that is remote and what they actually live as their remote reality. Anyone who's searching for [00:01:00] a job nowadays and filters for remote, you get a lot of results. Everybody's saying they're doing remote and they're about as specific about this.When the restaurant tells you we offer food, I mean, I would hope that you offer food as a restaurant, but I would also like to know whether you are more into Asian food or Mexican food, or vegetarian or et cetera. And with remote, it's the same. There are so many nuances to it, and nobody talks about what they offer in terms of.Tyler Sellhorn: Okay. You're really, I I love the forcefulness with which you're drawing out that dichotomy. This is a very, very like the, the incoherence the spread between what we say and what we do. Right? This is about trust building, right? Is to say, like, when you say remote, what is it that you mean?So tell, tell us when, when you say remote Valentina, what do.Valentina Thörner: That's the thing. I don't think there is one definition for remote because it can, the only definition [00:02:00] for remote that really like that applies to everybody is you are not working from the office with everybody else that's remote. That may mean that you're working from home. It may mean that you are working from a co-working or from the local library, or from the cafe or from somewhere that is not the office.And the thing is not every company can allow or wants to allow all of these options for. All of their roles. So for example, if you are, the security officer or something, you may not be allowed to work from a public cafe because you might have too much access to sensitive information. In that case, it actually makes sense to include that into the policy that you have specific rules for specific people.Some people really want you, like some companies want to have you in a room where you can close the door because they work with, I don't know, health data or something, and they're really like unsure how they can safeguard their own customers data. The thing is, that is a valid reason. , but you need to [00:03:00] communicate that reason because otherwise it just looks like you are closing people into their living rooms, which is like not, probably not what you're trying to do.So this whole, we have reasons for what we do, or we think we have reasons for what we do. But we don't really know how to talk about it, and actually no one is responsible for it. So we don't really know who's going to make those decisions. And actually those are a lot of decisions to make. So we'll just table it for next week and tell HR to put remote into the job offer, and then we'll figure it out and it never gets figured out.Tyler Sellhorn: Okay. This is one that I'm gonna take away with me. Valentina. We're going to make rules for roles. Right? And, and obviously like you're encouraging us to be specific, you're encouraging us to get some specificity to what we mean when we say remote. And it, and you're just, like you said, there's isn't just one version, there's not one definition.And in fact, there's not even one definition for, for every role at a particular company. [00:04:00] It'sValentina Thörner: you kind of, you need to balance. You need to balance your employee's needs and wants. Who may want to have flexibility to travel or to work anywhere or to get inspiration from whether they are with your customer's needs. Whose data is needs to be secure and who that, that they need to be able to trust you.That not anyone who walks by a Starbucks can just glance on a monitor and see their entire health history. Like this is a thing.Tyler Sellhorn: Yes, yes. I mean, it's not necessarily gonna be a one size fits all for every role. It's not gonna be a one size fits all for, for every company, just to say remote and, and put it on the JD and, and that, that not have any specifi
Ep 81Matt Wilson, co-founder and co-CEO at Omnipresent
Matt's links:WebsiteTwitterLinkedIn
Ep 80Tsedal Neeley, Author of Remote Work Revolution, Naylor Fitzhugh Professor of Business Administration Harvard Business School
Tsedal's links:WebsiteRemote Work Revolution bookDigital Mindset bookTwitterLinkedInYouTubeInstagram
Ep 79Jennnifer Dennard, Founder at Range
Jennifer's links:LinkedInMediumCompany Website
Ep 78Jordan Carroll, The Remote Job Coach
Jordan's links:WebsiteRemote For Life bookLinkedInYouTubeFacebook
Ep 77Kelsey Bishop, Founder at Candor
Kelsey's Links:LinkedInTwitterCandor profileCandor websiteCandor Raises $5M To Build The Next Generation, Authentic Professional Social Network
Ep 76Michael Mizrahi, Head of Operations at Levels
Michael's Links:LinkedInTwitterWebsiteLevels Company WebsiteLevels Culture handbookMemo: Meetings and MemosMemo: Transparency strategy / building in publicMedium: Deep dive into remote onboardingMedium: How to intentionally structure company communicationsLevels Public Memo database
Ep 75Rowena Hennigan, Founder at RoRemote
Rowena's links:LinkedInCheck out Rowena's new LinkedIn course: Becoming a Digital NomadTwitterWebsite
Ep 74Matt Drozdzynski, Founder at Pilot
Matt's links:LinkedInTwitterCompany
Ep 73Maryellen Stockton, Co-founder at Work Well Wherever
Maryellen's links:LinkedInWork Well Wherever
Ep 72Len Markidan, CMO at Podia
Len's links:LinkedInTwitterPersonalPodia
Ep 71Kuty Shalev, CEO at Clevertech
Kuty's links:LinkedInTwitterClevertech website
Ep 70Tariq Rauf, Founder & CEO at Qatalog
Tariq's Links:TwitterLinkedInQatalogPersonal
Ep 69Kaleem Clarkson, COO at blendme, inc.
Kaleem's links:Remotely We Are One podcastLinkedInTwitterInstagramWebsiteCompany Website
Ep 68Jeff Chow, Chief Product Officer of InVision
EJeff Chow's links:InVision BlogLinkedInTwitter
Ep 67Nola Simon, CEO of Nola Simon Advisory
"The Remote Show" is brought to you by WeWorkRemotely.comNola Simon's Links:LinkedInTwitter
Ep 66Harris Kenny, Founder of Intro
EHarris Kenny, Founder at Intro links:LinkedInTwitterWebsiteIntro Company Website
Ep 65Tammy Bjelland, Founder and CEO of Workplaceless
Tammy's links:LinkedInTwitterWebsiteWorkplaceless Blog
Ep 64Chris Cerra, Founder at RemoteBase
Chris's links:LinkedInTwitterWebsite
Ep 63Dallas Henry, Senior Manager at Google, Army Officer and Founder of Henry Engagements
Dallas' links:LinkedInWebsite
Ep 62Kyle Havlicek-McClenahan, Co-Founder & CEO at Scales
Kyle's links:LinkedInTwitterCompany Website
Ep 61Nicole Caba, Founder & CEO at Avvinue
Nicole's Links:LinkedInTwitterAvvinue Company Website
Ep 60Arkadiy Baltser, Founder and CEO at Plutoview
Arkadiy's links:LinkedInProduct HuntCompany Website
Ep 59Darcy Boles, Director of Culture & Innovation at TaxJar, a Stripe company
Darcy's links:LinkedInTwitterTaxJar a Stripe Company websiteReferenced materials:Chip ConleyEudaimonic wellbeing
Ep 58Job van der Voort, Founder and CEO at Remote and Darren Murph, Head of Remote at GitLab
Job's links:LinkedInTwitterWebsiteRemote Company WebsiteAbout Page for Job on Remote dot comDarren's links:LinkedInTwitterWebsiteGitLab Company WebsiteDarren Murph's README
Ep 57Mike Adams, CEO at Grain
Mike's links:LinkedInTwitterGrain WebsiteTyler's Links:Tsell.linkSteve Jobs "Bicycle for the mind"
Ep 56Ryan Anderson, VP of Global Research & Insights at Herman Miller
Ryan's Links:Ryan on LinkedInWFH at Herman MillerFuture ForumHerman MillerTyler's Links:Tsell.link
Ep 55Ryan Chartrand, CEO at X-Team
Ryan's Links:X-Team StarconX-Team Blog Posts by RyanRyan Chartrand on LinkedInTyler's Links:Tsell.link
Ep 54Amy Yin, Founder & CEO at OfficeTogether
Amy's Links:LinkedInTwitterFacebookOfficeTogether Company WebsiteTyler's Links:Tsell.linkTyler's LinkedIn Announcement about joining Yac as Head of CX
Ep 53Mitko Karshovski, Founder & CEO at Parable, Host of That Remote Life
Mitko's Links:ParableThat Remote Life PodcastLinkedInTwitterTyler's Links:tsell.link
Ep 52Flo Crivello, Founder & CEO at Teamflow
Flo Crivello's links:TeamflowLinkedInTwitterTyler's links:Tsell.link
Ep 51Jesse Chambers, Founder and CEO at wrkfrce
Jesse's links:wrkfrceJesse on LinkedInMentioned on the show:Matt Mullenweg's "5 levels of autonomy"Tyler's links
Ep 50Lance Robbins, Founder at RemotelyConnected, Global Recruitment Lead at XWP
Links to Lance's internet things:LinkedInTwitterRemotelyConnectedXWPDistributeLearn more about Tyler here
Ep 49Katerina Sukhenko, Co-founder & CBDO at POSTOPLAN
Kate's links:LinkedInPOSTOPLAN Tyler's Links
Ep 48Adam Nathan, Co-founder & CEO at Almanac
Links to Adam's internet things:Almanac.ioAdam on LinkedInAdam on Twitter
Ep 47Valerie Krämer and Rebecca Görres, Co-Founders at Remi
Links to Valerie and Rebecca's stuff:Pre-seed raise after our conversation!Valerie Krämer [she/her] on LinkedInValerie Krämer (she/her) on TwitterRebecca Görres on LinkedInRebecca Görres on TwitterRemi.soLinks to Tyler's stuff:Tsell.linkTylerSellhorn.tech
Ep 46Amanda Nielsen, Partner Manager at Formstack
Amanda's Internet Things:LinkTree@very_demanda on Twittervery_demanda on Instagramvery_demanda on TikTokAmanda on LinkedIn
Ep 45Tony Jamous, CEO of Oyster
Links to Tony's Internet things:LinkedInTwitterOyster
Ep 44Raul Galera, Chief Advocate at ReferralCandy
Links to Raul's internet things:LinkedInReferralCandy
Ep 43Patrick Burns, Cofounder at Commons
Patrick Burns' Internet things:Commons.so (on Product Hunt)TwitterLinkedInMedium
Ep 42Daphnée Laforest, Distributed Workplace Strategist, Host of Remote First Podcast
Daphnée Laforest's Links:LinkedInTwitter(@nomade_moiselle)Remote First podcastWebsite(daphneelaforest.com) Pitch Tyler as a future guest at this link
Ep 41Highlights from Tyler Sellhorn, Peep Laja, Chris Herd, Laurel Farrer, and Kate Lister
Full Episodes with:Tyler SellhornPeep LajaChris HerdLaurel FarrerKate Lister
Ep 40Corey Haines, Founder of Swipe Files
Links to Corey Haines' internet things:Corey is the Founder of Swipe FilesCorey's podcasts are Everything is Marketing and Default AliveFollow Corey on Social Media as well:Twitter (@coreyhainesco)LinkedInPersonal Website