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The Complete Guide to Working with Remote Developers

The Complete Guide to Working with Remote Developers

by András Lieber / Tuesday, 15 November 2016 / Published in Web

The benefits you will realize by choosing a remote development agency can be significant.

Remote teams often have more experience and greater talent than local coding enterprises. They service the global marketplace, and have a solid understanding of recent trends and technologies.

Good remote coders have learned and practiced ways to become highly productive. And they constantly strive to improve their skills.

Being remote not only requires better communication, it forces it to happen. How does this happen? Weekly meetings, chat sessions, and the exceptional clarity in briefs, specifications, and feedback. These are all part of the overall scheme.

Keep these four golden rules in mind when working with a remote agency:

  • A clear brief helps to get a project off to a solid start. Collaboration can get underway even before your brief is finalized when you have a good agency working with you. Be willing to listen to any guidance the project manager may offer. It can help to get everyone on the same page as the project gets underway.
  • Practicality is important. Your coding agency should advise you on the coding best practices and the technologies that they plan to put into play. The final decision is yours, but it should be a knowledge-based decision.

Technologies may vary, but the maker’s touch is essential.

  • Communicate efficiently and effectively. Understand your responsibilities toward making collaboration work by preparing yourself for periodic briefings. Avoid making changes once the project is in development. If you must do so, be prepared to negotiate new deadlines. Work with the agency to determine which means of communications will work best.
  • Listen to the specialists. Professional developers always have the user in mind. Criticism is intended to be constructive, and it is given with the best of intentions. The feedback you may receive is based on solid, variate coding experience.

Read full article: here

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