65 cards covering everything a distributed team has to figure out, from communication channels and meeting norms to equity, culture and time off. In an office a lot of this goes unsaid. Spread across locations, it has to be made explicit. Put the cards on the table and decide together.
A hybrid team is one where people work from different places: some in an office, some at home, some in another time zone. Most of what keeps such a team working well is not a tool, it is an agreement. Four starting points.
The fastest way to use this deck is to turn it into a short team agreement. Four moves, then go deeper card by card.
Get the whole team looking at the same set of cards, in person or on a shared board. The point is that everyone sees the same picture of what working together involves.
Working well, not working, and never actually discussed. The third pile is usually the most revealing: it is the stuff everyone assumed and nobody agreed.
You cannot agree on everything at once. Pick the handful of cards causing the most friction now, talk them through, and write down what you decide.
An agreement only counts if it is written somewhere people can find it. Put it where the team lives, and come back to it when the team or the work changes.
The cards are the same, but this is one path through them: the order a team tends to set itself up in, from the basic deal to looking after people. Start wherever the friction is.
The deal underneath everything: what kind of team you are, where and when people work, and the few ground rules everyone signs up to.
The single biggest thing to get right across locations: which channels, what belongs in a meeting versus a message, and how you talk on camera and in text.
How things actually get done when you are not side by side: the tools, who owns what, how decisions get made and tracked, and how work is handed over.
Closing the gap between the people in the room and the people on the screen, so location does not decide who gets heard, included and remembered.
The culture that no longer comes free from sharing a space: rituals, time together, feedback and the small things that make a team feel like one.
Keeping the team sustainable: boundaries, real time off, individual needs, and helping people grow whether or not anyone can see them working.
Search freely or filter by theme. Each card is one part of working as a hybrid team, with its own page: the thing to make explicit, how strong teams tend to handle it, questions for your team, and things to watch for.
Filter by theme
A quick gut-check of what a hybrid team usually needs to have settled. Ticks are saved in your browser, so you can come back to them.
A library for teams that work across places, built on a card deck that lays the whole subject out on the table.
Working as a hybrid or remote team is not one thing, it is dozens: how you meet, how you communicate between meetings, how you decide, how you make sure remote people are not second-class, how you keep a culture alive when nobody shares a kitchen. MethodKit for Hybrid Teams lays those parts out together so a team can talk them through. Here each card gets its own page that asks the same questions: what is this part of working together, how do strong teams tend to handle it, and what should you agree on.
It is for any team that is not all in one room: leads setting up how the team runs, and members who want a say in the norms they live by. The texts are starting points for a conversation, not a policy to adopt.
Pull the cards that matter for where your team is now, set the rest aside, and use the questions to agree on how you want to work before habits harden. Lay them on a table or a shared board, sort them into what is working, what is not, and what you have never actually discussed.
Want the cards in your hand? The deck is available from MethodKit.