Leave room in the meeting so it's not about the meeting. Every Zoom call on our team starts with catch-up time. Not a scripted icebreaker or a forced team-building exercise. Just regular conversation. What's going on in your life? What did you do this weekend? Did you see the news today? It sounds trivial, but those are the moments that turn coworkers into people you actually know. When every interaction is task-based, you end up with a team that functions fine but doesn't really connect. And a team that doesn't connect won't go to bat for each other when things get hard. I'm not the kind of business owner who thinks a pizza party buys loyalty. I respect my team's time. But I do think friendly banter matters more than most leaders give it credit for. We've had virtual happy hours where everyone grabs a drink of their choice, and we just talk. No agenda, no slides. People joke around, tell stories, and occasionally gripe about a tough client in a way that's more funny than frustrated. Those calls don't need to be long. Thirty minutes is plenty. But they give the team permission to be human with each other, which gets lost fast when all your communication happens in project management tools and task threads. Our team spans multiple time zones across the U.S., Central America, and India, so these moments don't happen accidentally. You have to be intentional about creating space for them. That means not cramming every call with status updates and action items. It means treating a ten-minute personal conversation at the top of a meeting as time well spent, not time wasted. The one tip I'd give is simple: stop treating every interaction with your team as transactional. The relationship is the infrastructure. If you only invest in the work and never in the people doing it, you'll have a team that clocks in and clocks out, but never one that genuinely has each other's backs.
I learned this the hard way when COVID hit and we suddenly had warehouse teams, customer service reps, and account managers all working remotely for the first time. We tried the usual stuff - Slack channels, virtual happy hours, team video calls. Everyone hated it. Attendance dropped to like 30% after two weeks. Then I accidentally stumbled on what actually worked. I started sending voice memos instead of typing long messages. Just pulling out my phone, recording 60 seconds about a problem I was wrestling with or a decision I needed help with, and sending it to specific people. Not polished. Sometimes I'd be walking my dog or sitting in my car. The response was insane. People started sending them back. Real conversations happened. Here's why it worked - it forced vulnerability and it was asynchronous. When you're typing, you edit yourself into this professional robot. When you're talking, your actual personality comes through. You hear someone laugh or sigh or get excited. That's the stuff that builds real connection. And unlike Zoom calls, people could respond when they had actual mental space, not during some scheduled meeting when half the team is multitasking anyway. We ended up creating what we called "decision threads" where I'd voice memo a tough call I was facing - should we invest in new warehouse automation, how to handle a difficult client situation, whether to expand to a new market. I'd tag three or four people and ask for their gut reaction. The quality of feedback I got was 10x better than any conference room brainstorm we'd ever done. The other thing that mattered - I shared stuff that made me look human, not just CEO polished. Talked about deals that fell apart, hires I screwed up, days I felt overwhelmed. When leaders are real about struggles, everyone else feels permission to be real too. That's when you actually get a team instead of just people collecting paychecks from different zip codes.
One useful practice is to create a simple promise board that the whole team can see and own. It can be a shared page where each person posts one commitment for the week and one request for help. Both points should stay short and clear so people can read them quickly. The team reviews the board every Monday and closes the loop on Friday by updating what was completed. This approach works because trust grows when people see work followed through and when asking for help feels normal. From our base in Ahmedabad while working with a global team rhythm, we have seen that the promise board reduces silent assumptions. It also prevents the remote habit of writing long explanations in chat. When someone delivers, we add a short thank you and one line about the impact so the contribution feels visible.
We're a fully remote team spread across Europe - Sweden, Portugal, France, Hungary, Romania, Poland and more. Nobody shares an office. Most of us have never met in person. And honestly the "camaraderie" is stronger than any office job I've had. One tip that actually works: give people structure to connect, don't just hope it happens. Early on I assumed that because we hired great people they'd naturally bond. They didn't. Remote work is isolating if you don't actively design against it. People finish their tasks, close their laptop, and thats it. No beers, no lunch together, no accidental conversations in the hallway. So we built what we call the DonnaPro Tribe - a private community for our team with dedicated messaging channels, regular virtual meetups, and peer mentoring. But heres the thing that makes it work: its not forced fun. Nobody has to attend a virtual happy hour and pretend to enjoy it. The community is built around actual work problems. When one EA figures out a clever way to handle a difficult client situation or discovers a better system for managing a CEO's inbox, they share it. Others jump in with their own experiences. People bond faster over solving real problems together then they do over icebreakers. Thats been our experience anyway. The other piece is having quality managers and HR people who actually check in on people - not just their output but how their doing. Are they overwhelmed, are they feeling disconnected, do they need support. When someone knows theres a real person watching out for them and not just monitoring theirs KPIs, they feel like they belong somewhere. And that feeling is what turns a remote job into a remote team.
My single tip is to hold regular one-on-one meetings that prioritize listening and constructive feedback. At Kualitee I make time for these check-ins on a regular basis to discuss performance, address concerns, and offer guidance. These conversations create a space where people feel heard and appreciated. When individuals feel heard they are more likely to share ideas and join in collaboration. To foster camaraderie from a distance, encourage openness during these sessions and invite team members to speak freely. Pair each meeting with clear follow-up so people see that their input leads to action. Over time this practice builds trust, reduces misunderstandings, and aligns goals across the team. Consistent attention to dialogue and responsiveness is the most reliable way I have found to build strong virtual relationships.
Something I've noticed with remote teams is that relationships don't really form during the big scheduled meetings. Those tend to be agenda-driven and everyone's trying to move through things quickly. The real sense of camaraderie usually comes from smaller, unplanned interactions — the kind that happen naturally in an office but disappear online unless you make space for them. A small habit that's helped our team is keeping certain Slack threads intentionally informal. People drop screenshots of something funny they saw online, a random article, even photos of what they're cooking that night. None of it has anything to do with work. At first it might feel trivial, but over time you start recognizing little things about people — their sense of humor, what they're into, what their day-to-day life looks like outside of tasks and deadlines. That familiarity changes how collaboration feels. When someone asks for help or gives feedback later, it doesn't feel like a message coming from a username on a screen. You have a clearer sense of the person behind it. And in a remote environment, those small signals of personality end up doing a lot of the work that hallway conversations used to do.
My single tip is to practice personal, meaningful engagement with colleagues online. Take time to learn what matters to each person, share the story or context behind your work, and follow up with thoughtful suggestions. Use regular one-on-one check-ins and small gestures, such as remembering personal details and celebrating small wins, to turn routine meetings into trust-building moments. I apply this relationship-focused approach at MusaArtGallery to keep our remote team connected and engaged.
To create strong connections with others in remote teams, try to communicate on a personal level and not solely related to achieving project deliverables. For example, in a remote setting, the majority of conversations that take place are only about the operations involved with getting a task accomplished. When team members can have quick and frequent discussions regarding the context of their job duties, as well as any obstacles they may encounter, and also be able to provide insight into their personal lives, trust and connection can form amongst all members of the team. To help encourage feelings of connectedness from afar, establish simple and consistent patterns of interaction (i.e., working vs. non-working) versus large scale initiatives. Simple habits of interaction such as short, frequent phone calls, responding promptly to an email or text, and having open communication with each other can foster feelings of support vs. selfishness when it comes to teamwork remotely. By having team members know that they will receive prompt responses to questions or concerns they have, they will naturally work well together as teams that will provide collaboration and cooperation.
One useful habit for remote teams is building a shared language for feedback. Virtual teams often avoid honest comments until small issues quietly grow into bigger problems. We follow a simple pattern that keeps conversations steady and focused on the work. This approach helps us stay clear and prevents text messages from creating wrong assumptions. To build connection from a distance we rely on small learning rituals each month. One teammate shares a tactic they recently tested in their own daily work routine. Others ask questions and try the idea during the following week together with interest. Over time we connect through curiosity and steady improvement instead of forced team activities.
Our team hit a wall during the long hybrid stretch. Meetings felt transactional, cameras were on, but energy was off, and our collaboration score had slipped to 41%. I realised we didn't have a productivity issue. We had a connection gap. So we redesigned the start of every standup with something we called Virtual Fika Firestarters. Instead of jumping into updates, we opened with a 3-minute honesty round using quick polls. Where people shared one thing that went wrong that week. Not polished wins, but real frustrations. After that, we randomly paired people for short coffee-roulette breakout chats with no agenda other than conversation. The shift was immediate. Humor, empathy, and inside jokes started flowing back into Slack and project channels. So we finally started working as a team again. Within a few months, engagement jumped 4.2x, our internal NPS reached 82, and stronger collaboration helped drive SEK 2.9M in cross-team upsells.
Meet in person at least once. That is the single most effective thing you can do for any remote relationship. Video calls and Slack messages build a working relationship, but they do not build trust the way a shared meal or a walk around the block does. Once you have spent real time with someone face-to-face, every virtual interaction after that carries more weight. If your team is distributed across cities or countries, find a way to make it happen. Fly out, organize a team offsite, and meet at a conference. The cost is worth it. One in-person meeting does more for team camaraderie than six months of virtual hours.
A simple way to build stronger relationships with colleagues in a virtual environment is creating small shared spaces where people can interact beyond formal meetings. Remote teams often communicate only through scheduled calls or task updates, which can make collaboration feel mechanical. Introducing lightweight, interactive touchpoints helps restore some of the casual connection that happens naturally in an office. For example, some teams create a rotating "team spotlight" page where one colleague shares a short introduction, current projects, and a few personal interests. Instead of sending long emails, the link to that page can be shared through a QR code generated with Freeqrcode.ai and placed in a team workspace, digital newsletter, or virtual event slide. When teammates scan the code, they quickly access the profile and can leave short messages or reactions. Over time this creates small moments of recognition that make remote colleagues feel visible and appreciated. It sounds simple, yet these lightweight interactions often encourage more informal conversations during meetings and messaging channels. When people understand the person behind the screen, collaboration tends to become smoother and more supportive even when everyone is working from different locations.
If you are a founder, send investor prep brief yourself. In fact, same for others as well. That's my actual tip, translated into whatever your version of it is. At spectup, I write a 150-300 word briefing before every investor call our clients take: fund name, partner background, thesis, portfolio overlap, and talking points. I could delegate it. I probably should delegate it. But doing that work myself means I stay connected to what every team member is working on across London, Toronto, and Munich, without needing a status meeting. The prep brief is the status meeting. The real issue with virtual teams isn't communication frequency; it's context loss. You lose the hallway conversations where someone mentions a deal is stalling or a client is frustrated. My workaround is building that context exchange into work product that already needs to exist. When I write an investor briefing, I'm simultaneously checking campaign quality, catching targeting issues, and staying close to the team's output. One artefact, three functions. No extra meeting required.
Praise and recognition go a long way. Oftentimes, remote workers feel a little less appreciated by their leaders or coworkers because the work they do doesn't get the obvious praise that it might if they worked in the office. So, if you can be intentional about that, doing things like messaging them and thanking them for their hard work or complimenting the things they are doing, that can really go a long way toward not only improving their work experience but building rapport with them.
VP of Demand Generation & Marketing at Thrive Internet Marketing Agency
Answered a month ago
"My essential virtual relationship technique is ACKNOWLEDGING LIFE OUTSIDE WORK by never scheduling meetings before 9 AM or after 5 PM unless absolutely necessary, and proactively asking about team members' lives during check-ins. Remote work blurs boundaries dangerously, and respecting clear work hours signals that I value people's personal time and lives. I also remember and ask about things team members mentioned—following up on a vacation they took, asking how their kid's soccer game went, or checking in on a home project they mentioned. The camaraderie this creates: team members feel seen as whole people rather than just workers, building emotional connection that pure work relationships lack. One team member specifically mentioned that my remembering her daughter's college acceptance and asking about it weeks later made her feel valued personally, strengthening her commitment to the team. These small personal acknowledgments cost nothing but create genuine relationships that make virtual work feel less isolating and transactional. When people feel personally valued, they bring energy and loyalty that professionally-only relationships never inspire."
Building strong relationships with colleagues in a virtual environment requires intentional effort. Without hallway conversations or casual interactions, remote teams can easily become transactional. One simple but powerful tip is to create structured moments for human connection during regular work interactions. Virtual work often prioritizes efficiency, with meetings focused strictly on tasks and deadlines. While this keeps projects moving, it can unintentionally weaken team relationships. Leaders who build a few minutes of informal connection into meetings help restore the social fabric that naturally exists in physical offices. Starting meetings with quick personal check-ins, sharing small wins, or asking reflective questions gives team members space to be seen as people rather than just roles. These moments build familiarity and trust, which makes collaboration smoother when challenges arise. For instance, some remote teams begin weekly meetings with a brief round where each member shares something positive from the past week or a challenge they are navigating. The conversation takes only a few minutes, but it encourages openness and empathy among colleagues. Over time, these small interactions make team members more comfortable reaching out for help, offering support, or collaborating across projects. Research from Harvard Business Review highlights that remote teams with deliberate social interaction rituals report higher levels of trust and psychological safety than teams that focus exclusively on tasks. When employees feel personally connected to colleagues, they communicate more openly, resolve conflicts more effectively, and collaborate more productively. Strong virtual relationships are not built by chance; they are built through small, consistent practices that prioritize human connection. By creating intentional moments for informal interaction, teams can cultivate camaraderie even across distance, strengthening both collaboration and overall team morale.
We have team members across three time zones and the one thing that's made the biggest difference in building genuine relationships is what we call "random coffee chats." Every two weeks, a bot in our Slack workspace randomly pairs two team members for a 15-minute video call that has absolutely nothing to do with work. The rules are simple: no project talk, no status updates, no screen sharing. Just two people having a conversation about whatever comes up -- weekend plans, a show they're watching, something their kid did. It sounds trivial but after running this for about a year, the effect on collaboration has been noticeable. People who've had these casual conversations are measurably faster at resolving conflicts in code reviews and more willing to ask each other for help. Before we started this, our remote developers in different time zones barely knew each other beyond Jira ticket comments. Now they'll message each other directly to pair-program on tricky problems because they've built a personal connection that makes asking for help feel natural instead of awkward. The key is making it voluntary but culturally expected. We don't force anyone, but about 85% of the team participates consistently. The 15-minute time limit also matters -- it's short enough that nobody resents the time investment but long enough to have a real conversation.
Do something that has absolutely nothing to do with work. I run a virtual team at my insurance agency and the thing that actually bonded us wasn't another Zoom meeting about quarterly goals. It was a dumb online trivia game we started doing on Friday afternoons. No agenda, no KPIs, no "let's circle back on that." Just people being people for 30 minutes. The problem with most virtual team building is that it still feels like work wearing a costume. People can tell the difference. When your boss schedules "fun time" and then asks everyone to share their professional development goals, that's not camaraderie. That's a meeting with a party hat on. Virtual relationships get real when the interactions stop being transactional. Create space where people can just be themselves without a deliverable attached to it. Josh Wahls, Founder, InsuranceByHeroes.com
Many virtual teams have incorrectly tried to copy the live interaction of the office such as having mandatory Zoom happy hours. The problem with this approach is that they often feel like just another item on your calendar, not necessarily like a chance to connect. The real key to building camaraderie across distance is through what I refer to as "micro-connecting." Instead of relying on scheduled social time to connect, we create opportunities for low-stakes updates that are done asynchronously. In my work environment, I encourage people on my team to share their small wins or personal milestones in a dedicated channel. I do this not because they are required to do so, but because it creates a shared context about who we are as people outside of our job tasks. Once you know someone on your team is trying to run a marathon or has just moved to a new city, you are able to view them as more than just a name on your computer and have a helping hand when trying to collaborate on a technical solution. That simple act of humanizing each other is how remote teams remain connected when they are physically separated by thousands of miles. With so many of the physical markers we typically look to for establishing trust removed when working remotely, we will have to develop new, consistent, intentional habits. This isn't about doing more social activities but rather making the little moments we share as humans count.
One thing I've learned running Blister Prevention with a fully remote setup is that you can't rely on "checking in" when there's an issue, you have to build connection into the rhythm of work. In our monthly Office Hours, I don't just teach blister management, I open the floor for questions and real case discussions, and that's where trust builds because people feel seen and heard. My view is simple: consistency beats intensity. You don't need long meetings, you need regular, human touchpoints where people can contribute, not just report. A practical tip is to create a standing space, even 15 minutes, where your team can share wins, challenges, or something they've learned. It keeps communication open and stops small issues from becoming big ones. Ask yourself, when was the last time your team spoke without an agenda? That's usually where real connection starts.