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Ask HN: Working fully remotely as a QA and/or deaf person?

3 pointsby qa_guyover 5 years ago
Preface: Commute 2h 1-way to Chicago half of the week, remote the other half. Work in QA automation and am very good at what I do (finding bugs), in charge of a QA team. May have opportunity to work full remote and want to. I am deaf but have a cochlear implant - I can talk and hear well for the most part.<p>I communicate OK with my colleagues while at home on a 1:1 basis, talking over Slack or a video call. My weakness is in a group setting when I am remote. If I am present in person at a group meeting, my chances of understanding everything enough to answer QA related questions or enforce a culture of quality is high. While I am remote, it is hard to both raise my voice to get my words in and also very hard to understand everything people are saying in a group meeting. Even without group meetings, my level of contribution is high - but others feel differently and frequently want to schedule meetings with me being present in person. I feel that if I go fully remote, they will be unable to cope.<p>1. Are there strategies on how to minimize group meetings or otherwise make them a bit more directed? Is it awkward to do so just for one person (me) so I can perform better while remote?<p>2. In your experience, does working fully remotely impact my chances to keep being in charge of a team?<p>3. Do I even have a chance as a deaf person to find another remote QA job to keep doing what I do if this current job doesn&#x27;t pan out forever?<p>I&#x27;m trying to find experiences with folks who have done any of those things:<p>- Worked remotely as a lead or have responsibilities related to &quot;being in charge of a team&quot;<p>- Worked with a remote deaf employee of any position<p>- Worked as a remote deaf employee of any position<p>Please offer your insights!

1 comment

deckiedanover 5 years ago
I recently had some &quot;how to run a meeting&quot; training, maybe some ideas? This would be just thoughts I have maybe to make remote video&#x2F;audio meetings work better. Honestly though, I&#x27;m just guessing. I&#x27;m not an expert (yet!)<p>Can you delegate the running of meetings to others in your team? Have meetings &quot;chaired&quot; by a different member of your team each time, they&#x27;re in charge of keeping it to agenda, making sure everyone contributes, doesn&#x27;t go too off topic, etc. Then they have free reign within that. Use it as a training &#x2F; mentoring thing for them too.<p>Before each group meeting, you have a quick 1 on 1 with the meeting chair, let them know your direction, etc, and afterward to debrief if things go badly.<p>Also, have a PM window open to them during the meeting, and msg them if you need something clarified, or want to say something. I&#x27;m sure they&#x27;ll be happy to ensure that happens. Teams look after each other.<p>One of the ideas from the meeting training I had was some companies have a &quot;if there&#x27;s no agenda and notes sent ahead of the meeting with enough time to read them all, then you aren&#x27;t expected to show up&quot;.<p>Look for information about &quot;Lean&quot; meetings, maybe, there are a few different styles about.<p>I whole heartedly recommend getting in contact with Dan and Suzie Potter ( <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;duzie.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;duzie.com&#x2F;</a> ), they&#x27;re fantastic coaches and team trainers, and excellent and giving out-of-the-box ideas.