
Sadly, HR by and large hasn’t much evolved over the decades, and adapting the same tools across contexts will only get you so far. Many foundational HR concepts assume that the workplace is centralised, and are not always compatible with our values.
One example is performance management (an HR staple!) We noodled on this idea at length, asking ourselves questions to challenge our ingrained beliefs. What is performance management trying to achieve? Who does it fundamentally benefit? What does the decentralized version of this look like? A key assumption at the heart of performance management is that a company will benefit from putting in place structure and support to aid employees in contributing effectively towards company objectives.
However, if we take a view that our contributors are already highly driven and self-motivated, we need to be very careful about mandating learning and development moments that risk killing off intrinsic motivation that already exists.
Another consideration is that many performance management systems assume that every employee has a supervisor that has a legitimate right to make an evaluative judgment on the individual’s work. This simply doesn’t tally with decentralized values.
Finding performance management tools and software that are sympathetic to a decentralized way of working is hard, and we’re yet to be blown away by any off-the-shelf solution (if anyone reading this has nailed this problem, we’d love to hear from you!) We’ll also let you know how our efforts to adapt HR to the decentralized reality goes :) Currently, we’re bouncing ideas about using peer circles to provide reflective learning moments for contributors, without any top-down direction or mandate.
Joining Status for many people can be a total leap into the unknown. It requires a contributor to be comfortable with multiple Big Concepts (remote work, a flat hierarchy, the blockchain community, decentralized organizations).
Even one of these Big Concepts being new to the team member could make for a disorientating start, but put together they can be overwhelming. So it’s important to recognize that people come from diverse backgrounds, and we need to meet them where they’re at, giving support to the transition as smoothly as possible. The need to hire people who are already in as close as possible alignment with our values becomes all the more important.
Joining Status is less onboarding and more immersion. Some of the things we offer, or are working on, include:
It’s easy when lost and confused in a remote setting to withdraw, or not speak up about problems. We look out for team members, check in, and help pair them up with the support they need to navigate this new world.