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Replacing (or shortening) standups

A major benefit of using Steady is that you can free your team from daily standup meetings and give them back unbroken focus time.

Context switching and the ramp down/ramp up from standups removes about an hour of productivity for the average team member. By switching to asynchronous coordination, your team gets that hour back.

If you're not ready to completely remove your meetings, you don't need to. Make them shorter and more efficient. Steady will have already captured and recorded the details, so your team can use the time to focus on meaningful interactions rather than data collection. By using Steady alongside live meetings, teams improve efficiency, capture important details, and focus on meaningful discussions.

Getting your team ready to start checking in

Before you dive right into using daily check-ins, make sure you prepare your team.

  • Provide Context: Hold a meeting or send an email explaining how daily check-ins fit into the broader team and organizational goals.
  • Set Clear Expectations: Be explicit about the structure, timing, and frequency of the check-ins.
  • Demo the Process: Offer a quick demonstration or a sample check-in, so team members understand the flow and expectations.
  • Address Concerns: Open the floor for any questions, concerns, or potential hurdles. Be transparent about how the process will evolve over time and the flexibility for adjustments.

Send an announcement to the team

Clearly explain the purpose and benefits of daily check-ins while addressing any concerns the team may have. It’s important to let people know that it’s not just a new ask, but something that’ll genuinely make work better for them.

Key Elements to Include:

  • Purpose: Explain why daily check-ins are being introduced (e.g., fostering better communication, eliminating meetings, staying aligned on goals, removing blockers).
  • Benefits: Emphasize how check-ins will improve collaboration, transparency, and ensure everyone is on the same page.
  • Expectations: Outline the frequency, time commitment (e.g., 5 minutes each day), and structure (e.g., a brief update on what was accomplished, what is planned for today, and any blockers).
  • Tone: Keep the tone encouraging and supportive. Highlight that this is a tool for the team's benefit, not micromanagement.

Example announcement template:

Subject: Using Steady for daily check-ins

Hi Team,

Starting [date], we’ll be using Steady for daily check-ins to keep everyone in sync and reduce meetings. The check-ins allow us to share our progress, discuss any challenges, and coordinate more efficiently.

Here's what you can expect:

  • Each check-in will only take a few minutes
  • You'll quickly go over what was accomplished yesterday, what’s planned for today, and if any blockers need addressing.

The goal is to create greater awareness and coordination while giving you more time back for actual work.

Here's a quick video overview.

Looking forward to kicking this off together!

Thanks,

[Your Name]

Kick off the Daily Check-ins

The first check-in is important to set the tone for the ongoing process. A positive start will get and keep everyone on track.

  • Lead by example: Participate and share your check-in first.
  • Celebrate small wins: Use the first check-in to highlight small successes. React and comment to your team's check-ins, reinforcing the positive impact of the process.
  • Encourage participation: Make sure everyone contributes, even if it’s just a quick update.

Use integrations to increase engagement and context

One of the primary ways that Steady saves time and gives maximum context is through integrations. There are two main types of integrations in Steady: chat and activity.

  1. Set up Slack or Microsoft Teams (if you use them). Integrating Steady with Slack or Microsoft Teams makes it easy for your teams to receive reminders and updates right in your chat tool. No more digging around the inbox for emails required.
  2. Set up activity integrations with your key tools. Activity integrations collect and surface actions from the tools where your team works, like issues and code updates. When team members check in, Steady adds relevant activity from connected tools and pushes those check-ins to their teammates. Our most popular activity integrations include Jira and Linear for issue tracking and GitHub and GitLab for code management. But there are many other options available. Check them out and set them up in Account Settings -> Integrations.

Keeping engagement high on your teams

Steady connects your people to their work and each other with shared goals, automated updates, and live dashboards so you can confidently focus and hit your targets together.

But if team members aren't providing regular updates through check-ins and your participation rate is low, you won't have the leading indicators, actionable insights, and delivery confidence that you need. And team members lose out on understanding the context of their efforts when others aren't participating, impacting transparency and trust on the team.

Here are some tips and best practices for keeping your team members engaged that are based on lessons learned from the thousands of teams using Steady every day.

Set a strong example

As the manager or lead, setting an example by participating in check-ins is the single best thing you can do to keep participation high. Fill in your check-in every time, and keep your own participation rate at 100%. In addition, fill out your check-ins in the style that you expect from your team members. For example, using brief sentences or specific hashtags.

This is for them as much as it is for you

In your next round of 1:1 meetings, communicate the value of the tool to your members and let them know how it benefits them (not you) by:

  • Reducing the number of meetings and interruptions
  • Reducing duplicative efforts
  • Helping them stay connected to their work and team
  • Collecting historical data and context that they can use for future self-reviews
  • Increasing your ability to quickly help them out
  • Reducing the number of meetings and interruptions (yes, we said it again because team members really appreciate this one).

Steady is an aggregator, not just another tool

Make sure you have activity integrations hooked up. When team members see that you are collecting their activity in one place (e.g., Jira updates, GitHub commits, etc), it signals to them that you and your organization are acknowledging the breadth of their efforts.

React to check-ins

Use the reaction emoji on the dashboard to signal to your team that you are paying attention to what they are writing. We recommend using 👍 for each check-in and celebrating wins with 🎉 or a supportive comment. Those simple gestures are some of the most effective because they show your team that you're actually reading what they write each day. And the positive feedback from you will help establish the habit of checking in.

Instantly respond to blockers

Steady will alert you by email if someone answers the "blockers" question in their check-in. That means that they cannot make progress without outside help. If you let these requests for help linger unanswered, it's a signal that you're not listening, and they'll stop engaging.

Use the Insights report during 1:1s and retros

The Insights report is a great way to create a comparison view of time periods, and allows you to create a filtered view of check-ins by team member and other variables. When team members understand that their check-ins inform 1:1 and retro discussions, they'll be more apt to take the time to fill them out.

Encourage check-in brevity

Steady will provide the most value to you and your team when the participation level is high, so we recommend optimizing for short, consistent check-ins that don't take much time to complete. If team members feel they need to write long, burdensome answers to check-in questions, they'll find ways to prioritize other work and participation will drop as a result.