How To Lead, Motivate, And Collaborate With A Team You Cannot See: Advice From The CEO Of LiveOps

How To Lead, Motivate, And Collaborate With A Team You Cannot See: Advice From The CEO Of LiveOps

Greg Hanover is the CEO of LiveOps, a virtual call center company that provides services for a wide variety of industries including healthcare, retail, travel, hospitality, and insurance. LiveOps has a little over 200 full-time employees and they have 14,000 independent contractors who work virtually from home. Having a team of virtual agents has allowed LiveOps to be more cost effective, flexible, and innovative than a traditional brick and mortar call center.

Having flexible and remote work options is becoming more and more valuable to employees, no matter what industry they are in. But a lot of executives shy away from giving these options because of the concerns that come with leading a virtual workforce. How do you know if they are actually working? How do you measure productivity? How do you create a cohesive corporate culture when not everyone is in the same building everyday?

Greg says it ultimately comes down to your communication strategy. Having effective and consistent communication is critical when it comes to working with a virtual team. The great thing is there are so many tools and platforms available now that leaders can take advantage of. LiveOps has built their own collaboration tool called LiveOps Nation which allows agents to communicate with one another, share tips and secrets, find company wide news, etc...It allows the leaders to disseminate information to the whole team, very quickly.

It is also important to set expectations early when leading a virtual team. Starting at the interview, the potential employee should know what attributes you are looking for in a team member, what is expected of them, and what their responsibilities will be. "We all know there are some people who can be more successful than others in a virtual environment", Greg says. Working virtually requires self-motivation, a certain amount of drive, an entrepreneurial spirit and self-control.

"One of the big things or processes we have in place is every agent signs what we call a statement of work. And we make it clear, so whether you're supporting a large retail customer or one of our insurance customers, or healthcare customers, we're going to list out what the requirements are to support that customer. So we may have certain requirements around number of hours worked each week or certain quality metrics that have to be met to stay active on a program. We'll clearly outline in that statement of work with the agent what the requirements are to support that end customer. There are requirements. It's not a free for all model."

For organizations or leaders who are looking to test out a remote workforce or a few remote positions, Greg's advice is to "understand what does success look like in that position. And then make sure that you've clearly articulated that to the folks that you're going to place in a remote environment". It is important to lay out the requirements, expectations, job description, etc… ahead of time and use that as the measure of success.

Greg suggests starting small, maybe you give employees the option to work from home one day a week or you give them more flexibility in their schedules. But don't try to run before you crawl. It may not be the best idea to start hiring a whole new team of remote workers if you've never managed this type of a team before. Start small and test things out, put the right tools in place, and set up guidelines and expectations up front.

What you will learn in this episode:

  • How to lead a virtual team
  • What tools LiveOps uses to collaborate and communicate
  • What it is like to work at LiveOps
  • How they stay competitive in the Bay Area
  • How they train, upskill, and motivate a team they cannot see
  • How they keep the team aspect alive while everyone is remote
  • How to change the mindset of leaders so they can see the benefits and possibilities of remote working


Links from the episode:

LiveOps: www.liveops.com

Greg's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/greghanover/

Jaksot(1180)

Your Company Was Already Too Big. AI Didn't Create the Problem, It Just Ended the Lie.

Your Company Was Already Too Big. AI Didn't Create the Problem, It Just Ended the Lie.

April 2, 2026: A landmark MIT study out today challenges the AI job apocalypse — and the data lands somewhere more optimistic than the headlines suggest. Then: the "AI washing" debate exposes a harder...

3 Huhti 41min

Best of Q1 2026: The $1T Market Crash, Citi's Results Mandate, and the AI Revolution at Amazon, Accenture, and Workday

Best of Q1 2026: The $1T Market Crash, Citi's Results Mandate, and the AI Revolution at Amazon, Accenture, and Workday

The first quarter of 2026 was not just a collection of headlines. It was a definitive "hard reset" for the global workforce, marking the moment where the gap between legacy systems and the new AI-driv...

30 Maalis 32min

Claude Mythos Leaked, AI Agents Done Wrong, JPMorgan's New Performance Rules, and the Gen Z Reality Check

Claude Mythos Leaked, AI Agents Done Wrong, JPMorgan's New Performance Rules, and the Gen Z Reality Check

March 27, 2026: Anthropic accidentally leaked Claude Mythos — its most powerful model ever — and the implications for cybersecurity and enterprise AI go far beyond a product announcement. America's to...

27 Maalis 43min

The AI Liability Era Begins, Salesforce Freezes Pay, and Why 95% of Job Postings Still Don't Mention AI

The AI Liability Era Begins, Salesforce Freezes Pay, and Why 95% of Job Postings Still Don't Mention AI

March 26, 2026: A California jury found Meta and YouTube liable for deliberately addictive platform design — and the legal framework they used is headed straight for enterprise AI. Salesforce freezes ...

26 Maalis 37min

863 Applications Per Hire, 78% of Workers Scared, and Microsoft Blows Up HR

863 Applications Per Hire, 78% of Workers Scared, and Microsoft Blows Up HR

March 25, 2026: Fortune reports that the job market has gotten so broken that people are paying $1,500 a month just to have someone apply to jobs on their behalf — and on average it takes 863 applicat...

25 Maalis 52min

CFOs Say AI Barely Touched Jobs, College Grads Still Worried, Anthropic Releases Economic Index Report

CFOs Say AI Barely Touched Jobs, College Grads Still Worried, Anthropic Releases Economic Index Report

March 24, 2026: Three major research reports dropped today with a combined picture of where AI and work actually stand right now. A landmark NBER working paper of nearly 750 CFOs finds AI had zero mea...

24 Maalis 45min

Microsoft's Chief People Officer Reveals the Playbook on Scaling AI Without Losing Trust

Microsoft's Chief People Officer Reveals the Playbook on Scaling AI Without Losing Trust

The real bottleneck to AI isn't the code; it's our own ego. We're so hooked on being the "expert" that we've forgotten how to be beginners again, and in a world changing this fast, that's a dangerous ...

23 Maalis 52min

Trump's AI Framework Is Here, Your Retirement Is at Risk, and Engineers Are Quitting for Tokens

Trump's AI Framework Is Here, Your Retirement Is at Risk, and Engineers Are Quitting for Tokens

March 20, 2026:  The White House dropped its national AI legislative framework today — I go through the whole thing, because there's a provision about preempting state AI laws that is one of the most...

20 Maalis 49min

Suosittua kategoriassa Liike-elämä ja talous

sijotuskasti
mimmit-sijoittaa
rss-rahapodi
psykopodiaa-podcast
rss-rahamania
rss-lahtijat
ostan-asuntoja-podcast
hyva-paha-johtaminen
rss-seuraava-potilas
rss-sami-miettinen-neuvottelija
rss-startup-ministerio
rahapuhetta
lakicast
rss-porssipuhetta
rss-bisnesta-bebeja
rss-sisalto-kuntoon
rss-set-for-life-sijoita-ja-vaurastu
rss-rahataito-podcast
rss-paasipodi
rss-viisas-raha-podi