The remote work debate didn’t end. It fragmented into something more specific and more difficult: organizations that went distributed in 2020 without changing how they make decisions are now discovering that the problems they attributed to remote are actually governance problems that the office was masking. I ran a team of fifteen in a manufacturing IT environment before moving to agency work — not distributed, but a team where half the group was across two sites. The coordination failures I saw there were not about location. They were about who had authority to decide what, and whether that was documented or informal. Remote didn’t create the problem; it removed the ambient correction mechanisms that had been hiding it.
What the data actually shows
The Stack Overflow Developer Survey 2023 found that a majority of developers prefer hybrid or fully remote setups, a figure consistent across multiple consecutive years. The Microsoft Work Trend Index 2023 found persistent perception gaps between managers and employees on productivity in hybrid environments — managers more skeptical, employees more confident in their own output. Eurostat data shows ICT employment across the EU has continued growing, though at moderated rates from pandemic peaks. The workforce is larger and more distributed than five years ago, and the experimental period for remote is over. What remains is structural adjustment.
The real source of remote dysfunction
In colocated environments, ambiguity is corrected socially. Someone catches you in the corridor and a decision gets made. A conversation happens at the coffee machine that resolves a question that would otherwise sit in a ticket queue for three days. Remote removes those friction dampeners without replacing them with anything structural. The result is that distributed teams inherit all the organizational ambiguities that the office was managing informally, and then discover those ambiguities when deadlines slip.
The specific failure patterns I’ve observed: communication that appears slow is almost always the result of unclear decision rights — when no one has final authority on a topic, async becomes a loop where people wait for consensus that doesn’t come. Endless Slack threads and meeting proliferation are usually the same problem approached from opposite sides. Excessive meetings are an attempt to manufacture the social correction mechanisms that the office provided; they don’t work because they don’t create decision authority, they just create more opportunity for conversation. Research on this is consistent: excessive meeting volume correlates with reduced perceived productivity without a corresponding reduction in ambiguity.
Post-2023 return-to-office pressure in parts of Germany and the UK has created hybrid asymmetry in organizations that handled it poorly: in-room participants dominate airtime, remote participants experience reduced informal influence, and the power imbalance compounds over time. Hybrid doesn’t eliminate governance problems — it can concentrate them in ways that are harder to see than pure remote dysfunction.
What actually works
The distributed teams I’ve seen function well share a specific structural characteristic: decision rights are explicit and documented, not assumed. Someone owns each decision domain, and that ownership is written down somewhere accessible. This sounds bureaucratic. It isn’t — it’s the minimum viable clarity required to make async work without constant escalation. Teams that treat documentation as executable governance — decisions written, timestamped, owned — move faster than teams that rely on anyone being available to answer questions in real time. Platforms built around this async-first ownership model, like Taskee, are designed to support exactly this kind of structured coordination. Platforms built around this async-first ownership model, like Taskee, are designed to support exactly this kind of structured coordination.
Performance measured by outcome rather than presence is a necessary condition, not a nice-to-have. When managers can’t see people working, some respond by increasing control frequency — more standups, more check-ins, more reporting layers. This increases noise rather than clarity. It also signals distrust in a way that is immediately legible to the team and affects motivation in proportion to how competent the team members are. The best remote managers I’ve encountered define what “done” looks like for a sprint or quarter with enough precision that they don’t need to check in on the process of getting there.
Time zone spread matters more than people budget for. Even modest two-to-four-hour differences compress overlap windows significantly. If your decision-making requires consensus across five people in four time zones, latency compounds quickly. The teams that handle this well have either reduced the decision circle or moved to explicit ownership models where one person makes the call and others are informed, not consulted. Both work. Attempting consensus across a fragmented time zone structure doesn’t.
The supervision problem
Distributed dysfunction is frequently supervision anxiety amplified through tooling. A manager who isn’t sure whether their team is working hard enough in the office will not become more confident when that team is remote — they will install monitoring, demand more reporting, and interpret the absence of visible output as evidence of the problem they suspected. This is not a technology problem. It’s a management capability problem that remote makes impossible to avoid. The organizations that figured out remote didn’t do it by finding better tools. They did it by clarifying what they were actually trying to measure and then measuring that instead of activity.
For a closer look at how these governance dynamics play out in the hiring process — specifically what distributed team experience signals to European employers — see the breakdown of how senior developer hiring actually works and where remote team management experience is weighted.