Recruiting and Hiring

How To Stay Relevant And Visible When Working Remotely



Adapted for professionals navigating remote work, career uncertainty, and limited resources

You're right to ask this—because relevance isn't about location. It's about value, visibility, and connection. And yes, you can fade into the background even sitting in an office. So let's break this down into two intertwined goals: **staying relevant** (your skills matter) and **staying visible** (people know they matter).

 Why Relevance Isn't Optional Right Now

The job market is volatile. Loyalty doesn't guarantee security. Staying relevant means your organization *needs* what you do—which strengthens your leverage for raises, promotions, or your next move.

 The Three Pillars of Relevance

1. Be Indispensable (Without Burning Out)

- **Align with what leadership cares about.** Ask your manager: "What outcomes matter most this quarter?" Then tie your work to those goals.

- **Develop one high-value skill** that's scarce in your team. You don't need to master AI—but understanding how it impacts your workflow (or how to critically evaluate its use) makes you a resource.

- **Document your wins.** Keep a simple running log: "Project X → Result Y → Impact Z." This isn't bragging; it's evidence.

> *ADHD-friendly tip:* Set a 5-minute weekly reminder to jot down one accomplishment. Small, consistent, sustainable.

 2. Be Seen (Even From Afar)

Skills don't speak for themselves. People promote people they know, trust, and remember.

- **Over-communicate progress, briefly.** A short weekly update ("Here's what I shipped, what's next, where I'm blocked") keeps you on radar without being noisy.

- **Create micro-moments of connection.** Add 2 minutes to a Zoom call for personal check-ins. Comment thoughtfully on a colleague's post. Small gestures build recognition.

- **Share knowledge, not just output.** Offer a quick tip in Slack, summarize a useful article, or volunteer to onboard a new hire. Generosity = visibility.

3. Be Liked (Authentically)

The "airport test" is real: Would someone want to be stuck with you during a delay? You don't need to be everyone's best friend—but being reliable, respectful, and human matters.

- **Remember details.** "How did your presentation go?" or "Did your cat recover?" shows you see people as people.

- **Assume good intent, clarify impact.** If tension arises (like a coworker labeling you "crass"), address it directly but calmly: "I want to make sure we're aligned—can we talk about what landed poorly?"

- **Protect your energy.** You don't have to perform enthusiasm. Consistency and integrity build trust longer than forced cheer.


 Remote Visibility: Strategies That Don't Require a Budget


You don't need to fly to HQ or host flashy webinars to stay on the map.

 Low-Effort, High-Impact Tactics

- **Virtual coffee roulette.** Propose a monthly 15-minute random pairing with colleagues via your team chat. Low pressure, high connection.

- **Asynchronous thought leadership.** Write a short internal post: "3 things I learned from Project X" or "A question I'm wrestling with." Doesn't need to be perfect—just provocative.

- **Leverage existing meetings.** Arrive 2 minutes early to video calls for informal chat. Stay 2 minutes after to follow up. These edges matter.


 If You Can Travel (Even Occasionally)

- **Bundle trips.** If you do go onsite, schedule multiple 1:1s in one day. Focus on relationship-building, not just task updates.

- **"Bleisure" on a budget.** If you cover travel, tack on a personal errand or low-cost local activity to make it worthwhile. Your well-being counts too.


 Build Reputation Beyond Your Team

- **Volunteer strategically.** Help with onboarding, a DEI initiative, or a recruiting event. These cross-functional moments expand your network.

- **Speak where you already are.** Offer to guest-lecture in a former professor's class, present at a local meetup, or write for an industry newsletter. Start small, close to home.

 Warning Signs: When to Course-Correct


Don't wait for a layoff notice to reassess. Watch for these subtle signals:


🔴 **Your work gets deprioritized**

- You're left off meeting invites for projects you used to lead.

- Resources you relied on get reassigned without explanation.

- Company messaging shifts toward areas you're not involved in.


→ *Action:* Request a 15-minute check-in with your manager: "I want to make sure my work aligns with current priorities. Can we revisit my focus areas?"


🔴 **Responses slow down or stop**

- Emails go unanswered; requests stall; collaborators seem distant.


→ *Action:* First, audit your asks: Are they clear, time-bound, and easy to action? Then, widen your net: Is there someone else who could help? Don't take silence personally—but do treat it as data.


🔴 **You struggle to articulate your impact**

- If asked, "What's your biggest contribution this year?" you hesitate.


→ *Action:* Keep a "brag document" (just for you). Update it monthly. When opportunities arise—promotion talks, job interviews, networking—you'll have ready, confident answers.

One Last Thing: Relevance Is a Practice, Not a Performance


You don't have to be "on" all the time. You don't have to mimic hustle culture. Relevance grows from consistent, values-aligned action—not perfection.


If you're feeling stuck, start with one tiny step:

- This week, send one proactive update.

- This month, have one genuine conversation with someone outside your immediate team.

- This quarter, document one skill you want to grow—and find one low-stakes way to practice it.


You're not behind. You're building. And in a world that often rewards noise, choosing intentionality is its own form of relevance.


*Note: If you're navigating workplace tension (like a recent complaint or feeling misunderstood), remember: clarity and documentation protect you. Keep records, communicate in writing when possible, and lean on allies (like a supportive VP of HR) when needed. Your professionalism and self-advocacy matter—even when it feels like no one's watching.*