I wish I could reach the correct audience to suggest to that, if you are going to work full time remote, especially for a mostly remote company for the first time, it is absolutely crucial that you learn how people communicate and actively participate in it. Not just how work information is disseminated. Join your “random” and hobby Teams or Slack channels. Meet people not on your direct team. Join a social group if your company sponsors one you find interesting. It indeed takes effort as an introvert - but while working remote you are not building relationships organically like in an office, at all. Those work relationships are important to getting stuff done in business, being noticed when opportunities come up, emotionally feeling part of a team and mission, and staying mentally healthy. We spend a big chunk of our lives working!

Over the last 5 years of working and managing a team FT remote, this social interactivity is one of the top indicators I’ve observed of whether someone will succeed and be balanced and happy, long term - or whether they will burn out and be left behind. The people who often vanish the fastest never chatted except when prompted to do so for business, never turned their camera on, nor set a profile image.

I’m not telling you to step way outside your comfort zone. I’m not saying there aren’t situations where it’s necessary to turn off the camera. I’m not saying you’ll automatically fail if you never socialize. I’m just giving you some advice based on hard life lessons of watching people thrive versus be unhappy.

@hacks4pancakes I actually find it *easier* and significantly less draining to interact online, ever since BBSes, FidoNet, then Usenet, IRC (still there), the plethora of early IM clients, and now Slack & Teams & social media.

I wish we'd have more social- and fun-oriented Teams chats at work, but We Must Be Professional... I'm skirting the line with the same profile image I use here, and a chat w/ 2 others where I respond in memes half the time.

@hacks4pancakes I should probably add that only select people get more than 20% remote, sorta the nature of the beast. But even beforehand, I typically avoided all in-person social functions there.