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RWL035 How to Align with Visionary CEOs for Dream Remote Job Success

What if the secret to landing your dream remote job isn’t about you, but about understanding the very heart of remote business leaders? This episode of the Remote Work Life podcast promises to shift your perspective by revealing insights from top CEOs who prioritize solving global problems beyond geographical constraints. Discover how aligning your goals with these visionary leaders’ missions can make you an invaluable asset to any remote team. We’re also eager to hear your thoughts on the podcast format: do you enjoy a raw, unfiltered experience, or prefer a polished, professional touch? Your feedback is crucial as we strive to perfect our content and grow our community.

Aspiring entrepreneurs, this one’s for you! Understand why many CEOs opt for remote business models and how having an entrepreneurial mindset can set you up for success in a remote work environment. Learn the value of taking ownership and bringing fresh, innovative ideas to the table, and how this can help you connect with potential opportunities. Plus, join our thriving Facebook community to collaborate, share insights, and battle the isolation often associated with remote work. Your journey to thriving in the remote work landscape starts here, backed by a supportive network that shares your passion and drive.

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Benefits of Remote Work Explained

Speaker 1

0:00

Hello, it's Alex from the Remote Work Life podcast. I hope you're well. How are you doing? Wherever you may be in the world?

Speaker 1

0:07

The Remote Work Life podcast is all about me talking to you about the benefits of remote work and sharing interviews that I've done with people who know it best, and really me wanting to help you to know what to expect and how to connect with your next opportunity in the world of remote work. And today I want to talk about something that I believe will really help you to do that, really help you to connect with your next opportunity, whether that be you prospecting for new leads or whether that be you wanting to actually become an employee within an existing remote business. And the reason I say that is because I have a group on Facebook and a lot of the conversations, as you can probably imagine, are around people wanting to to work remotely. But there are a number of people in there who post and, in fact, not just my group, but a number of groups on Facebook where people post their requests in terms of wanting to start remote work, but they lead with the fact that they want to work remotely and, in fact, I commented on one of the posts saying this is probably not the way. Well, this is certainly not the way you should approach looking for remote work. And I got a bit of a bit of a sort of a laugh emoji I don't know if they were just it was just tongue-in-cheek or they were being serious, I don't know, or they just thought that what I was saying was completely ridiculous, who knows. But yeah, I mean, I've noticed that a lot of people approach looking for a remote opportunity from the point of view of their own needs, their own wants, and that could really alienate you from the people who are hiring remote people. So I think by me sharing with you some of the reasons why these ceos, some of these great ceos, have started remote businesses, I think by me sharing with you that information and you understanding of them a lot more, I think you can then formulate a strategy to connect with those people and hopefully increase your chances of getting that remote opportunity that you want.

Speaker 1

2:21

But before I go into that, I just want to ask you a question and I want you to comment below, because I don't know if you've noticed, but this is a very new podcast. This is just, I think, my 10th episode, 10th or 11th episode, so I'm quite new to the world of podcasting and you've probably noticed it's quite I don't know how to explain it quite bare in the sense that I don't have an intro, I don't have any music introducing me, I don't have any real slogan as such, I don't, it's just very bare. And I want to know, do you prefer that? I mean, is that the kind of thing you like? Do you want me to just to get straight into the episode? Do you want me to introduce? How do you want me to sort of build this podcast? Do you want me to continue with the podcast? That's another thing. Please comment below and also, if you like the information that I'm sharing with you, please remember to leave me a rating, and please do well, yeah, leave me a five-star rating. That would be really nice. And leave me a comment as well. Please do, because it's nice to know that there are people out there listening, but not only that people who are hopefully benefiting from some of the things that I am talking about.

Speaker 1

3:33

So on to my list of I think it's seven things that I you know some of the reasons why some of the best remote CEOs start their businesses, and this is with a view to you. You know, using this information to connect with them and with others, because I think a lot of other CEOs who have remote businesses have similar sort of train of thought, because I've interviewed about I think about 10 or 11. Recently I did some informational interviews as part of the remote work life summit and this information I'm about to give you is information that a lot of them said over and again. So the first thing on my list is they really want to. When they start their business, they want to solve a problem. They want to solve a problem, a long problem, a problem that's probably perhaps not going to go away anytime soon, a problem that is really affecting the lives of people, and they want to provide some sort of solution to that problem. So if you think about that from your perspective, then if you can then find a way of understanding how you can fit into that whole um, fit into the picture really, and show them and demonstrate to them how you can help them to help their clients or help the people that they help to solve those problems, if you can add value in in what they do, then you're on to a winner. Because, yeah, from all of the CEOs that I've interviewed over the years. That is their main reason for wanting to set up their business, and they want to solve a problem whilst earning a living a lot of them, obviously as well. So if you can find a way of fitting in to solve their problem, then you will be, you know, onto a winner there. So that's reason number one. Reason number two is well, and these are not in any particular order, this is just a list that I've I've made, and this is number two.

Speaker 1

5:36

This happens to be number two on my list, so they don't necessarily want to be tied to a specific location to solve that problem, and let me explain briefly one reason why that may be the case. So the certain areas of the world. So, for example, if you take silicon valley, where a lot of talent will gravitate to those areas, they'll, you know, a lot of businesses as well will gravitate towards those areas and it will attract the talent, some of the best talent out there. And it's not a cheap place to set up. Is it really? It's not. It's, it's quite expensive. I hear a lot of people complaining about the cost of living there, as nice as it may be, and well, some people don't like it there actually.

Speaker 1

6:20

But if you take that just as an example, if you don't, if you're tied to that specific location, then you know you're tied to things like the rates in that area, tied to things like hiring people from that particular area who can afford to live there, you know. So they don't necessarily want to be tied to a specific location. They want to be able to be flexible as to where they locate themselves. And this is, you know, when it comes to being location independent, they're also thinking as well about their own lifestyle, I think as well, because to be location independent does help you to mold a kind of lifestyle that you want. So, yeah, I think, although solving a problem is, you know, solving a client's problem is one of the reasons why they start their business. Not having to be tied to a location is certainly another aspect of their thought process when they're setting up and when they're growing. So that's another reason that I found.

Speaker 1

7:26

So another reason on my list number three on my list is and it's kind of connected to not being tied to a specific location, and that is they want a diverse and rich workforce and candidate pool to be able to hire from, because it's not necessarily the case that all the best talent is going to be in Silicon Valley or in, I don't know, in the city of London. There are going to be talented people who perhaps, either for whatever reason, don't want to move city of london. There are going to be talented people who perhaps, either for whatever reason, don't want to move to those areas. You know. They may be in india, they may be in somewhere in I don't know in africa, they may be in somewhere in europe or asia or wherever it may be.

Speaker 1

8:10

Having a remote business enables the ceos sort of like fish in a sort of real diverse and rich pool of talent that they may not have been able to access had they located in a bricks and mortar business in one part of the world. So that is another reason that they want to set up as a remote business. So let's move on to reason number four on my list, which is they want to connect with people. They want to make friends with people from different backgrounds as well. So what I found is the remote CEOs and the people that work within the remote businesses.

Speaker 1

9:02

What I found is the remote CEOs and the people that work within the remote businesses. They're very keen on connecting and relationships and communication and making friends. And that's a really important aspect of remote work because, if you think about it, working remotely, you have to have a really tight knit and a really sort of culturally aligned team. A really sort of culturally aligned team, and they're very, they're very keen on having people that they can really get on with, because that in that way and I think you know, co-located businesses could learn a lot from this having people that you can get on with and having a team that's really sort of going in the same direction from a cultural standpoint, from the point of view of the mission and the problems that they solve. Having that all in your team and your setup is a recipe for real camaraderie, it's a recipe for productivity, it's a recipe for success, in my opinion. So you know they want to make friends, friends, they want to connect with people from different backgrounds.

Speaker 1

9:57

So let's go on to my next reason, or at least a reason that I believe the best CEOs um start working remotely and set up remote businesses. The next reason on my list is they want a team that can take responsibility and be empowered to do their best work. And I've put the word here trust. Trust is something that came up in a number of interviews that I did with the remote CEOs that I interviewed as part of the remote work-life summit. Trust is a massive word, but they want to give you the responsibility to do your best work. They want to leave you to do your best work and not have to look over your shoulder, because they believe and I agree with this because I've worked remotely myself and I've experienced this myself they believe that you can do your best work working.

Speaker 1

10:51

You know working autonomously, being responsible for your own projects, being responsible for your own team. You know being responsible for putting forward ideas, being part of the culture. They want people who are proactive and you know part of that whole situation where you're taking responsibility, you're empowered. They want to empower you. They want to give you the tools to do your best work and they're not. It's not just spin. You know how sometimes you go to a job and they feed you with this spin that you know. We want to do this for you, want to do that for you. We want to make sure that you do your best work and, with the remote CEOs and the remote people that I've interviewed, they are really engaged with doing their best work and they're really, you know, they they take a vested interest in doing their best and showing up every day, being part of the culture, being part of the team, being part of the culture, being part of the team, being part of the business and really, really coming to do their best. And you know, and I think, having that trust, you know, having that trust instilled, if you've got that trust to do your work, then I really believe you feel, you feel good about yourself, you feel a lot more confident. So I can, really, I can really get on board with that.

Speaker 1

12:16

So another reason, then, that I have on my list is that they want to help you to thrive in your career, and that's that's linked to something that you know the previous point I just made, but to further that point, what, what you find with working remotely is that it gives you time to do things that you want to do. It gives you the ability to um, to, to find more balance in your work and in your life, and it gives you the ability to perhaps well, not perhaps it gives you the ability to not have to commute. So that's all obviously linked with time. So, yeah, they want, they want to help you. I really believe that they want to help you to experience the benefits that they've experienced through setting up their remote business.

Future Entrepreneurs in Remote Work

Speaker 1

12:56

But, as I said, first and foremost, it's all about solving solving those problems that that are in the world and problems that are long-standing problems and problems that they have a real interest in solving. So, yeah, that's um, how many. How many things did I mention there? So, solving problems not being tied to a location, a diverse workforce, a rich workforce, being able to connect with friends and people from different backgrounds, having a team that can take responsibility and be empowered and have that trust. And they also want to help you to thrive in your career as well.

Speaker 1

13:32

I really believe that from all the interviews that I did and I think I mean to add another point they want you almost to be, you know and this is also linked with helping you to thrive. They want you to feel as though you are responsible for almost like running a business, and some of the CEOs I interviewed a couple of them say that they almost expect people to still have their interests on the side and still have their ideas around being entrepreneurs, because a lot of the time, entrepreneurs are suited to working remotely. It's one of those things that the traits of an entrepreneur are very much suited to the remote lifestyle, so that's another additional reason why I think they want to create future entrepreneurs, some of the remote ceos that I've spoken to. So that's, I think, seven, seven reasons why um ceos start up their businesses remote businesses and it's all really about people and, as I said, solving problems. So I hope that's helped you, I think, if you can then use some of this information to then begin to understand how you can connect with your next opportunity and do your research into the reasons why the CEO that you want to approach started his or her business, because that will really help you. It really will.

Speaker 1

15:07

Please don't just go about talking about the fact that you want to work remotely.

Speaker 1

15:15

Anyway, I hope that has helped you.

Speaker 1

15:18

Please listen out for more episodes and, as I said, if you've liked this and if you like the other content that I'm putting out, please give me a five-star rating and tell me what you don't like about this podcast and tell me what you want me to include in the next podcast episodes, by commenting below or commenting on iTunes or Google Play or wherever it is that you're listening to me from and join the Facebook group as well, because you can also post questions and comments in there.

Speaker 1

15:49

We're almost at 400 people in the group. It's a fairly quiet group at the moment, but there are a few people in there posting comments, posting questions. You know, working remotely. It's always good to have a community and I'm trying to build that community of people so that we can all work together. We can ask each other questions, we can thrive, we can avoid isolation. We can ask each other questions, we can thrive, we can avoid isolation, all those sorts of things. So look at the show notes that I've included for a link to the group and I will speak to you in the next episode.