GitLab: Leaning into remote work pre- and post-pandemic

A chat with Betsy Church Bula, Talent Brand Manager, Gitlab.

Laptop sitting on table

Ali Greene

Betsyโ€™s passion for remote work was evident from my very first question. Her journey to remote work is relatable. After a spouseโ€™s job landed them in a new city, Betsy asked her company if she could go remote and they said yes! It was not until a couple years later and a new job as the Talent Brand Manager at GitLab when Betsy realized just how good remote could be.

She went from one of the few working remotely, feeling isolated socially from peers in an HQ, to part of a fully distributed team spanning over 65 countries and a number of Slack channels full of travel and puppy pictures.

โ€œI canโ€™t tell you how different, how freeing, it is to be part of a team that encourages that much autonomy and flexibility. Itโ€™s been such a great experience.โ€œ โ€”Betsy, on her two year experience at GitLab
Gitlab Betsy Church Bula Senior Talent Brand Manager

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Much of this she attributes to their company values. When discussing company culture, I knew our conversation was going to be great after Betsy shared an opinion I wholeheartedly agree with, โ€œitโ€™s so important,โ€ she said of developing a strong foundation, โ€œto take that intentional approach and not lean on the things that were just kind of like serendipitous as you were in the office together.โ€

With so much of the inner-workings of GitLab culture made public, via their online Handbook, it is clear why GitLab earns our title of a โ€œWell-Distributedโ€ company. Throughout my conversation with Betsy this became even more apparent as I learned about their remote hiring approach, employee resource groups, and what this radical approach to transparency means for them.

On remote hiring

Nearing 1,300 team members across multiple time-zones, GitLab is truly a distributed company. Their approach to hiring is near and dear to our heart as well, as Oyster envisions a world in which every talented person can have a fulfilling careerโ€”no matter where in the world they live.

GitLab is one of those companies that is making this happen, as Betsy explains, โ€œWe consider it part of our vision for remote work to be able to spread opportunities to locales across the world. And so, you know, not leaning on these traditional hubs for talent. So itโ€™s been really cool to see how that goal kind of goes hand in hand with our goal of increasing the diversity of our team, because itโ€™s such a natural outcome of hiring in so many different places, that you have such a diverse group of people coming together and sharing different experiences and bringing different things to the table.โ€

โ€œWe consider it part of our vision for remote work to be able to spread opportunities to locales across the world.โ€

When it comes to making this vision a reality, a lot of effort is taken by Betsyโ€™s team in sharing the realities of the job throughout the interview process. First, each job posting relates to a job family, what they call the type of job, that has performance indicators attached to it. Candidates are also able to familiarize themselves with the role and the publicly available information about working at GitLab. The interview process, which strongly emphasizes behavioral questions, aims to get a sense of how successful the candidate will be at the work to be done. The interviews are designed to share past experiences of how candidates have handled certain situations at work and what their approach to being successful at work is like.

As more people have their own remote work experiences throughout the pandemic the focus on remote work in the interview process has also evolved, with candidates asking the questions. โ€œA lot of people who either said, I would have never been able to work remotely. And now I love it. And I want to be part of your teamโ€, or people who say, โ€œI havenโ€™t had the best experience this yearโ€ฆ Hearing candidates come in and say, oh, like Iโ€™ve been remote, Iโ€™m a little hesitant, because Iโ€™ve been remote this year, and itโ€™s not been the best experience, How are you different?โ€ is a question that the GitLab team takes seriously: they attribute their differences to โ€œdoing it from the startโ€ with a strong focus on structure and โ€œsuper intentionalโ€ culture.

In the end a lot of effort is put into the process, as Betsy shares โ€œwe really do focus on trying to hire the best person for that role, whether you know, theyโ€™re in whatever city or town, it doesnโ€™t it doesnโ€™t matter as long as theyโ€™re able to connect with the team.โ€

Transparency and documentation

Hiring with such a dedicated approach to transparency is not the only area where information is king. Throughout our conversation, anytime I had a question for Betsy about life at GitLab she easily referred me to a public page where more details could be found for anyone interested in the inner workings of the company.

It is evident that transparency and documentation are two qualities that make a strong remote team but the level to which GitLab takes this philosophy is impressive!

An example of this is the approach to asynchronous work: โ€œWe really do depend on everyone in the company to be able to communicate well, and document well, so that that machine continues to work well. And part of that is being able to use the GitLab tools to get your work done, and document projects make updates to the public handbook and whatever it may be.โ€ shares Betsy, โ€œYouโ€™re moving your things forward and making sure the right people are looped in and that youโ€™re getting feedback, and operating within our company values.โ€

โ€œIf I log off I on a project, at the end of the day, I should have documented it well enough so that someone in another time zone could log in while Iโ€™m asleep and be able to continue collaborating.โ€ โ€”Betsy on asynchronous work

The transparency at GitLab knows no limit, with this sharing of information going all the way up to the CEO as part of the CEO shadow program, a program whereby employees get to join the CEO in an immersive experience in San Francisco and now remotely. This opportunity provides employees with a transparent view into every aspect of the company that they might not have exposure to in the day-to-day.

Company culture

Like many remote companies during the pandemic, GitLab had to take all their in-person meetups online, something Betsy said the team had to be creative about. Creative, might be an understatement as the GitLab Informal Communication document outlines some of the ways they keep the culture strong and people connected from DJ Zoom Rooms to Scavenger Hunts.

As we know during these times, it is not always fun and games when it comes to remote work and company culture. โ€œI think one of the things that Git lab did really well at the beginning {of the pandemic} was acknowledging everyoneโ€™s situation is different. Our leaders immediately came out and said: ย โ€˜Look, yes, weโ€™re remote. Yes, we know how to do this. But this is a different bear. So we can all you know, be taking care of our friends and family first, and figuring out what our needs are.โ€™โ€

With this focus on people, it was two-specific Slack channels that stand out: Juice-Box Chats which is a group for employeeโ€™s kids and families to have the opportunity to meet over Zoom. Described in their handbook as a โ€œbring your kid to work dayโ€ the benefits of this program is to socialize internally, connect kids with similar interests or ages, and allow working parents a break from that unannounced meeting crasher. The other Mental Health Aware something Betsy considers to be a โ€œbreath of fresh airโ€ to see how people can connect and support each other across the world. โ€œEspecially this year, where people are feeling a little more isolated and donโ€™t have like their typical support systems that they might have outside of work.โ€

After an hour of talking with Betsy I knew we would barely scratch the surface of what makes GitLab so unique in terms of their remote work practices.

โ€œI think what I would say is that weโ€™ve seen more than ever this year, that remote work is the future. And itโ€™s not even the future. Itโ€™s now. I hope that so many other teams will kind of start to adopt that too, and figure out what it looks like for them. Itโ€™s again, not a one size fits all. But thereโ€™s so many unique little things and anecdotes that will come out that help you sort of determine who you are as a company. So embrace that and figure out how it works for you.โ€ โ€”Betsy, on advice and best practices for other remote companies

To learn more about GitLab, check out: https://about.gitlab.com/

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