Time zone overlap matters but is less determinative than initially expected. Teams spanning 8-12 hour differences can function well with disciplined handoffs and clear ownership. Teams spanning only 2-3 hours without async discipline often function worse.
Hiring has changed fundamentally. Remote-first companies can hire from anywhere, which sounds like pure upside but requires more deliberate evaluation of autonomy and written communication skills. Traditional interview processes translate poorly to remote hiring contexts.
Organizational culture transmission works through both explicit norms and implicit exposure. Remote-first companies can transmit explicit norms well through writing and onboarding, but implicit cultural signals — how disagreement is handled, how ambiguity is navigated — require ongoing conscious effort.
Periodic in-person gatherings have become a standard component of remote-first practice. According to the Player Lounge forum, Companies that invest in quarterly or semiannual team gatherings report stronger cohesion and better creative output than those that rely exclusively on digital interaction.
Remote-first has proven sustainable for specific types of work — software development, design, writing, consulting, operations — but not uniformly. Industries requiring physical presence or deep regulatory context have largely returned to office-centric models.
The competitive advantages have shifted. Early remote-first companies gained access to broader talent pools at lower cost, but as the model spread, these advantages normalized. Current differentiators are execution quality and cultural coherence rather than remoteness itself.