Asynchronous collaboration guide: How to improve team collaboration without another meeting
Reading time: about 17 min
Jump ahead:
Meeting fatigue is hitting organizations hard. The shift to remote work took away the ad-hoc collaboration and watercooler chats so many were accustomed to, prompting more meetings as workers attempted to adjust. Since 2020, the amount of meetings workers attend has increased by 13.5% with 70% of those meetings keeping people from focusing and completing their tasks.
Organizations know this new meeting culture is draining their employees, zapping creativity, and wasting valuable time. They need a new approach to keep their teams aligned, engaged, and innovating—but what?
Some organizations have taken the approach of canceling all—or at least a large chunk—of their organization’s meetings. This approach can be effective, but only if you’ve intentionally enabled new ways for employees to share information, plan projects, and work together. If a planning session turns into a complex email thread with over 20 responses (and three different versions of an attached spreadsheet), have you really improved productivity or engagement? You may have solved the issue of “too many meetings” but created a whole new host of problems in the process.
Don’t be discouraged, though. Collaboration without meetings is possible. In fact, this type of collaboration, called asynchronous collaboration, can be far more effective than an endless string of meetings if approached strategically—that is, with the right mix of techniques and tools.
With insights from the companies leading the charge of asynchronous collaboration—Loom, Asana, Zight (formerly CloudApp), and our own team at Lucid—this guide will uncover the tried-and-true strategies that boost productivity, engagement, and innovation.
What is asynchronous collaboration?
Asynchronous collaboration (or async collaboration for short) is any unscheduled collaborative activity in which collaborators contribute at separate times, not in real time. Unlike synchronous collaboration, which requires participants to be present during a designated timeframe to contribute, asynchronous collaboration allows teammates to leave messages, share ideas, or provide feedback at their convenience.
You’re likely already familiar with some forms of asynchronous communication, like sending emails or leaving comments in a shared document. Because async collaboration allows participants to contribute as their schedule permits, it can drastically reduce the number of meetings employees need to attend.
Benefits of asynchronous collaboration
We know asynchronous work reduces meeting fatigue—but the benefits extend far beyond that. In fact, asynchronous communication can be the fuel needed to keep organizations working effectively and, ultimately, improve the bottom line. A few data-backed benefits of asynchronous collaboration are that it:
Increases efficiency: Asana’s recent Anatomy of Work Index revealed that workers are spending 58% of their time on “work about work” and 129 hours in unnecessary meetings each year. Async collaboration gives employees this precious time back.
“By enabling employees to review and respond to actions and messages in their own time, you’re giving them the flexibility and space to focus on skilled, high-impact work.” —Billy Blau, head of corporate and business development at Asana
Accommodates all collaboration styles: Lucid’s research shows that 56% of people feel that the loudest, most active voices dominate meetings. Async collaboration levels this playing field.
”Asynchronous work allows the deep thinker, the planner, the organizer, to more carefully and thoughtfully prepare their thoughts prior to a deadline and to do it at times that are most conducive to their superpowers.” —Scott Smith, CEO at Zight
Connects dispersed teams: Employee demand for flexible working arrangements is at an all-time high: 65% of professionals would prefer an entirely remote work environment and 32% would prefer a hybrid workplace. But fostering effective collaboration among a dispersed workforce isn’t always easy. With asynchronous collaboration, teams can work together from where they want, when they want—without lost productivity.
“There's an expectation of flexibility in the modern workforce—in geographical location, what time you work, and whether you work from home or in the office. Asynchronous collaboration meets this expectation, allowing teams to keep projects moving forward in the way that works best for their schedules.” —Dan Lawyer, CPO at Lucid
Increases innovation: By removing location and time barriers, async collaboration allows organizations to capture more diverse perspectives and as a result, accelerate innovation. In fact, a Boston Consulting Group survey found that organizations with above-average diversity earned a whopping 45% of their revenue through innovation.
Promotes transparency: Organizations too often leave important explanations only for synchronous meetings. Anyone outside that meeting—perhaps those who were not yet pulled into the workstream or simply not available at that time—misses out on that content.
“Meetings often create a knowledge gap and force you to have duplicative conversations to bring everyone up to speed. Asynchronous communication enables the company to capture that knowledge in a documented and easily scalable format.” —Anique Drumright, COO at Loom
Improves team morale: When an employee's schedule isn’t dictated by meetings, they have more control over when they get their work done. And research shows that when employees feel trusted and have autonomy, they’re happier. According to Harvard Business Review, a 40% reduction in meetings not only made employees more productive but also increased satisfaction by 52%.
The Leading Trends in Visual Collaboration for 2024
Asynchronous work is more relevant than ever. In Constellation Research's report, learn how Lucid is paving the way forward and dissolving the boundaries between synchronous and asynchronous work.
Download nowAsynchronous vs. synchronous collaboration: How to decide
Async collaboration can be a major time saver and morale booster—but it can’t replace all real-time conversation. So how can you determine what activities require a meeting and which are better done asynchronously?
As a general rule of thumb, asynchronous communication should be your default form of communication. In other words, if you can achieve the desired outcome without a meeting, then cancel (or don’t schedule) the meeting.
With that said, here are some criteria you can use to help you decide if the outcome you’re looking for requires live collaboration.
Asynchronous communication criteria
Ask yourself these questions to determine whether a meeting is best:
- How urgent is the matter? Asynchronous collaboration can introduce latency, especially as teams adjust to a new way of working in the early stages of implementing an asynchronous strategy. So if you need to resolve something ASAP, you might need to hop on a quick call.
- Is this a sensitive or controversial topic? Conversations that could potentially be emotional are best done in real time. Synchronous collaboration allows the participants to read body language, ask questions, and avoid any misunderstandings that could arise if the conversation were relayed via text.
- Are you trying to build team connections? This might go without saying, but intentional team-building activities are best when team members can talk, laugh, and connect face to face.
- Is the idea novel or complex? If you’re starting a project that’s completely new or different from anything your team has done before, they’ll likely have a lot of questions. If you anticipate a lot of discussion, you may want to kick off the project in real time. However, we do recommend using a format that will help you transition these projects easily into asynchronous work post-kickoff, like visual documentation of ideas, feedback, and project plans.
Pro tip
Easily transition from a kickoff meeting into async action with a visual project kickoff template that captures complex ideas, timelines, and next steps.
Try it outUse your organization’s values and mission to build a custom framework that helps your employees decide if a meeting is necessary. “For example, at Loom, we believe that explanation and presentation is a communication type best suited for asynchronous channels,” said Drumright. “Group decision-making and prioritization are examples of communication well-suited for a synchronous conversation.”
Which collaborative activities are better done asynchronously?
Need inspiration for collaborative activities that can be done asynchronously? Here are a few that, with the right tools and practices in place, can easily be done without a meeting:
Starting ideation sessions
Think of the live brainstorming sessions you’ve attended. It’s likely that most start with a few minutes for individuals to record ideas before everyone converges to discuss their ideas. Since that initial brainstorming is done independently anyways, you can save unnecessary meeting time by allowing team members to brainstorm and react to each other’s ideas asynchronously. Then, bring the team together to discuss the ideas live.
By beginning an ideation activity asynchronously, most team members will be better prepared to participate in rich discussions, especially those that need more time to think through ideas.
Explaining or assigning work
Unless you anticipate many questions or a need for live discussion, you can often explain a project asynchronously with visual documentation or recording a quick video through a platform like Loom or Zight. The assignee can view your explanation video when it works for them—and if the project is reassigned, you won’t need to spend more time reexplaining the same thing.
Providing status updates
Most status updates, such as quick project check-ins, can be done asynchronously. These types of meetings are often so ingrained in our weekly routines that we don’t stop to question their effectiveness or consider if they’re even needed.
With tools that help you visualize the work and tag teammates, you can show progress, highlight blockers, and stay aligned without as many meetings. Try a Kanban board or Scrum board template to collaboratively keep a pulse on projects.
Collecting feedback
It can be tempting to schedule a meeting to get feedback on an idea or plan, but you can collect more robust feedback—and in the appropriate context—when this is done asynchronously.
Remember, asynchronous collaboration should be part of a larger high-value collaboration strategy. The goal isn’t necessarily to replace as many meetings as you can but to work as efficiently as possible to achieve targeted outcomes. With the right tools and tactics, you should be able to transition between real-time conversation and asynchronous work seamlessly.
“Most of the time, you don’t need a meeting. But that doesn't mean that the content isn't important. It doesn’t mean that sharing ideas isn’t important. What it means is that there are better channels to do these things.” —Jarom Chung, director of product at Lucid
Best practices for asynchronous collaboration
For many organizations, asynchronous collaboration represents a major shift from traditional ways of working. This type of change requires intentional skill-building, culture reinforcement, change management, and of course, patience. To make asynchronous collaboration successful at your organization, keep these tips in mind.
Redefine productivity
Without regularly seeing people in the office or on video calls, it’s natural to worry about your team’s productivity. But don’t confuse the illusion of work with actual work being done. Instead of using hours worked or meetings attended as a baseline for productivity, set goals as a team and measure your progress towards those. This way, you build a critical level of trust with your team that empowers them to do their best work.
“My team has really specific goals we’re trying to accomplish, and it doesn’t matter how we get there, as long as we get there,” said Lawyer. “Establish together what the outcomes you expect are, and let the team use their autonomy to determine the best way to get there.”
Tip: To ensure roles and accountabilities are clear, try building out project plans and timelines in Lucidspark. You can automatically transfer these over to common project management systems, like Asana, Jira, or monday.com to keep everyone aligned.
Go visual
Why do we often schedule meetings? It’s usually because it would be too complicated or time-consuming to type out the necessary context via email or chat. “Text-based communication is limited by its linear nature,” said Chung. “Meaning, trying to connect ideas and find important information across long chat threads is nearly impossible.”
But there’s a better way to add context, align, and communicate ideas quickly: visuals. Humans understand information quicker and retain it better when it’s presented visually.
Whether you’re connecting ideas in a flowchart, tagging co-workers to review different parts of a diagram, or adding project info with sticky notes, tags, or links, visual collaboration gives every team member the context they need to make decisions and keep projects moving forward.
Dive deeper
Learn more about the different ways teams can use visual collaboration to align on complex projects.
Read the blogDocument as you work
Documentation is necessary for eliminating institutional knowledge, sharing information, and keeping team members aligned—whether or not they were part of a meeting.
Before you groan at the idea of laborious, time-consuming documentation, here’s some food for thought: Documentation can actually be a natural byproduct of collaboration—in other words, it can be practically effortless. How? By using the same collaborative platform for all your ideation sessions, prioritization, decision-making, project planning, and more, you’ll organically produce documentation that accelerates innovation.
With all ideas, project context, and feedback centralized in one spot, you can easily answer questions and solve problems without taking time on anyone’s calendar.
Toolkit for effortless documentation
Check out our pre-selected templates to easily document everything from processes and plans to team structure and mission.
Get startedStandardize team communication norms
To ensure everyone in the team is aligned on how to best collaborate asynchronously, take the time to build a team working agreement that details communication expectations and best practices. Be sure to build this collaboratively, so everyone has the chance to contribute and feel bought in to this agreement. A sample team charter for working asynchronously may include:
- Each team member’s working hours, location, and time zone
- Tools to use for different types of collaboration (i.e., Slack for daily updates, Lucid for knowledge sharing, etc.)
- Communication agreements for different levels of urgency (i.e., deadlines to respond, how to indicate alignment, etc.)
- Links to common team resources or knowledge bases
A team charter not only helps set the right expectations for your current team, but it’s also a great way to get new team members up to speed quickly. In Lucid, you can even use team hubs as a home base for all team information.
Reevaluate recurring meetings
Many recurring meetings, even if they were valuable at one point, can quickly turn into time sinks, disrupting focus and productivity.
“Many employees have a perception that management expects them to attend all these real-time conversations,” said Lawyer. “But in reality, these are just long-standing rituals that no one has bothered to question.”
Treat the transition to async as a trial-and-error process. That could mean picking a recurring meeting to cancel and trying in an asynchronous format. You may learn you can decrease the frequency of the meeting to quarterly instead of monthly or weekly—or you might not need to meet at all.
Lead by example
Most large-scale organizational change requires full leadership support to be successful. If you’re in a position to lead the shift to async, remember: It’s not enough to document your collaboration patterns—you must also emulate this behavior. For example, if you say you want to avoid the “always on” mentality that often accompanies flexible work, set the precedent that you will schedule, not send, messages outside of working hours—and stick to it. When you show you’re serious about this behavior, the rest of the team will follow suit.
“More often than not, there are advocates within an organization who are pushing for change,” said Smith. “They want to improve an existing dynamic, but without executive or managerial support, those changemakers may get frustrated and feel their efforts are being ignored.”
Get the guide
Leading through change requires a flexible approach to leadership. Get tips from Lucid experts on how to adopt an agile leadership style.
Learn moreHow to build an asynchronous collaboration tech stack
Asynchronous work requires the right tools to be effective—and we don’t just mean email. To properly share information and keep projects moving forward, look for tools that help add context, clarify ideas, and save you time.
When building out your asynchronous collaboration tech stack, these are the must-haves to ensure continuity, collaboration, and alignment.
Chat and messaging platforms
Many teams rely on messaging tools, like Slack or Microsoft Teams, for basic asynchronous communication. These tools allow you to chat with teammates, share updates, ask questions, and respond on your own time.
Using these tools, you can create groups or channels with those you frequently communicate with, making these tools a great way to reach alignment on easy-to-explain topics. If you notice your messages start to get too long or hard to follow, though, you’re probably better off using a different asynchronous tool.
Video recording tools
Video recordings are a great way to add context to projects without a meeting. With tools like Loom or Zight, you can send pre-recorded project explanations, status updates, or screenshares for teammates to watch at their convenience.
According to a survey Loom ran of office workers in the US and UK, nearly a third (32%) said the majority of digital work meetings could be replaced by asynchronous videos.
Not only are video recordings a great way to increase efficiency, but according to Jana Lass, VP of Marketing at Zight, they can also increase connection: “You can see a human face—making touchpoints more personal, more understandable, and consumable on everyone’s own time and schedule while avoiding many of the distractions that occur in an in-person work environment.”
Project and work management systems
Project and work management tools—like Jira, Asana, or Smartsheet—become especially important when working asynchronously because they allow teams to track work, assign tasks, and manage timelines without needing a meeting.
“One of the best things about Asana is that all communication is connected directly to work, making it easy to quickly understand who is doing what, and by when,” said Blau.
Cloud-based document storage and knowledge management tools
You can help your team get up-to-date information by using file storage tools like Google Drive and Microsoft OneDrive or knowledge sharing tools like Confluence and Notion. These cloud-based platforms allow team members from across the globe to access the files they need, when they need them.
Visual collaboration platforms
To truly help your team members stay aligned, informed, and engaged without a meeting, you’ll need a visual collaboration platform. Visual collaboration helps teams reach a shared understanding quicker and uncover deeper insights than if relying solely on verbal or text-based communication. Teams can use a visual collaboration platform to collaborate asynchronously on anything from brainstorming ideas to designing architectures or even planning new products.
The best part? By capturing all context in one place, the visual collaboration platform serves as a living blueprint for the organization, making it easy for teams to move seamlessly between meetings and async work without losing momentum.
It’s important to note that not all visual collaboration platforms are created equal. Look for solutions that integrate well into your workflow, leverage your existing data, and automate visualizations for you.
How to evaluate visual collaboration platforms
Identify your collaborative needs, compare options, and learn how to choose the best visual collaboration solution for your organization.
Get the checklistNo matter what tools you decide to add to your asynchronous tech stack, it’s important that they integrate well with each other. Otherwise, you could end up with siloed information and inadvertently make async collaboration more complex, not less.
Take the next steps in your async collaboration journey
Asynchronous collaboration can be an incredibly powerful way to combat meeting fatigue while also increasing organizational efficiency, engagement, and innovation. The key is being intentional—not just canceling meetings and hoping for the best. With the right combination of tools and techniques, you can enable continuous collaboration, from real-time to asynchronous, idea to reality.
According to Constellation Research’s report, “The Leading Trends in Visual Collaboration for 2024”:
"In today’s global work environment, the organization places a strong emphasis on asynchronous collaboration. Lucid has proven to be instrumental in this regard. The tool’s capabilities have been especially beneficial for teams operating in a hybrid work model, bridging the gap between remote and onsite collaborators.”
Leading organizations are turning to the Lucid Visual Collaboration Suite to increase collaboration, alignment, and clarity. With the combination of Lucidchart’s intelligent diagramming, Lucidspark’s flexible virtual whiteboard, and advanced capabilities through team hubs, Collaborative AI, and Visual Activities, the Lucid Suite is the only visual collaboration solution that powers the entire project lifecycle.
In fact, Lucid customers save an average of 2.2 meetings per week by collaborating asynchronously with Lucid. And according to a commissioned study conducted by Forrester Consulting on behalf of Lucid, a composite organization using Lucid avoided 146,000 of follow-up meetings, saving $2.6M (The Total Economic Impact™ Of The Lucid Visual Collaboration Suite, May 2023).
With a dedicated team of professional service experts to act as strategic partners and help increase time-to-value, it’s easy to see the efficiency gains from day one.
Get started with async
Learn more about how the Lucid Suite can power your asynchronous collaboration strategy.
Get in touchAbout Lucid
Lucid Software is a pioneer and leader in visual collaboration dedicated to helping teams build the future. With its products—Lucidchart, Lucidspark, and Lucidscale—teams are supported from ideation to execution and are empowered to align around a shared vision, clarify complexity, and collaborate visually, no matter where they are. Lucid is proud to serve top businesses around the world, including customers such as Google, GE, and NBC Universal, and 99% of the Fortune 500. Lucid partners with industry leaders, including Google, Atlassian, and Microsoft. Since its founding, Lucid has received numerous awards for its products, business, and workplace culture. For more information, visit lucid.co.
Related articles
Bring your bright ideas to life.
or continue with
By registering, you agree to our Terms of Service and you acknowledge that you have read and understand our Privacy Policy.