Why remote work can quietly limit your growth if you’re not careful♦Photo by Nelly Antoniadou on UnsplashLife feels easier within the comfort of your home.
Hot tea is always within reach. There’s no pressure to look a certain way. No forced small talk. No subtle tension when a manager walks by.
It feels… lighter.
But behind the screen, something quieter is happening.
Your chances of standing out are shrinking. Your exposure to how workplaces actually function is fading. And slowly, almost invisibly, your attitude toward growth begins to soften.
At a stage where growth should be intentional, comfort takes over.
No commute.
No conference rooms.
No overheard conversations.
No one tapping your shoulder to say, “Hey, quick thing…”
On the surface, it feels efficient. Even comfortable.
But if you’re a new engineer who has never experienced an in-person workplace, there’s something important you might not realize.
It's understanding what remote work quietly removes—and what you need to rebuild intentionally.
Context Learning Takes A BackseatWhen you work from home, your tasks are usually well-defined:
- Pick up a ticket
- Write code
- Fix bugs
- Push changes
You get comfortable executing.
But in an office, something else happens in parallel:
You overhear why decisions are made, you see disagreements unfold, and you notice who influences what and how.
That ambient exposure builds context.
Without it, your growth can become narrow:
You would often be clear on what to do, but not always why it matters.
And over time, that gap grows and shows.
Comfort Quietly Reduces VisibilityIn an office, visibility happens passively:
- People see you working
- They notice your involvement
- Your presence builds familiarity
In remote setups, none of that exists by default.
Your work doesn’t travel unless you make it travel.
So even if you’re doing good work, it can remain invisible—not because people don’t care, but because they’re busy; they’re not in your day-to-day catch-up calls, and you're not in their line of sight
This can lead to a frustrating feeling: “I’m working hard, but no one seems to notice.”
And visibility gap slowly creeps in
Communication Is No Longer OptionalIn a physical office, you can compensate for weak communication by clarifying things in person and reading expressions in real time.
Remote work removes those safety nets.
Now your thinking is judged by the following:
- Slack messages
- PR comments
- Meeting inputs
If your communication is unclear, your work appears unclear—even if your thinking is solid.
This accelerates something many engineers only learn later:
Clarity is not optional. It’s part of your job.
You Miss Informal Feedback LoopsIn offices, feedback is often subtle in the form of a quick correction at your desk, a casual “this approach might not scale," or a 2-minute post-meeting comment
These are low-pressure, high-frequency signals.
Remote work replaces them with:
- Formal reviews
- Scheduled 1:1s
- Written comments
Which means:
Feedback becomes less frequent but more loaded
By the time you hear it, it often feels heavier than it should.
And if you’re not proactive in asking, you might not get enough of it at all.
Your Network Stays Smaller Than You ThinkOne of the most underrated parts of early career growth is
Who knows you—and how they know you
In offices, relationships form organically:
- Coffee breaks
- Walking between meetings
- Casual conversations
Remote work reduces interactions to
Scheduled calls with specific agendas
Which means you might only know the following:
- Your immediate team
- Your manager
And that’s it.
This limits:
- Opportunities
- Mentorship
- Internal mobility
Not immediately, but over time.
So What Should You Do About It?This is not a disadvantage you’re stuck with.
But it is one you need to actively compensate for.
A few shifts make a significant difference:
1. Make your work visible
- Share updates proactively
- Write clear PR descriptions
- Summarize what you did and why
Not for attention — for alignment.
2. Ask for context, not just tasks
Don’t stop at “what needs to be done."
Ask:
- Why are we doing this?
- What trade-offs are we considering?
This builds depth.
3. Speak—even if briefly
You don’t need to dominate meetings.
But:
- Ask one question
- Share one thought
- Summarize one idea
Presence matters.
4. Create your own feedback loops
Don't wait for formal reviews.
Ask:
- “Is this approach reasonable?”
- “Anything I could improve here?”
Small, frequent feedback compounds.
5. Build connections intentionally
Message people.
Schedule short calls.
Be curious about their work.
It may feel unnatural at first, but it replaces what the office would have done for you.
Final ThoughtStarting your career remotely isn’t a disadvantage.
But it is a different game.
Early growth isn’t just about output.
It's about context, communication, visibility, and relationships.
In an office, these come to you.
In remote work, you have to build them yourself.
And the sooner you realize that,
The faster you close the gap between doing the job
and actually growing in it.
♦How to Grow Faster While Working from Home was originally published in Code Like A Girl on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.