Hybrid working in IT: 7 practical steps

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Published by
WINMAG Pro Editorial Team
Wed, 10 June 2026, 08:30
Read time: 4 min 34 sec
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In this step-by-step plan, we look from the ground up. This way, you have everything from start to finish to work hybrid in IT.

Step 1: Determine your work model

Yes, really the beginning; first determine how you want to work. Do you work fully remote, partly in the office, or flexibly per project? Map out:

  • What your role requires in terms of presence, collaboration, and availability.
  • Which days or activities are suitable for working from home.
  • What team members can expect from each other.

Make clear agreements with your team or supervisor about communication, working hours, and responsibilities. This prevents noise and creates space for technical setup in line with your work rhythm.

Step 2: Inventory what you need

Now it’s time to set up your home workspace. Depending on your model, you may need different tools or equipment. You can find out by diving deeper into your daily tasks. For example, consider:

  • Whether you need access to internal networks or staging servers.
  • How much you work with virtualization, CI/CD, or infrastructure management.
  • How much interaction you have with colleagues, clients, or external suppliers.

Document your needs and differentiate between essential resources (such as repos, scripts, or dev environments) and supporting resources (think of communication or documentation tools). This way, you ensure a plan without blind spots.

Step 3: Choose suitable hardware and connectivity

That plan must of course become a reality. Your hybrid workspace depends on robust hardware and stable internet. So look for equipment with sufficient performance (think of the amount of RAM, SSD, CPU). Check if you need docking stations to quickly switch between workspaces. And also consider the 'smaller' things, such as an extra screen or an ergonomic keyboard/mouse.

A stable internet connection is also essential. If something goes wrong, you also need a 4G/5G fallback (e.g., via tethering or dongle). And if you have a lot of contact with colleagues or stakeholders, don’t forget about sound quality: a good headset with noise cancelling prevents miscommunication.

Step 4: Set up your work environment with cloud tools

After setting up the hardware, it’s time for the software. For accessibility, cloud-based tools are of course the most convenient. Most companies use Microsoft 365 or Google Workspace for email, calendar, and collaborating on documents. GitHub, GitLab, or Bitbucket are popular for code management, and Notion, Confluence, or SharePoint for knowledge sharing and documentation.

For communication within a team or project, apps like Slack, Teams, or Discord can be the most useful. Note: ensure that all these tools are integrated with your identity & access management system for central manageability. And of course, make sure they are well secured.

Step 5: Ensure a secure infrastructure

Security is crucial in a hybrid setup. Not only for your organization but also for your own access. Minimum requirements are:

  • VPN or SD-WAN for encrypted connections.
  • Multi-factor authentication (MFA) on all accounts.
  • Zero-trust access control: access per user, per device, per session.
  • Endpoint Detection & Response (EDR) and device management (e.g., via Intune or Jamf).

Do you work in a regulated sector? Then also consider compliance and regulations such as NIS2 or ISO standards. And a small tip: turn off your setup outside of working hours.

Step 6: Automate and monitor where possible

In IT, efficient hybrid working means as little manual management as possible. Since you don’t want to constantly be patching, updating, and keeping track or analyzing, it’s useful to automate the following tasks:

  • CI/CD pipelines (e.g., with GitHub Actions or Jenkins).
  • Patches, updates, and backups via scripts or RMM tools.
  • Monitoring of network, performance, and applications (e.g., via Zabbix, Datadog, or Prometheus).

Also ensure alerting in case of incidents, so you can intervene remotely without wasting time.

Step 7: Evaluate, optimize, and maintain balance

Okay, you can now get to work. However, you are not done yet; no matter how well you set everything up, you never know if everything is actually running smoothly. Technology is one thing, but human factors make or break a hybrid work structure. Therefore, build in evaluation moments:

  • Regularly schedule a check-in with your team or supervisor.
  • Keep track of what works well and what frustrates you.
  • Use tools to keep your workload visible.

Also monitor your private/work balance. For this, we look back at the first step: for example, use focus settings in Teams or work with fixed start and end times. Efficient hybrid working is not just about working smart; it’s also about working sustainably.

IT is ready to work hybrid

With these 7 steps, you as a professional in IT lay a foundation for hybrid working. By starting strategically, securing technically, and remaining sober in evaluations, you build your ideal work structure, safely and without problems.

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