Get Hired on WWR + Try This Clarity Hack Before You Reply

We’re highlighting top remote jobs on We Work Remotely—and a simple habit that helps you write clearer, faster responses every time.

In partnership with

First, here’s a list of remote work companies (we keep this updated).

And from that list, we’re spotlighting the newest additions…

Remote Work Hotspot of the Week

Founded in 2011, We Work Remotely (WWR) is one of the most established job boards focused entirely on remote work. With over 6 million monthly visitors, it's trusted by job seekers and companies alike.

What makes it worth using:

  • ✅ 100% Remote Jobs – Every listing is for a remote position, no filtering needed

  • ✅ Manual Review – All jobs are reviewed by staff to ensure quality and authenticity

  • ✅ Global Reach – Jobs posted by companies hiring across multiple countries and time zones

  • ✅ Wide Range of Industries – Roles in tech, marketing, customer support, product, and more

  • ✅ Remote Work Community – Active Slack group for networking, support, and job sharing

Unlike traditional job boards, WWR was built with remote work in mind from day one. If you're serious about working from anywhere, it’s one of the best places to start looking.

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Now, let’s talk about the top 3 in-demand roles on that platform:

Software Developer

Software development continues to dominate remote hiring, especially full-stack, front-end, and back-end roles.

These developers are expected to build scalable systems, fix bugs fast, and contribute to product architecture. They’re fluent in languages like JavaScript, Python, and Ruby, and often work with frameworks like React, Node.js, or Django.

Strong GitHub portfolios and experience with remote-friendly workflows (think: Git, Slack, Linear, Loom) help candidates stand out.

Startups, SaaS platforms, and agencies turn to We Work Remotely for top engineering talent that can ship code independently and communicate clearly.

Customer Support Specialist

Support roles remain one of the most accessible and high-volume jobs on WWR.

These specialists respond to customer questions, solve problems quickly, and represent the company’s voice in every interaction. Tools like Zendesk, Help Scout, and Intercom are commonly used.

Strong writing, time-zone flexibility, and calm under pressure matter more than formal credentials.

These roles show up across industries—from finance apps to learning platforms—especially for companies that run async support teams.

Marketing and Sales Roles

Companies need help growing—and they’re hiring marketers and sales reps who can move fast and test ideas.

Roles like SEO specialist, email marketer, and sales development rep appear frequently. Successful candidates understand funnels, KPIs, and tools like HubSpot, Google Analytics, or ConvertKit.

It’s a mix of creativity and data. The best hires can write great copy, run A/B tests, and close warm leads without sounding robotic.

These roles are common on WWR for brands looking to scale sustainably without bloating their teams.

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This Week’s Remote Work Hack

Inbox message giving you anxiety? Slack thread spiraling into confusion?

Try the “Narrate to Clarify” method.

Here’s how it works: Before you respond to anything complicated—email, DM, task update—pause and say your answer out loud to yourself. Don’t write yet. Just speak.

It doesn’t need to be perfect. The point is to hear your own logic in real time. You’ll catch what’s unclear, overly wordy, or emotionally off-tone before it hits someone’s screen.

Why it works:
Speaking naturally forces clarity. It bypasses the overthinking that can sneak into your writing and helps you sound more like a human, less like a robot.

Plus, it shortens the time you spend editing and second-guessing.

How to make it stick:
Keep it casual—narrate while pacing, standing, or away from your desk. Once it feels solid, then write it down. You’ll be sharper, faster, and clearer.

Bonus hack:
Use this before big messages like pitch emails, client replies, or feedback—you’ll feel more confident hitting “send.”

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Here’s to writing with more clarity and less second-guessing—even before you type a word.

Try the Narrate to Clarify method this week—and notice how speaking first helps you write faster, sound better, and stress less.

Let us know how it works for you.

See you next week!

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