Strategies For Enhancing Team Communication

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  • View profile for Susanna Romantsova
    Susanna Romantsova Susanna Romantsova is an Influencer

    Certified Psychological Safety & Inclusive Leadership Expert | TEDx Speaker | Forbes 30u30 | Top LinkedIn Voice

    30,339 followers

    Diverse teams are powerful, but only if they’re designed to be. Just putting different people together isn’t enough. What I’ve learned over 11+ years is that true  🧠 Collective Intelligence only emerges when diversity is intentionally activated. 🖌 My Blueprint to unlock it: 🔹 Cognitive diversity It’s about bringing different thinking styles. Teams that embrace divergent ways of solving problems uncover creative solutions that others miss. 🔹 Demographic Diversity The presence of different intersectional identities and lived experiences creates a richer understanding of potential blind spots and unmet needs. 🔹 Experiential Diversity Diverse career paths and life stories equip teams with practical insights that can cut through “tried-and-true” methods that often fail in complex, changing environments. 🔹 Psychological Safety This is the game-changer. Without it, diversity backfires. High-performing teams create a “safe container” where everyone��from the quiet thinkers to the bold disruptors—can voice their ideas without fear. 🔹 Inclusive Decision-Making Diversity is wasted if decisions are still made by the loudest voice in the room. Structured inclusion ensures that varied perspectives aren’t just heard but drive the direction forward. The result? 1️⃣ Faster, smarter decisions: diverse insights reduce blind spots and increase confidence in strategic choices, helping leaders respond swiftly to market changes. 2️⃣ Increased innovation and agility: aligned teams leverage diverse perspectives to solve complex problems creatively and adapt to new challenges with resilience. 3️⃣ Stronger engagement and retention: when teams feel psychologically safe and included, they’re more committed and motivated. This translates to lower turnover and higher morale. The path to unlocking your team’s full potential starts with aligning on the right elements—diversity, psychological safety, and inclusion in decisions. 🤔 P.S. Where is your team on the path to collective intelligence—and what’s your next step?

  • View profile for Dr. Carolyn Frost

    Work-Life Intelligence Expert | Boundaries + EQ to help you stay steady and respected under pressure - without burnout and exhaustion | Mom of 4 🌿

    344,047 followers

    Team dynamics are failing silently right now. 12 power phrases that change everything: You see the signs: Tense meetings Defensive responses Silent disagreement But surface-level solutions aren't fixing the root cause. Real connection happens in small moments of psychological safety. These phrases transform team dynamics instantly: 1) "I notice things feel tense, can we pause here?" ↳ Name the elephant. Everyone exhales. 2) "Here's what I'm not sure about" ↳ Model vulnerability. Watch others open up. 3) "What support do you need right now?" ↳ Ask this before giving advice. Creates trust instantly. 4) "That's an interesting perspective - tell me more" ↳ Replace defensive reactions with curious questions. 5) "I made a mistake, and here's what I learned" ↳ Share failures first, watch psychological safety soar. 6) "Let's explore what we missed together" ↳ Turn blame into collective learning. 7) "I appreciate you bringing this up" ↳ Reward courage. It multiplies. 8) "What would make this feel safer to discuss?" ↳ Create containers before hard conversations. 9) "I might be wrong about this" ↳ Three words that unlock honest dialogue. 10) "Let's take 5 minutes to reflect individually" ↳ Silent reflection beats reactive responses. 11) "What else should I be asking?" ↳ Make space for the unsaid. 12) "Help me understand the impact on you" ↳ Switch from defending to understanding. Your next team interaction is a choice. Make it one that builds psychological safety ✨ Which phrase will transform your team dynamics today? -- ♻️ Repost to help your network build stronger team connections without forcing trust 🐱🏍Follow Dr. Carolyn Frost for more strategies on creating high-performance environments where people thrive

  • View profile for Vrinda Gupta

    2× TEDx Speaker | Corporate Communication Trainer | I Help Teams & Leaders Communicate with Authority | Better Client Conversations, Stronger Leadership Presence, Higher Conversions | Top Voice 2025

    133,287 followers

    Good: → "Thanks for the feedback." Better: → "Thanks for pointing that out. I'll try to do better next time." Best: → "I appreciate you taking the time to provide constructive feedback on my presentation style. I understand your point about pacing & will consciously work on varying my speed in the future." Next level: → "I actively solicit feedback after each presentation. I've found that asking specific questions like, "What was the most impactful part of the presentation?" or "What could have been clearer?" yields the most actionable insights. I then meticulously track & analyze this feedback to identify patterns and areas for consistent improvement." Reality: → "Sometimes, feedback stings. It's easy to get defensive, especially when you're passionate about your work. The reality is, even the harshest feedback often contains a kernel of truth. The key is to separate the message from the delivery, focus on the intent, and identify actionable steps for growth. Remember, feedback is a gift, even when wrapped in prickly paper." Accepting feedback takes practice sometimes. Have you ever felt stung by a constructive feedback? Share your stories before.

  • View profile for Dr. Kartik Nagendraa

    CMO, LinkedIn Top Voice, Coach (ICF Certified), Author

    10,111 followers

    Teams don’t break because of big failures. They break because people stop seeing each other.🤦🏻 A recent study from Wharton Neuroscience Initiative found that a two-minute dyadic exercise - where pairs silently gaze into each other’s eyes and reflect on shared human experiences - significantly improved feelings of closeness and prosocial behaviour, even in virtual settings. Why does such a modest act matter?🤔 Because remote and hybrid work have stripped many of the non-verbal cues that teams rely on for trust, alignment and meaningful collaboration. Without consistent signals of presence and mutual attention, teams slow down. They hesitate. They lose momentum. From a leadership perspective this has three clear implications: 1️⃣ Trust isn’t optional: Research shows that teams rank trust and communication among their top drivers of performance. When trust is missing, three in four cross-functional teams underperform. So trust is not “nice to have”. It is a performance imperative. 2️⃣ Presence matters more than process: You can layer tools and workflows. But if you don’t restore human presence - visible attention, mutual recognition, real-time interaction - the tools won’t bridge the gap. Leaders must build moments of presence, not just more meetings. 3️⃣ Small acts scale big results: You don’t need an expensive platform or overhaul to begin. A weekly structured check-in where participants look at each other, reflect silently and then speak gives teams a refresh of connection. Over time, these efforts add up into higher clarity, fewer misunderstandings, faster decisions. Action steps for leaders to consider: 👉🏻 Set aside 5 minutes at the start of key meetings for teams to look at each other (in-person or video) and share one non-work observation. 👉🏻 In hybrid and remote teams, require video ON during synchronisation moments. Encourage but don’t mandate heavy rituals - the goal is presence, not performance. 👉🏻 Track not just what gets done, but how people feel: ask “Did you feel seen and understood this week?” If answers slide below a threshold, intervene. 👉🏻 Make trust practices repeatable. Even after workflows are digitised, schedule a monthly “presence reset” to rebuild bonds, especially when change is high. If we stopped chasing vanity metrics like tools deployed or meetings held, we could instead aim for one impact: teams that trust each other enough to move fast and lean on each other without hesitation. Because in uncertain times the difference between teams that drag and teams that fly often comes down to who looks up and sees another human willing to hold their gaze. ✅ #leadership #teammanagement #lifecoaching

  • View profile for Francesca Gino

    People Strategist & Collaboration Catalyst | Helping leaders turn people potential into business impact | Ex-Harvard Business School Professor

    99,769 followers

    The lesson I take from so many dispersed teams I’ve worked with over the years is that great collaboration is not about shrinking the distance. It is about deepening the connection. Time zones, language barriers, and cultural nuances make working together across borders uniquely challenging. I see these dynamics regularly: smart, dedicated people who care deeply about their work but struggle to truly see and understand one another. One of the tools I often use in my work with global teams is the Harvard Business School case titled Greg James at Sun Microsystems. It tells the story of a manager leading a 45-person team spread across the U.S., France, India, and the UAE. When a major client system failed, the issue turned out not to be technical but human. Each location saw the problem differently. Misunderstandings built up across time zones. Tensions grew between teams that rarely met in person. What looked like a system failure was really a connection failure. What I find powerful about this story, and what I see mirrored in so many organizations today, is that the path forward is about rethinking how we create connection, trust, and fairness across distance. It is not where many leaders go naturally: new tools or tighter control. Here are three useful practices for dispersed teams to adopt. (1) Create shared context, not just shared goals. Misalignment often comes from not understanding how others work, not what they’re working on. Try brief “work tours,” where teams explain their daily realities and constraints. Context builds empathy, and empathy builds speed. (2) Build trust through reflection, not just reliability. Trust deepens when people feel seen and understood. After cross-site collaborations, ask: “What surprised you about how others see us?” That simple reflection can transform relationships. (3) Design fairness into the system. Uneven meeting times, visibility, or opportunities quickly erode respect. Rotate schedules, celebrate behind-the-scenes work, and make sure recognition travels across time zones. Fairness is a leadership design choice, not a nice-to-have. Distance will always be part of global work, but disconnection doesn’t have to be. When leaders intentionally design for shared understanding, reflected trust, and structural fairness, I've found, distributed teams flourish. #collaboration #global #learning #leadership #connection Case here: https://lnkd.in/eZfhxnGW

  • View profile for Prachi Mishra

    Global Head of Learning @ Vanderlande | Leadership Development, Executive Coaching

    9,970 followers

    Over the weekend, my family was having a lively debate about language- how it shapes identity and how it connects people. It struck me that the same is true at work. In a global organization, we may all speak “business English,” but each team has its own dialect, jargon and unspoken cues. Leaders and L&D professionals should not underestimate how much language shapes belonging, trust, and learning. We often focus on what people learn: skills, tools, frameworks, but how we speak about learning shapes its impact. ✔️Language shapes culture—the words around performance and growth can empower or discourage. ✔️Shared language builds alignment—common phrases create common meaning across teams. ✔️Language enables inclusion—clear, mindful communication ensures no one is left behind. As L&D leaders, we don’t just design programs, we shape the very language through which people see themselves, their teams, and their future.

  • View profile for Mel Loy SCMP

    Author | Speaker | Facilitator | Consultant (all things change and internal comms) | International Award Winner

    5,234 followers

    “Congrats, you’re a leader now – go lead! Oh, and we’ll just assume you know how to communicate effectively.” ‘tis a tale as old as time. I was that person too. The problem is that team leader communication is so critical to engagement, understanding strategy, and aligning your team behind purpose. So here’s 10 ways leaders can improve their communication right away. 1.      Ask your team what they want – find out what they want to know more about, their preferred methods of communication, how often they want to meet, etc. And keep asking them – preferences will change over time. 2.      Get feedback, constantly – don’t wait for an engagement survey. Ask what’s working, what’s not, and what ideas people have to improve comms in your team. 3.      Say more, with less – don’t get caught in the trap of long-winded emails and team calls. People are time-poor and busy. Keep it short. And don’t assume that ‘poor communication’ is solved with more communication! 4.      Record and review – facilitating online meetings? Record them, and watch them back, and self-reflect. 5.      Co-create content – you don’t have to come up with it all yourself. Get your team involved, share the weekly newsletter around or get them all to contribute to a teams chat. It creates a sense of ownership. 6.      Set a rhythm – people like things that are predictable. So after you’ve found out what people want, set a rhythm with your comms and stick to it. 7.      Find out the answers – it’s okay to say you don’t know something, and commit to finding out and reporting back. As a leader, especially during change, it’s your job to find out why things are happening, and what that means for your team. 8.      Be authentic – people can see through the ‘leader mask’ we sometimes put on. Authenticity builds trust. So use the words you’d normally use, and talk to others like human beings. 9.      Get equitable – this is getting harder in hybrid worlds, but equitable access to communication is key for your team members, especially during change. Make sure everyone has an opportunity to hear directly from you, and to talk to you 1:1. 10.  Listen to understand, not to respond – sometimes we jump into solution mode when our team members come to us with worries. Let them talk, and ask curious questions to understand the real problem, and what they need from you. Sometimes, they just need to be heard, they don’t need you to do anything. What would you add to the list?

  • View profile for Suzy Welch
    Suzy Welch Suzy Welch is an Influencer

    NYU Stern Professor | Director of the NYU Initiative on Purpose and Flourishing | 3X NYT Best-Selling Author | Creator of the self-discovery method, “Becoming You," and 10-10-10, a values-based decision tool.

    82,732 followers

    You think getting tough feedback is hard? Try giving it! Every manager – every human being – struggles with delivering a tough message in a way that will be heard and yet not hurtful. There is a solution. It’s called the OILS approach, invented by Emily Field, a partner at McKinsey & Company, whom I am fortunate enough to bring to my class NYU Stern School of Business every semester. OILS guides managers through delivering feedback with four steps. ✴️ You start with an observation, literally. “Can I make an observation,” you might say to a team member, “I noticed you interrupted the client a lot in our meeting yesterday.” ✴️ Next, you talk about impact. “We have so much to learn from the client, and we could be missing critical information about their problem if they think the conversation is just a one-way street.” ✴️ The third step of OILS is the hardest. You have to listen. You have to give the chance for the feedback-recipient to respond. People want to explain themselves, and deserve that opportunity. ✴️ Finally, you turn to creating a solution together. You might suggest, for instance, that you come up with a secret signal if you see an interruption happening. Oftentimes, the feedback receiver also has solutions to offer, and that’s all for the good. Whenever Emily visits my class on managerial skills, my students leave smarter and wiser, and so do I! Giving feedback is never easy, but OILS greases the way. 

  • View profile for Andrea Petrone

    The CEO Whisperer | WCL21 Founder, The Hub for $20M-500M ARR CEOs | 250+ CEOs & C-Suite Coached | Keynote Speaker | Wiley Author

    165,274 followers

    "We’re a family here" sounds comforting to people. But often, it comes with unspoken demands. Behind those friendly words, people get pushed too far. That “family” feeling can turn into a license for: ↳ Blurred boundaries ↳ Endless availability ↳ Unspoken obligations Suddenly, team members feel pressured to stay late, take on extra tasks, and act as unofficial "therapists" – all in the name of “being family.” Here’s the truth: Real family doesn’t ask you to set aside your needs or always say ‘yes.’ When work tries to act like family, things get messy: ↳ People get drained ↳ Limits disappear ↳ Saying “no” feels like a betrayal Let's flip the script: 1. Use 'Team' Language to Set the Tone ↳ Say “team” instead of “family” to keep things professional and respect boundaries. 2. Define Roles Clearly to Avoid 'Invisible' Expectations ↳ Make roles clear so everyone knows their limits and what’s truly expected. 3. Encourage Honest Feedback Without Fear ↳ Let people know it’s safe to give feedback and say “no” when needed. 4. Limit Extra 'Emotional Tasks' to Prevent Burnout ↳ Keep emotional duties optional, so no one feels pressured. 5. Model Boundaries as a Leader ↳ Lead by example by respecting personal time and taking breaks. 6. Recognize Efforts Without Expecting Sacrifice ↳ Appreciate hard work, but avoid praising overwork. Show that balance is valued. 7. Set Clear ‘Off’ Times for Everyone ↳ Establish times when work communication pauses, letting team members fully disconnect. Final thought: A strong workplace isn’t a “family”. It’s a place where people thrive as a team. ♻️ Share this if you believe in respectful workplaces and follow Andrea Petrone for more.

  • View profile for Sacha Connor
    Sacha Connor Sacha Connor is an Influencer

    I teach the skills to lead hybrid, distributed & remote teams | Keynotes, Workshops, Cohort Programs I Delivered transformative programs to thousands of enterprise leaders I 15 yrs leading distributed and remote teams

    14,181 followers

    Meetings aren’t for updates - they’re where your culture is being built… or broken. In distributed, remote, & hybrid teams, meetings are key moments where team members experience culture together. That makes every meeting a high-stakes opportunity. Yet most teams stay in default mode - using meetings for project updates instead of connection, ideation, debate, and culture-building. Fixing meeting overload isn’t just about having fewer Zooms. It’s about rewiring your communication norms: ✔️ Do we know when to communicate synchronously vs. asynchronously? ✔️ Are we using async tools that give transparency without constant live check-ins? ✔️ Have we aligned on our team values and expected behaviors? 💡 3 ways to reduce meetings and make the remaining ones count: 1️⃣ Co-create a Team Working Agreement. Before you can reinforce values, your team needs to define them. We’ve spent hundreds of hours helping teams do this - and have seen measurable gains in team effectiveness. Key components: ✔️ Shared team goals ✔️ Defining team member roles ✔️ Agreed-upon behaviors ✔️ Communication norms (sync vs. async) 2️⃣ Begin meetings with a connection moment. Relationships fuel trust and collaboration. Kick things off with a check-in like: “What gave you energy this week?” Or tailor it to the topic. In a recent meeting on decision-making norms, we asked: “Speed or certainty - which do you value more when making decisions, and why?” 3️⃣ Make team values part of the agenda. Create a ritual to recognize teammates for living into the team behaviors. Ask the question: “Where did we see our values or team agreements show up this week?” And check in on where could the team have done better. Culture doesn’t happen by accident - especially when your teams are spread across time zones, WFH setups, and multiple office sites. Your meetings can become a powerful tool to build culture with intention. Excerpt from the Work 20XX podcast with Jeff Frick

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