The New Rules of Collaboration
Remember the old office? The marketing team was on the third floor, finance on the fourth. You could walk over, catch up by the coffee machine, and solve a problem in minutes. That world is gone. Today, the marketing lead might be in Mumbai, the engineer
in Bengaluru, and the sales head in Delhi, all collaborating on a single project. This is the essence of 'cross-functional' work in the hybrid era — bringing together diverse expertise from different departments, regardless of physical location. But when digital tools replace face-to-face interaction, the nuances of communication often get lost, leading to silos, delays, and frustration. The old rules of teamwork simply don't apply anymore.
EQ: More Than Just Being Polite
This is where Emotional Intelligence (EQ) becomes a superpower. Often misunderstood as just 'being nice,' true EQ is a set of four core skills: self-awareness (understanding your own emotions and how they impact others), self-regulation (managing your reactions, especially under pressure), social awareness (primarily empathy, or understanding others' perspectives), and relationship management (the ability to influence, inspire, and resolve conflicts). In a cross-functional hybrid team, this isn't a soft skill; it's a critical operational tool. It’s what allows a product manager to understand the pressure the sales team is under, or an engineer to appreciate the marketing team's need for a clear, compelling story.
Why Hybrid Work Magnifies EQ Gaps
In an office, we absorb a huge amount of information through body language, tone of voice, and casual observation. This context is erased in a Slack channel or an email thread. Without strong EQ, simple situations can escalate. A curt message from a busy developer isn't read as efficient, but as rude. A marketing team's urgent request is seen as a distraction, not a business priority. This is the 'cross-functional gap' magnified by hybrid work. Different teams have different communication styles, priorities, and even vocabularies. Without the emotional intelligence to bridge these gaps, teams work against each other instead of with each other, draining energy and killing productivity. Trust erodes, and innovation grinds to a halt.
Building Your Cross-Functional EQ
Developing this skill isn't about personality transplants; it's about conscious practice. It starts with 'digital empathy'—assuming good intent and seeking clarity before reacting. Instead of firing off a quick, ambiguous message, take a moment to add context. Ask: 'How might someone from a different team interpret this?' Second, practice 'active listening' on video calls. This means not just waiting for your turn to speak, but asking clarifying questions like, 'What I hear you saying is... have I got that right?' This confirms understanding and makes the other person feel heard. Finally, leaders must model this behaviour. When a manager openly admits they don't have all the answers or proactively checks on a team member's workload, it creates a psychologically safe environment where EQ can flourish.
From Theory to Team Practice
To make this practical, teams can implement simple but powerful routines. Start projects with a 'team charter' meeting where you don't just discuss goals, but also preferred communication styles, working hours, and how to handle disagreements. Schedule regular, short, informal video check-ins with no agenda other than to connect as human beings. When a conflict arises between departments, frame it as a shared problem to be solved, not a battle to be won. Encourage 'shadowing' where a member from one team spends a few hours understanding the workflow of another. These small, intentional acts build the connective tissue of trust and understanding that technology alone cannot provide.
















