Communication, Influence & Collaboration Topics
Communication skills, stakeholder management, negotiation, and influence. Covers cross-functional collaboration, conflict resolution, and persuasion.
Advocacy and Constructive Disagreement
Share examples of times you disagreed with leadership, colleagues, or customer requests and advocated for your perspective. Demonstrate healthy disagreement: listening to others' views, building evidence for your position, expressing concern diplomatically, accepting decisions even when you disagree. Show that you can influence outcomes through persuasion rather than authority. At mid-level, demonstrate both advocating for your views and respecting final decisions by others.
Technical Partnership and Communication
Ability to understand technical constraints and tradeoffs, assess technical feasibility, and partner effectively with engineering teams and engineering leadership. Evaluate how the candidate translates complex technical concepts into clear business language for non technical audiences, explains architecture and technical debt considerations, negotiates constraints with engineering partners, and balances business goals and engineering realities while avoiding unnecessary jargon.
Cross Team Collaboration and Conflict Resolution
This topic assesses a candidate's ability to work effectively across organizational boundaries and to identify, negotiate, and resolve disagreements between teams or stakeholders. Candidates should be prepared to describe concrete examples of collaborating with cross functional partners such as product managers, designers, application developers, infrastructure teams, data scientists, and business stakeholders. Key skills include clear and tailored communication of complex technical ideas to non technical audiences, active listening, diagnosing root causes of conflicts, negotiating trade offs and trade off trade offs, facilitating consensus, advocating for your team while maintaining collaborative relationships, and implementing process changes to prevent recurrence. Interviewers will evaluate interpersonal influence, stakeholder management, conflict de escalation techniques, decision making under competing priorities, and measurable outcomes from collaboration and conflict resolution efforts.
Cross Functional Collaboration and Coordination
Comprehensive competency covering how individuals plan, communicate, negotiate, and execute work across organizational boundaries to deliver shared outcomes. This topic includes building and maintaining relationships with product managers, engineers, designers, researchers, operations, sales, finance, legal, compliance, human resources, and people operations; translating priorities and terminology between technical and nontechnical audiences; surfacing and resolving dependencies and handoffs; negotiating trade offs and aligning incentives and timelines; establishing decision rights, meeting cadences, and clear communication channels; designing inclusive processes for cross functional decision making; influencing without formal authority and building coalitions; resolving conflicts constructively and giving and receiving feedback; and measuring shared success and program outcomes. At more senior levels this also includes stakeholder mapping, executive collaboration and sponsorship, navigating organizational politics, managing multi functional programs that involve complex regulatory or compliance constraints, and sustaining long term trust across teams. Interviewers will probe for concrete examples, frameworks and tactics used to align stakeholders, the measurable outcomes delivered through collaboration, and how the candidate balanced competing metrics and priorities while maintaining momentum.
Influence and Persuasion
Skills and tactics for persuading and influencing decisions and behaviors when you do not have formal authority, and for scaling influence across teams and organizations. Candidates should demonstrate how to build credibility and trust tailor messages to stakeholder priorities, use data and customer insight to make the business case, tell compelling stories that connect to outcomes, recruit allies and champions, negotiate and compromise, and create operational changes such as standards processes or tooling to lock in gains. Interviewers will probe for examples of influencing technical and non technical stakeholders resolving disagreements building consensus and measuring the impact of influence on adoption quality speed or other business outcomes. For senior levels include examples of cross organizational influence and governance for sustained change.
Stakeholder Management and Influence
Managing stakeholders and driving cross functional alignment by identifying stakeholders, mapping priorities, building consensus, and negotiating trade offs between competing needs. Includes tailoring communication to different audiences, running alignment and escalation processes, maintaining transparent documentation such as plans, status updates, decision records, and issue logs, and influencing without formal authority to keep projects moving.
Cross Functional Leadership and Influence
Covers leading and influencing across organizational boundaries without formal authority. Topics include building coalitions, stakeholder management, negotiating trade offs, aligning diverse teams around shared objectives, advocating for customer needs inside product and engineering discussions, and shaping strategic decisions. Candidates should be able to describe how they build credibility, navigate competing priorities, secure resources, and persuade partners across finance, operations, human resources, and business units. Emphasis is on interpersonal influence, stakeholder mapping, communication strategies, and examples that demonstrate measurable impact from cross functional initiatives.
Team Fit and Working Style
Evaluates a candidate's preferred ways of working and how those preferences align with a prospective team and manager. Core areas include autonomy versus structured workflows, individual contribution versus paired and cross functional work, preference for frequent touch bases versus independent execution, communication channels and cadence, feedback giving and receiving style and cadence, decision making and ownership boundaries, meeting cadence and structure, collaboration tools and handoffs, code review and onboarding practices, remote versus onsite expectations and availability, adaptability to different team norms, and approaches to conflict resolution. Interviewers will probe for concrete examples that demonstrate successful integration into new teams, alignment with a manager's style, adaptation to differing expectations, and the ability to articulate negotiation points for effective collaboration. Candidates should be ready to state their working preferences honestly, show flexibility, describe specific past scenarios and outcomes, ask clarifying questions about team norms and manager expectations, and propose concrete practices to ensure productive alignment.
Influencing Without Authority
This topic covers the behavioral competency of persuading teams, peers, and leaders when you do not have formal decision making power. Candidates should be prepared to describe concrete examples from their experience where they influenced engineering teams, product teams, business leaders, or cross functional stakeholders to change priorities, adopt approaches, improve deliverables, or reach a decision. Assessors will look for how the candidate built credibility, mapped stakeholders, understood constraints and motivations, used data and evidence, framed proposals in terms of business and technical trade offs, created psychological safety for dissent, and found win win outcomes. Good answers show specific actions such as gathering and presenting data, prototyping or providing examples, facilitating consensus building sessions, negotiating trade offs, escalating appropriately when needed, and following through to measure impact. Candidates should also explain how they handled disagreement, preserved relationships, and adapted their approach for engineers, product managers, or executives.