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.
Organizational Impact and Stakeholder Value Proposition
Clear articulation of value legal operations creates for different stakeholders: lawyers (efficiency, tools), business units (speed, cost clarity), executive leadership (governance, risk management), operations teams (career development, culture). How you build support for legal operations as critical to business success.
Collaboration with Other Teams and Leadership
Focuses on cross functional collaboration beyond the immediate team, including working with sales, human resources, executive leadership, and peer leadership. Topics include understanding the partner team's goals, adapting communication to different stakeholders, building credibility with sales and business partners, influencing without formal authority at the executive level, and operating as a bridge between technical and business functions. Candidates should provide examples of successful cross functional work and explain how they would prioritize and coordinate with stakeholder teams.
Conflict Resolution in Ambiguous Situations
Focuses on resolving interpersonal or stakeholder conflicts that arise when goals, requirements, or information are unclear. Interviewers look for approaches to surface differing assumptions, align priorities, negotiate trade offs, use data or experiments to break deadlocks, and maintain relationships while driving a decision. Includes techniques for mediating disagreements, escalating when appropriate, and documenting decisions and accountability.
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.
Handling Disagreement and Conflict
This topic covers how a candidate identifies, manages, and resolves disagreements and organizational conflicts while navigating complex stakeholder landscapes and competing priorities. Interviewers assess the ability to tell a clear behavioral story that shows professional conduct when disagreeing with peers, managers, or stakeholders, including how the candidate validated different perspectives, advocated for a position, and remained open to changing their view. It includes skills such as active listening, empathy, negotiating trade offs, influencing without authority, de escalation and escalation judgment, and building alignment through data driven reasoning and decision frameworks. Candidates should also demonstrate how they balanced competing needs, surfaced root causes, proposed options, implemented resolutions, measured outcomes, and reflected on lessons learned to improve future interactions.
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.
Collaboration Across Teams
Cross functional collaboration skills for working with backend engineers, designers, product managers, quality engineers, and other stakeholders. Topics include negotiating API contracts and boundaries, translating product requirements into feasible designs, communicating trade offs and impact, influencing roadmaps through evidence and partnership, resolving cross functional disagreements, and creating processes that enable reliable handoffs and shared ownership.
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.