Share
Facebook Facebook icon Twitter Twitter icon LinkedIn LinkedIn icon Email

Brain Circuits

Cultural Calibration in a multi-layered world

Published June 30, 2026 in Brain Circuits • 3 min read

Cultural intelligence alone is no longer sufficient to work effectively across global teams. What is needed, argues Dorotea Brandin, is continuous calibration.

How did we get here?

As organizations have become more international, the way we understand culture has not always kept pace. Professionals today are shaped by a combination of influences that go far beyond national identity. Many of us now carry multiple cultural layers. A colleague with two or more nationalities may have grown up in one country, studied in another, and now work across regions. Culture is no longer a single reference point. It is layered, fluid, and dependent on context.

Our ways of thinking, communicating, and behaving are conditioned not only by geography but by education, career background, organizational culture, individual communication tendencies, personal experience, and generational differences. In this environment, specific cultural knowledge is no longer enough. Norms and expectations around hierarchy, feedback, speed, and communication style can vary significantly, often without being made explicit.

Layered onto this is the increasing volume and speed of interactions. Messages arrive continuously; often across time zones and outside traditional working hours. In this context, misunderstandings, friction, and misinterpretation are not the exception – they are the natural byproduct of this multi-layered intricacy.

By using Cultural Calibration, leaders can turn complexity from a source of friction into a source of strength.

Three practices to navigate complexity

Cultural Calibration is the ability to adjust in real time across all these layers, so that meaning, intention, and impact remain aligned – not by simplifying the complexity, but by working with it as it unfolds.

  1. Keep your mind and heart open
    Stay curious before interpreting and ask, “What else could this mean?”
  2. Practice tactful explicitness
    Make key elements and needs visible and shared, rather than assumed.
  3. Revisit expectations regularly
    Surface and align expectations early and revisit them as situations evolve.

Where to use Cultural Calibration

Leaders and teams benefit from creating regular moments of calibration in areas where misalignment quietly builds:

  • Boundaries, including interaction levels and agreed response times
  • Individual communication styles and needs
  • Shared team communication dynamics
  • Decision-making processes and delegation
  • Contribution, ownership, and accountability dynamics
  • How recognition and credit are expressed
  • Giving feedback and feedforward
  • Sharing best practices within the team
  • Clarifying who is empowered to decide what, and when

These conversations needn’t be heavy or formal, but making them tactfully explicit and revisiting them over time prevents many of the tensions that might otherwise emerge down the line.

Key takeaway

Misunderstandings and misinterpretations are the byproduct of the complexity that inevitably arises in increasingly multicultural working environments. By using Cultural Calibration, leaders can turn complexity from a source of friction into a source of strength and competitive advantage.

Authors

Dorotea Brandin

Dorotea Brandin

Executive coach

Dorotea Brandin is the founder of BEYOND f2fÔ and an executive coach with over 20 years of experience, including a decade in Singapore, giving her a sharp eye for cultural calibration in global leadership. A former theatre actress, she brings deep insight into leadership presence and relational dynamics. With her support, leaders reconnect to their core values and strengthen their emotional intelligent communication. She is the author of Connect with Heart, a guide to cultivating trust and human connection in today’s remote and hybrid working world.

Related

Learn Brain Circuits

Join us for daily exercises focusing on issues from team building to developing an actionable sustainability plan to personal development. Go on - they only take five minutes.
 
Read more 

Explore Leadership

What makes a great leader? Do you need charisma? How do you inspire your team? Our experts offer actionable insights through first-person narratives, behind-the-scenes interviews and The Help Desk.
 
Read more

Join Membership

Log in here to join in the conversation with the I by IMD community. Your subscription grants you access to the quarterly magazine plus daily articles, videos, podcasts and learning exercises.
 
Sign up

Log in or register to enjoy the full experience

Explore first person business intelligence from top minds curated for a global executive audience