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Team culture

Keeping your team connected

Allow extra time and effort to make sure remote teams are cohesive and connected. Build relationships early and strengthen them through video calls, joint projects, and face-to-face visits.

Ensure your European team have access to the wider business through training and exchange programmes.

The GM EMEA needs to be in the US HQ every six weeks or they will forget what you look like!

Stuart Collingwood

GM EMEA, Anki

All-hands meetings help everyone to connect. Time differences can make global calls difficult. Afternoon calls US time can be too late in the day for Europe so keep this in mind when scheduling.

Avoid taking calls in the evening but I checked emails regularly and prompted US team members if I needed a response for customers.

Matt Price

Former GM EMEA, Zendesk

Video conferencing is better than phoning. You can sync up a video conferencing tool to calendars and screens in meeting rooms. Slack is especially good for global communication and onboarding.

Don’t overly rely on emails when addressing conflicts. A video conference or phone call can significantly minimise misunderstandings.

Raphael Fontes

Director EMEA Operations, Squarespace

You cannot underestimate the human issues that will arise from running a global team. Developing and communicating with Leaders outside HQ can be a challenge. Establish appropriate levels of autonomy and avoid fluctuating policies as this can create local frustration.

Decisions and reporting

Things change fast at a startup so a champion for International at HQ helps with communication and prioritisation prevents your International Office falling off the map. This may be the Chief Executive Officer, Chief Revenue Officer or a dedicated Vice President of International. Ideally this individual should have a cross functional remit, rather than it falling to the Vice President of Sales.

Decide whether the European office is a satellite office executing on US decisions, or if local teams have autonomy. Whatever you decide, communicate often and consistently.

In the early stages your EMEA Leader should report directly into the CEO to avoid filtering.

Stuart Collingwood

GM, EMEA, Anki

Maintaining culture across continents

Don’t try to create identical companies but make sure everyone understands your values, and decide what qualities you want to see driven through your company. Hire for cultural fit and carry the brand identity through all office fit-outs. Dropbox sent over a Head Chef from San Francisco for the European operation in Dublin.

Embrace new cultures. For instance, there is more of a drinking culture in Europe than US, and Christmas parties are a major focal point to end the year.

The nuts and bolts of legal
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