← L² Lab
💬 Communication
Card 13
🌍 🗣️ 🤔 🤝

Why do people from different cultures misunderstand each other—even when speaking the same language?

💭 How to Think About This

Direct feedback might be "honest" in one culture and "rude" in another. Silence might mean agreement or disagreement. In a globalized world, how do you communicate effectively across cultural differences?

🔒 Start writing to unlock hints

Key cultural dimensions (Erin Meyer):
• LOW-CONTEXT: Explicit, direct (US, Germany, Netherlands)
• HIGH-CONTEXT: Implicit, read between lines (Japan, Korea, India)
• "Yes" might mean "yes," "maybe," or "I hear you"
• Silence means different things
• Directness is valued in some cultures, offensive in others
What's "clear" depends on where you're from.

More dimensions that vary:
• Feedback: Direct negative ("This is wrong") vs. indirect ("Perhaps consider...")
• Hierarchy: Egalitarian vs. hierarchical
• Decision-making: Consensus vs. top-down
• Time: Linear (punctual) vs. flexible
• Trust: Task-based vs. relationship-based
None is "right"—they're different operating systems.

Mistakes to avoid:
• Assuming your way is "normal"
• Stereotyping individuals based on culture
• Not adapting your communication style
• Confusing language fluency with cultural fluency
• Attributing differences to personality vs. culture
Your "obviously polite" might be "confusingly vague."

How to communicate better across cultures:
• Learn about the other culture's norms
• Observe more, assume less
• Ask clarifying questions with curiosity
• Adapt your style when possible
• Be patient with misunderstandings
• Build relationships before tasks
Cultural intelligence is a learnable skill.

Cultures differ on directness, hierarchy, time, and trust—assume difference rather than similarity, observe more, and adapt your style!

Key insight: High-context cultures read between lines; low-context cultures say it explicitly. Neither is "right." Cultural intelligence means knowing your own defaults, learning others' norms, observing without assuming, and adapting flexibly. It's a learnable skill.

🤔 Which thinking lens(es) did you use?

Select all the lenses you used:

👨‍👩‍👧 For Parents & Teachers

🌱 A Small Everyday Story

American boss: "Let me know if you have any concerns about the plan."
Japanese employee: Silence. (Meaning: concerns exist, but hierarchy prevents direct disagreement)
American interpretation: "Great, no concerns!"
One sentence. Two meanings.
Neither is wrong. Both are operating from their cultural software.

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Key concepts: High vs. low context, cultural dimensions, cultural intelligence, adapting communication style, avoiding stereotypes.