Your Unified Global Team Is Lying To You
A 15×15 New York Times Sunday grid, a Staedtler Mars 780 lead holder, and a stack of vellum paper represent the physical tools of a trade that looks effortless only when it is perfectly executed. As a crossword puzzle constructor, my job is to create a seamless experience where the solver feels clever, never suspecting that I spent four hours agonizing over a single “Northwest” corner because the word “IXIA” refused to play nice with “AXLE.”
The grid presents a face of absolute, symmetrical unity: black and white squares in a dance of logic that suggests the world is tidy. Corporate leadership often views their “global team” through this same lens of aesthetic completion. They see the 24-hour sun-tracking clock on the wall and the headcount distributed across the 14-inch MacBook Pro M3 Max screens in London, Tokyo, and New York as evidence of a machine that never stops.
The C-Suite Abstraction
The McKinsey Global Institute report, the Salesforce Tower in San Francisco, and the quarterly OKR spreadsheet all suggest that distance is a solved problem. From the height of a C-suite office, “global unity” is a clean abstraction, a way to move chess pieces across a board without worrying about the friction of the board itself.
The CEO stands at the all-hands meeting and praises the “borderless collaboration” that allows the company to