What's happening in team diplomacy education
Course updates, instructor perspectives, and real conversations about working through disagreement together.
Latest from Inaroevari
Practical thinking on soft skills, digital collaboration, and what makes group learning actually work.
Featured
When group sessions get heated — what instructors actually do
Live online classes on team diplomacy can spark real friction. That's not a problem — it's often the most useful part of the session. We talked with two of our facilitators about the specific moments where tension becomes a teaching opportunity, and why emotional resilience isn't something you can explain in a slide deck. You have to feel it, observe it, and then reflect on it with others who were in the same room.
Read more
Learning Paths
Personalized tracks now available for leadership in digital teams
We've added a new individual learning path focused on leadership in the era of digital transformation — covering how to run hybrid meetings, handle asynchronous disagreements, and stay grounded when tools and timezones complicate communication.
Read moreBalancing technology and human values in online diplomacy training
AI-assisted feedback tools are now part of several sessions — but we're careful about how we use them. This piece covers our thinking on where technology helps learners grow and where it gets in the way of the messy, human work of learning to negotiate and listen.
Read morePerspectives from our instructor community
Three topics our instructors keep coming back to — and what they're doing about it inside actual sessions.
Emotional resilience isn't soft
In cross-cultural group sessions, participants from different backgrounds often interpret directness very differently. We practice naming those differences out loud — not as a debate, but as a map.
Conflict as curriculum
Rather than avoiding awkward moments in live sessions, instructors pause and facilitate reflection. The discomfort is often where the real learning happens — when people notice their own reactions.
Soft skills development works best in groups. Individual coaching builds awareness, but navigating live group tension is what actually changes behavior over time. That's why we keep group sessions central to every learning path.
Fionnuala Breczka
Digital Leadership Facilitator"Most leadership problems in digital teams aren't tech problems. They're people problems wearing a tech costume."
Solveig Rautanen
Cross-Cultural Negotiation Coach"When you're leading across timezones, half of diplomacy is just slowing down before you respond."
Our leadership courses started running in 2016 and have since included participants from over 40 countries. The curriculum adapts regularly based on what instructors observe in live sessions — not just theory.
- AI tools can flag communication patterns, but can't replace the judgment of a skilled facilitator
- We use technology to reduce admin friction, not to automate the human parts of learning
- Session recordings are available for review, but live attendance is where most growth happens
- Feedback systems are designed to prompt reflection, not just score performance
- Participants choose how much data they share — transparency matters in a diplomacy context
- Our instructors review AI-generated suggestions before they reach learners
Cookie Preferences
We use cookies to keep the site working and understand how it's used. You can choose what to allow below.