How soft skills solve marketing’s biggest challenges

Don’t let dysfunctions hold back your marketing efforts. Master soft skills to build a thriving, future-ready team.

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Marketing teams are facing a growing challenge: despite being packed with talented experts who excel at hard skills like data analysis and campaign management, they’re struggling to stay competitive. 

The problem isn’t a lack of technical know-how — it’s the absence of key human-centric skills like adaptability, emotional intelligence and collaboration. These “soft skills” are now critical to overcoming internal dysfunction and driving long-term success.

Marketing’s blind spot: Why your team is struggling to keep up

I was recently captivated by how my work on AI-driven skills-based learning intersected with a LinkedIn post by a good friend, John Common, CEO of Intelligent Demand. In his post, he highlighted the “three dysfunctions” that often plague marketing teams this time of year.

  • Ducking: Team members hesitate to raise issues, admit mistakes or offer honest feedback. Everyone is tiptoeing around the truth, afraid to admit if something isn’t working. 
  • The Cold War: Silent tensions and unspoken grudges deafen the room. Everyone in the team is engaged in an invisible standoff, holding back ideas or criticisms out of fear that others might react aggressively or evade responsibility. 
  • The blame game: A room full of people pointing fingers whenever something goes wrong. Instead of working together to solve issues, team members focus on absolving themselves and blaming others. 

Annual planning stalls. Tensions rise. The pleasure in one’s profession has all but evaporated.

The hard skill conundrum

The issue isn’t about talented people trying to do their best. Everyone on these teams is skilled, having honed their technical skills over years of rigorous training and practice. But therein lies the paradox.

The focus on hard skills isn’t just a company-specific issue. It’s a systemic problem across businesses worldwide. For decades, talent has been measured by certifications, credentials and tool expertise. But in today’s volatile business landscape, shaped by a global pandemic, remote work and shifting buyer behavior, those skills are losing value as soft skills become increasingly essential.

Marketing teams stuck in “ducking,” “the Cold War” and “the blame game” don’t lack technical know-how. They lack the tools for better communication, innovation and a growth mindset.

The soft skill solution

Here’s what top thought leaders in organizational development and learning have been saying about soft skills:

  • Companies that prioritize employee experience (i.e., soft skills like agility, resilience, inclusivity, etc.) can achieve up to 31% higher revenue growth (IBM Institute for Business Value) and an 18% increase in EBITDA after one year (McKinsey).
  • Organizations that emphasize data-driven decision-making are 63% more likely to adapt to a changing business environment (McKinsey).
  • Organizations focusing on people and performance are roughly 1.5 times more likely to remain high performers over time and have about half the earnings volatility. When the pandemic hit, they maintained profitability and grew revenues twice as fast as performance-driven companies (McKinsey/MGI).

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The upside is enormous, but how does that apply to our three dysfunctions?

Openness instead of ducking

In an open and accepting work environment, team members are encouraged to share their victories and challenges without fear of judgment or retribution. This enhances mutual trust, fosters faster problem-solving and cultivates a culture of continuous improvement. 

Resilience and emotional agility enable individuals to view feedback as opportunities for growth rather than setbacks. Such transparency fosters individual growth and team cohesion, supporting a dynamic and innovative workplace.

What are the soft skills that will help in this area?

  • Emotional quotient (EQ): Empathy and understanding promote a supportive environment where feedback is constructive.
  • Adaptability quotient (AQ): Supports agile responses and openness to change, aiding swift problem resolution and improvement.
  • EQ<>AQ intersection: Balances emotional resilience with adaptable behavior, facilitating transparent communication and learning from feedback.

Collaboration instead of the Cold War

A collaborative team dynamic is central to innovation and achieving shared goals. Here, active dialogue and mutual support replace silent tensions. Emotional intelligence fuels empathy and trust, while logical reasoning helps manage expectations and align strategies. 

Adaptability and teamwork drive the integration of diverse perspectives, enhancing creativity and synergy. This alignment cultivates a space where ideas flourish and team members work enthusiastically toward common objectives.

What are the soft skills that will help in this area?

  • EQ: Builds empathy and understanding, creating an atmosphere of trust and collaboration.
  • Intellectual quotient (IQ): Encourages strategic thinking to align team efforts with organizational goals.
  • EQ<>IQ intersection: Integrates emotional insights with strategic logic to encourage collaborative innovation.
  • AQ: Supports flexibility and openness in adopting diverse ideas and solutions.

Accountability instead of the blame game

In a culture that values accountability, team members take ownership of their actions and outcomes, accept responsibility and work together constructively to solve issues. Emotional agility helps manage interpersonal relationships, encouraging a focus on solutions rather than blame. 

Logical reasoning supports strategic analysis and improvement, while adaptability enables individuals to learn from experiences and implement changes effectively. This environment cultivates cohesion and drives more successful and sustainable outcomes.

What are the soft skills that will help in this area?

  • IQ: Supports logical analysis and strategic problem-solving to guide constructive actions.
  • EQ: Encourages personal responsibility through emotional maturity and resilience.
  • AQ: Promotes adaptive learning from mistakes and implementing improvements.
  • EQ<>IQ intersection: Balances emotional understanding with factual reasoning to focus on constructive solutions.

What’s a marketing leader to do?

These are trainable skills. Competency assessments have been around for a long time. AI and a fast-changing environment have made them essential for leaders to boost team agility and performance.

Imagine if your team had the resilience to handle setbacks, the emotional intelligence to navigate relationships and the adaptability to embrace change. These soft skills could transform stagnant and negative teams into dynamic collaboration and creativity.

Resilience and emotional agility

Resilient employees handle tight deadlines and changing priorities better, recovering stronger from setbacks. Emotional agility allows them to maintain composure and positivity, even under stress.

Adaptability and communication

As the workplace changes rapidly, adaptability ensures teams remain agile and open-minded, ready to tackle new challenges efficiently. Strong communication skills enhance these interactions, ensuring that ideas and concerns are clearly exchanged and valued.

Teamwork and collaboration 

A focus on collaboration fosters a sense of shared responsibility. Instead of isolating tasks or grudgingly tackling issues alone, team members work together, sparking innovation and ensuring everyone is aligned with common goals.

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Make 2025 the year of focus and success

The axiom “adapt or perish” has never been more relevant. As we move through 2025, we must prioritize soft skills, embedding them into our organizational cultures and training. The data is clear: companies that focus on human-centric skills achieve greater growth and stability, even in times of uncertainty.

By fostering openness, collaboration and accountability, we prepare our teams for today’s challenges and the unknowns ahead. Nurturing these capabilities revitalizes workplace satisfaction and elevates performance.

Let’s redefine success by making soft skills central to talent development, unlocking resilience, inclusivity and lasting achievement.

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Contributing authors are invited to create content for MarTech and are chosen for their expertise and contribution to the martech community. Our contributors work under the oversight of the editorial staff and contributions are checked for quality and relevance to our readers. The opinions they express are their own.


About the author

Mark Ogne
Contributor
As the CEO of Symplexity.AI, Mark has pioneered the technology of Expert Trained Custom Language Models for B2B Sales and Marketing Teams. Our vision is to democratize the successful use of GenAI applications, making it possible for any person of any technical capability to enter a simple English query and receive a human-quality, on-brand, and powerfully differentiated response. Our platform removes the complexity and perceived risks of GPT solutions. Learn more at https://www.Symplexity.AI.

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