A distributed team is a team whose members work from multiple locations and, typically, multiple timezones. The defining property is that no single location holds a majority of the team at any given time. Some distributed teams are fully remote; others have multiple offices.
Distributed team is sometimes used interchangeably with remote team, but the terms are not equivalent. A remote team describes work-from-anywhere arrangements. A distributed team specifically implies operational spread across boundaries — geographic, timezone, or organizational.
The challenge of a distributed team is not where people work. It is whether decisions, handoffs, and context can travel across those boundaries without loss.
Why Distributed team Matters for Distributed Teams
Distributed teams pay a coordination tax that co-located teams do not. The tax compounds with each additional timezone: every decision that requires multiple stakeholders is a delay risk.
Teams that pay the tax cheerfully usually have governance infrastructure — declared state, handoff protocols, decision authority maps. Teams that pay it bitterly usually rely on ambient knowledge and end up in 14-hour delay cycles.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a distributed team?
A distributed team is one whose members work from multiple locations and often multiple timezones. No single location holds a majority of the team. The defining challenge is coordination across geographic and timezone boundaries.
Related Terms
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StandIn is built around these concepts. Engineers publish declared state before going offline. The next shift starts with full context.