How to Work with Difficult Teammates Professionally

Every team has one eventually: the teammate who interrupts, dismisses, or derails. Here’s how to stay professional, protect your energy, and still get the work done.

Published on April 5, 2025

Why This Matters More in Freelance Work

When you’re freelancing, you’re often dropped into fast-moving teams. You don’t know the personalities. You’re expected to adapt. And sometimes, you hit friction—with someone who talks over you, ignores deadlines, or undermines your input.

You don’t control the team dynamic. But you do control your role in it. Your ability to remain composed, focused, and solution-oriented isn’t just good etiquette—it’s what sets you apart as a high-functioning creative.

Key Takeaways

  • Set boundaries early—passive tolerance becomes silent approval.

  • Focus on outcomes, not egos.

  • Use neutral language and proactive communication.

  • Document key agreements and tasks.

  • Don’t let someone else’s behavior make you abandon your professionalism.

  • Learn from each interaction—patterns reveal personal growth areas.

  • Conflict handled well can become a competitive advantage.

Step 1: Define What “Difficult” Looks Like

Not every mismatch is a problem. Some people work differently than you—and that’s okay. But some patterns are red flags:

  • Repeatedly missing deadlines and blaming others

  • Dismissing ideas or dominating discussions

  • Withholding information or context

  • Gossip, passive aggression, or personal jabs

You’re not imagining it if it’s creating stress and slowing down the work. It’s worth addressing.

Bonus Tip: If you find yourself venting to friends more than once about the same person, it’s probably time to address it directly or adjust your engagement strategy.

Step 2: Don’t Assume Malice

Start by assuming positive intent. Maybe they’re under pressure. Maybe they communicate differently. Maybe this is their 7th Zoom call today.

Approach it with curiosity, not combat:

  • “Hey, I noticed we keep circling back on this—want to jump on a quick call to align?”

  • “Would it help to clarify roles or who owns what?”

Sometimes, what looks like resistance is really confusion or overwhelm.

Step 3: Stay Outcome-Oriented

Your job is to keep the work moving—not to win every point. Reframe your focus:

  • What does success look like for the project?

  • What needs to happen to get there?

  • How can I adapt without compromising my standards?

Use this lens to guide your responses. It helps you step back from the emotion and lead with purpose.

Mindset Shift: Instead of thinking, “They’re making this harder than it needs to be,” try, “What’s the cleanest way forward from here?”

Step 4: Set the Tone in Writing

Use calm, clear, and professional language:

  • “Just looping back to confirm we’re aligned on the next step: I’ll send the draft, and you’ll review by Friday EOD?”

  • “Noticed a few edits came through late—want to check if we need to adjust the timeline?”

Avoid sarcasm, vague jabs, or capital letters. Tone gets distorted fast over email or Slack, and you never want to come off combative.

Tip: Assume your message will be forwarded. Keep it professional, always.

Step 5: Document Agreements

When dynamics are tricky, clarity is your ally:

  • Recap meetings with bullet points

  • Confirm deadlines and responsibilities in writing

  • Save key feedback and task assignments

  • Create a shared doc if things get murky

It’s not about being paranoid. It’s about having receipts if timelines slip or blame gets tossed around.

Tool tip: Use Google Docs or Notion comments to track revisions and decisions—it adds transparency.

Step 6: Pick Your Battles

Not everything needs a confrontation. Some things just need a workaround:

  • Can you redirect tasks through the PM?

  • Can you present your ideas to the group instead of that one teammate?

  • Can you let a minor tone issue slide if the work is fine?

Every pushback costs energy. Spend it where it actually protects the work.

Step 7: Loop in a Project Lead When Needed

If the behavior crosses into toxicity—public shaming, ongoing disrespect, or threats to project quality—escalate.

  • Bring facts, not feelings: what was said, what happened, what it affected

  • Propose solutions, not ultimatums: “Would it help to realign roles or add check-ins?”

  • Stay outcome-focused: “I want to make sure we stay on track and avoid future miscommunication.”

Project leads don’t want drama. They want clarity and momentum.

Step 8: Reflect on What You Can Learn

Every difficult teammate teaches you something:

  • How to stay grounded under pressure

  • How to communicate without blaming

  • How to advocate for yourself while staying collaborative

Keep a log. Write down what happened, how you handled it, and what you’d do differently next time. You’re building emotional intelligence with every challenge.

Journaling Prompt: “What part of this conflict triggered me—and what can I learn from that?”

When to Walk Away

In some freelance scenarios, the best move is to finish the contract and never return:

  • Chronic disrespect

  • Values misalignment

  • Constant firefighting without support

Finish strong. Leave notes for the next person. Protect your energy for better gigs. Burnout is not worth the paycheck.

Exit Strategy: Keep your departure email short and professional: “Thanks for the collaboration. For future reference, I’ve included links to all final files and notes for the next person.”

Red Flag Reminder: If you’re anxious before every call or constantly second-guessing yourself, it’s not a good fit. Trust your instincts.

Scripts for Sticky Situations

For scope creep:

  • “Happy to take that on—just flagging that it’s outside the original scope. Want me to send a quick quote for the extra time?”

For miscommunication:

  • “I may have misunderstood—can we clarify what’s expected before I move forward?”

For being talked over:

  • “I’d love to finish my point, then happy to hear yours.”

For repeated delays:

  • “I’ve noticed the feedback is coming in later than planned. Want to discuss how we can stay on schedule?”

For vague criticism:

  • “Can you point to a specific section that feels off? That would help me revise more effectively.”

For sarcasm or dismissal:

  • “Just want to confirm—was that a concern or a joke? Want to make sure I respond the right way.”

Scripts give you language to stay professional under pressure.

Building Long-Term Resilience

Difficult teammates are not going away. But your reactions can evolve:

  • Read books on conflict navigation (like Crucial Conversations)

  • Practice boundary-setting in low-stakes situations

  • Roleplay tough talks with friends or mentors

  • Get feedback on your own collaboration style

  • Reflect after each challenge—what would future-you do?

Every challenge sharpens you. Every tension handled well builds your brand as someone who stays steady under pressure.

Final Word: Difficult Doesn’t Have to Mean Destructive

Working with difficult teammates is part of every career path. It doesn’t mean you’re failing—it means you’re gaining tools for real-world collaboration.

Stay calm. Stay clear. Protect the project, your process, and your peace. Difficult people may test you, but they don’t have to define you.

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