By Helena Matamoros 

Nearshore software engineer in a remote workspace connecting with her distributed team through a video meeting, symbolizing trust and communication across screens.

Introduction

In my role overseeing human capital within the software sector, I’ve learned that trust isn’t built in a single meeting or through a well-written policy, it’s built in the everyday interactions that happen across screens. In a nearshore model, where collaboration spans borders and time zones, trust becomes the invisible infrastructure that keeps projects moving and teams aligned.

At Scio, we’ve spent over 20 years creating distributed software teams for U.S. companies, and one truth stands out: culture and trust are inseparable. When culture is intentional, trust flows naturally, even when your team is hundreds of miles apart.

Why Trust Matters in Nearshore Collaboration

Nearshore development offers clear advantages: similar time zones, cultural proximity, and strong technical talent. But these benefits only pay off when teams feel safe to communicate openly, share ideas, and take ownership without fear of micromanagement. Without trust, even the best code can’t save a project. Common challenges when trust is missing:
  • Misunderstandings due to different communication styles.
  • Delays caused by unclear expectations.
  • Low morale and disengagement in remote settings.
Distributed nearshore software team collaborating remotely around a shared workspace with engineering icons, representing trust, culture, and alignment in nearshore development.
Trust in distributed teams starts with shared rituals, clarity, and consistent collaboration.

Lessons from a Nearshore Culture

At Scio, we treat culture like code: intentional, elegant, and constantly refined. Here’s what I’ve learned about building trust in distributed teams:

1. Make Culture a System, Not a Perk

Trust doesn’t come from virtual happy hours alone. It comes from consistent rituals and shared values:
  • Daily stand-ups that prioritize transparency and psychological safety.
  • Retrospectives that check in on people, not just metrics.
  • Peer recognition that celebrates collaboration and effort.

2. Communicate Beyond Tools

Slack and Zoom are great, but they can’t replace clarity. In remote settings:
  • Document decisions so they survive across time zones.
  • Use empathetic language, what feels neutral in one culture may sound abrupt in another.
  • Encourage questions before assumptions.

3. Prioritize Soft Skills

Technical skills deliver features; soft skills deliver trust. Encourage:
  • Empathy: Understand the context behind every message.
  • Adaptability: Be ready to adjust when priorities shift.
  • Accountability: Ownership matters more than hours online.

4. Create Spaces for Connection

Isolation kills trust. Build intentional moments for human connection:
  • Virtual coffee breaks or social channels.
  • Monthly check-ins focused on well-being.
  • Open forums for feedback and ideas.

5. Align on Values Early

From onboarding onward, reinforce values like:
  • Collaboration – solving problems together, not in silos.
  • Curiosity – asking “what if” and exploring better ways to work.
  • Ownership – taking responsibility for results, not just tasks.

Practical Recommendations for Software Companies

  • Audit your communication norms: Are they clear and culturally sensitive?
  • Invest in onboarding: Make cultural alignment part of the process.
  • Measure trust indicators: Engagement surveys, feedback loops, and retention rates.
  • Lead by example: Managers should model transparency and empathy.
Professional woman presenting on a video call from her home office, demonstrating strong communication practices essential for remote and nearshore engineering teams.
Meaningful communication builds trust — even when teams collaborate across screens.

Final Thought

Building trust across screens isn’t about adding more meetings, it’s about creating a culture where people feel safe, connected, and empowered to deliver their best work. In nearshore partnerships, that culture is your competitive advantage.

Further Reading

Helena Matamoros

Helena Matamoros

Human Capital Manager