Cultural Intelligence (CQ)
entry by Julie M. Marx, Global Family Expert at Expat Valley
Cultural Intelligence (CQ) is an individual’s capability to function effectively in situations characterized by cultural diversity, drawing on a set of metacognitive, cognitive, motivational, and behavioral capacities. It describes how people notice and make sense of cultural cues, what they know about cultural norms and systems, how motivated they are to engage across difference, and how flexibly they adjust their behavior in real time. CQ is typically measured with validated scales and has been linked to better cross-cultural adjustment, decision-making, and performance in diverse settings, including expatriate assignments and multicultural teams. In work with global families, CQ offers a structured way to assess and develop the specific capabilities that support healthy adaptation, relationships, and leadership across cultures, distinct from but complementary to broader constructs like intercultural competence and global mindset.
Comparable terms
Cultural agility (HR/mobility, leadership development); Intercultural competence (education, training); Global mindset (international business, leadership); Emotional Intelligence EQ (leadership, psychology)
Why this matters
CQ provides practitioners with a research-based framework for understanding why some individuals and families adapt more effectively across cultures than others. It highlights that effective cross-cultural functioning is learnable, breaking it down into concrete dimensions that can be assessed and developed over time. For global families and the professionals who support them, CQ helps target interventions (training, coaching, education) toward the specific capabilities most needed for sustainable wellbeing and effectiveness in diverse cultural environments.
Cross-references
Intercultural Competence (Cultural Adaptation); Cultural Agility (Cultural Adaptation); Global Mindset (Identity & Belonging); EQ (Cultural Adaptation); ICC (Cultural Adaptation); Intercultural Sensitivity (Identity & Belonging). These related entries situate CQ within the broader ecosystem of constructs used to describe cross-cultural effectiveness, with CQ emphasizing a multidimensional capability set, intercultural competence and ICC emphasizing developmental and communicative skills, global mindset emphasizing cognitive complexity, EQ emphasizing emotional attunement, and intercultural sensitivity emphasizing perceptual and affective openness to cultural difference.
Sources
Earley, P.C., Ang, S. 2003. Cultural Intelligence: Individual Interactions Across Cultures. Stanford University Press. Ang, S., Van Dyne, L. 2008. Conceptualization of cultural intelligence: Definition, distinctiveness, and nomological network. In S. Ang, L. Van Dyne (Eds.), Handbook of Cultural Intelligence. Sharpe. Van Dyne, L., Ang, S., Koh, C. 2008. Development and validation of the CQS. In S. Ang, L. Van Dyne (Eds.), Handbook of Cultural Intelligence. Sharpe.
« Back
