
ENFJ LeadENTJ Report
Warm lead × commander member
Top 23% of all lead·report chemistry
Deadline management and direction are in sync — sharpen up feedback and this pair really clicks
Why this score?
How the four axes play out from lead → report
- CommunicationEEIn sync
- DirectionNNIn sync
- FeedbackFTWatch out
- ControlJJIn sync
Feedback is the make-or-break variable here
Their work chat
Chemistry by situation
In meetings
Lead · Walks into the meeting already firing off ideas.
Report · Fires right back — the meeting turns into a full debate.
💡 Great energy, but land it: close with one line on the decision and who owns what.
Giving feedback
Lead · 'Hmm... something feels off — can you take another pass at it?'
Report · 'What am I supposed to change exactly?' Staring at the screen, blank.
💡 'The weak spots are A and B — can you fix B first?' Give a priority and the member moves.
Under deadline
Lead · The moment they get the task, the deadline goes straight into the calendar.
Report · Works backward from the due date and maps out every stage.
💡 Planning is in sync — just leave one buffer slot for when things go sideways.
Direction & reporting
Lead · Listening to the report, the first question is 'how does this connect to the big picture?'
Report · Reports through the lens of context and possibilities.
💡 Direction lands well — add one line with a concrete number or date and execution gets a lot tighter.
Collaboration synergy
- 01
Deadline synergy
Your work rhythms match so well that 'when is this due?' never needs asking — things just flow.
- 02
Direction synergy
You see the work the same way, so when it's time to frame a report neither of you needs a long runway to get on the same page.
- 03
Communication synergy
Your communication tempo matches — silences aren't weird and meetings don't run over for no reason.
Friction points
- 01
Feedback conflict
The lead avoids hard calls and critical feedback — the member starts seeing them not as 'kind' but as 'weak.'
- 02
Deadline blind spot
Matching rhythms can breed complacency — and then the night before the deadline everything hits at once.
- 03
Direction blind spot
Shared perspective means shared blind spots too — if something's missing, both of you walk right past it.
Advice by role
- LeadWhat the lead needs to know
Don't end on praise and leave it there. Add 'and next time, can you try this instead?' — 'but' erases the compliment, 'and' keeps both alive.
- ReportWhat the member needs to know
Vague feedback from the lead? Ask 'can you be more specific?' — pushing for clarity is how you actually grow.
- Lead with your strengths
Strong deadline alignment is this pair's edge — build on that to fix the feedback gap.
Understanding each other
Lead · ENFJ's work style
Instinctively tuned to the team's mood and direction. As a lead, empathy is the default mode — checking in on reports comes naturally. As a member, they'll quietly overload themselves for the team and be the last one to say they're struggling. Ask 'how are you actually doing?' first and the relationship warms up fast.
Report · ENTJ's work style
Goal- and efficiency-driven — cuts straight to the conclusion in meetings and moves fast. As a lead, the push is strong. As a member, give them a clear mission and they handle it. Feedback can come out blunt, but there's no malice — take the directness at face value.
Best reports for a ENFJ lead — TOP3
Trickiest reports for a ENFJ lead — TOP3
Best leads for a ENTJ report — TOP3
Trickiest leads for a ENTJ report — TOP3
Just for fun. Real chemistry gets built by working together :)

