
ESTP LeadINFJ Report
Direct lead × visionary member
Top 93% of all lead·report chemistry
Feedback and deadline management diverge significantly — both sides need to make a conscious effort
Why this score?
How the four axes play out from lead → report
- CommunicationEIWatch out
- DirectionSNWatch out
- FeedbackTFWatch out
- ControlPJWatch out
Misaligned across multiple axes — feedback, deadline management, and more
Their work chat
Chemistry by situation
In meetings
Lead · Talks nonstop through the meeting, questions coming one after another.
Report · Can't find a gap to speak — just waiting for it to be over.
💡 If the lead pauses and asks 'what do you think, [name]?' the member's take actually comes out.
Giving feedback
Lead · 'Did you actually think this through before the meeting?'
Report · Internally: 'okay wow, are you serious right now?' — face goes rigid.
💡 Same feedback, 1:1 setting, reframed as 'what if you tried this instead?' — the member opens up.
Under deadline
Lead · 'Oh wait, when did I say it was due... this week sometime?'
Report · Flipping through the calendar: 'Three days left this week...' quietly panicking.
💡 One routine — confirm the deadline in writing at kickoff — saves the whole team a lot of stress.
Direction & reporting
Lead · Feedback comes in specifying the font size on a report.
Report · 'Am I not allowed to make any decisions on my own...' — quiet internal sigh.
💡 Agreeing on output standards upfront dramatically reduces process interference.
Collaboration synergy
- 01
Unexpected pairing
Not much obvious overlap — which means you fill in each other's blind spots. Works better than it looks on paper.
- 02
Grow by bumping into each other
Opposite styles make it frustrating at first — but once you finish something together, the output beats what either of you would've produced alone.
Friction points
- 01
Deadline conflict
The lead never closes the loop on deadlines or direction — the member is constantly anxious going 'wait, when is this actually due?'
- 02
Feedback conflict
The lead's blunt feedback gets amplified by the power gap — the member is mentally screaming 'seriously?!' while their face stays neutral.
- 03
Direction conflict
The lead micromanages down to the execution details — the member feels like a bird in a cage.
Advice by role
- LeadWhat the lead needs to know
Try Situation → Behavior → Impact: 'the numbers on page 2 look off — clients might lose trust' lands way better than 'this report is wrong.'
- ReportWhat the member needs to know
Before the bluntness lands too hard, come back with 'which part needs fixing and how?' — one question shifts the whole energy.
Understanding each other
Lead · ESTP's work style
Act first, figure it out as you go — that's the operating mode. As a lead, fewer meetings, more doing, then adjust. As a member, fast execution and instant reactions are the strengths. Real performance shows in the move-fast-fix-fast loop, not in elaborate process.
Report · INFJ's work style
Reads the room and the team's emotional state before anything else. As a lead, tracks each person's motivation and headspace. As a member, too busy reading the lead's signals to actually say when their own work is getting hard. A lead who asks first is a lead they open up to.
Best reports for a ESTP lead — TOP3
Trickiest reports for a ESTP lead — TOP3
Best leads for a INFJ report — TOP3
Trickiest leads for a INFJ report — TOP3
Just for fun. Real chemistry gets built by working together :)

