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What Kind of Leader Are You
When No One's
Watching?

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1,200+ managers profiled this quarter

Workshop facilitator laughing at whiteboard covered in hand-drawn frameworks, marker in hand

Your archetype

The Bridge

You build trust across silos. Your team finishes each other's sentences.

72% match

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The Architect·The Torch·The Mirror·The Bridge·Discover Your Style·The Architect·The Torch·The Mirror·The Bridge·Discover Your Style·The Architect·The Torch·The Mirror·The Bridge·Discover Your Style·The Architect·The Torch·The Mirror·The Bridge·Discover Your Style·
The Questions Nobody Googles at Work

The stuff managers actually
think about at 11pm.

Each question names a real leadership pattern. Click to see the honest answer — and find out which archetype you might be.

Part 1 — Trust & Communication

Because you've accidentally trained them that disagreement is dangerous. It usually starts small — an eye roll, a quick redirect, a 'let's take this offline' that never happens. Over time, people learn to perform alignment while routing real feedback through safer channels. The Slack thread isn't the problem. It's the data.

Leadership archetype →The Architect· See your result in the assessment

Most managers avoid feedback because they only learned feedback as punishment. The shift is small but everything: feedback is a description of impact, not a verdict on character. 'When you interrupt in client calls, the client stops sharing' lands differently than 'You're too aggressive.' One opens a conversation. The other ends it.

Leadership archetype →The Mirror· See your result in the assessment

No. But it's slower than building one from scratch, and you have to be honest about what you're actually inheriting — norms, not people. People adapt quickly when they see consistent new behavior from the top of the room. The tax you pay is the first six months, where you'll be tested constantly to see if you mean it.

Leadership archetype →The Bridge· See your result in the assessment

Recognise yourself in any of these?

Find out which archetype you are.

Three minutes. Five scenarios. One honest profile that names what you're already doing — and what to do next.

Part 2 — Power, Presence & Promotion

Because the signals were behavioral, not verbal. High performers stop volunteering in meetings 3–6 weeks before they resign. They stop pushing back on decisions. They get suspiciously easy to manage. What looked like maturity was disengagement. The antidote isn't more check-ins — it's making it safe to voice ambition before it becomes a resignation letter.

Leadership archetype →The Torch· See your result in the assessment

Because meetings have become the arena where people perform competence rather than solve problems. This happens when leaders reward the loudest voice and mistake silence for agreement. Try this: send the question 24 hours before the meeting. You'll discover who actually thinks and who just talks fast.

Leadership archetype →The Architect· See your result in the assessment

Stop trying to prove you deserve the role. You already have it. What senior people actually want from a younger manager is clarity, protection from organizational nonsense, and credit for their expertise. Ask them how they'd approach the problem before you tell them how you'd solve it. That's not weakness — that's the job.

Leadership archetype →The Bridge· See your result in the assessment

Still reading? Good.

The leaders who change things
ask this kind of question.

Take the assessment. See which of the four archetypes fits you best. No email required to start.

From the rooms where it happened

What changes when managers
stop pretending.

"I came in expecting another deck about psychological safety. What I got was a room full of managers having the most uncomfortable and most honest conversation I've seen in eight years of L&D. Two team leads cried. Both in a good way. We booked a follow-up before we left the building."
Priya Menon, Head of People & Culture at Fieldstone Systems

Priya Menon

Head of People & Culture · Fieldstone Systems

420 employees

"My manager did the assessment before the workshop and came out as a Torch. He laughed, then got quiet, then asked me if he ever made me feel like I couldn't speak up. That question changed something. We've had better 1:1s in the last six weeks than in the two years before."
Marcus Webb, Senior Software Engineer at Clearpath Digital

Marcus Webb

Senior Software Engineer · 180-person eng team

"We'd tried three leadership programs in four years. All good content, zero behavior change. Catalyst was different because it named the actual patterns — not aspirational ones. My managers stopped performing leadership and started practicing it. Retention in our highest-risk teams is up 22% this year."
Sandra Okafor, VP of Talent Development at Meridian Group

Sandra Okafor

VP of Talent Development · 1,100 employees

94%

of managers report a behavioral shift within 30 days of a Catalyst workshop

22%

average reduction in voluntary attrition at companies running quarterly cohorts

6 hrs

average time-to-insight from assessment to first applied behavior change

For HR directors & L&D teams

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workshop actually looks like.

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