Team in communication and collaboration
Tools & Methods

The DISC® Model: A Smarter Way to Lead and Communicate

Dominance, Influence, Steadiness, Conscientiousness — four dimensions that describe not what people are, but how they naturally respond, and why two highly capable people can struggle so profoundly to understand each other.

Samuel Schaller May 2026 7 min read

DISC® is a behavioural model. It describes the ways in which individuals tend to respond to their environment: how they communicate, make decisions, manage pressure and interact with others. It is not a clinical personality test, nor a predictor of performance.

DISC® does not tell you what a person is capable of. It tells you how they naturally go about things. That distinction is essential to avoiding the two classic errors: essentialism ("he's a D, he can't listen") and stigmatising labelling.

The model is grounded in the work of William Moulton Marston in the 1920s, later developed for the professional world. It identifies two axes: the perception of the environment (favourable or hostile) and the response to that environment (active or reserved). Four behavioural tendencies emerge from their intersection.

The four DISC® profiles

D
Dominance

Results-oriented, direct, decisive. Makes decisions quickly, cuts to the point, has little tolerance for delay. Can be perceived as authoritarian or impatient by more reserved profiles.

Results · Control · Challenge · Speed
I
Influence

Enthusiastic, persuasive, people-oriented. Motivated by recognition and social interaction. Can lack rigour in follow-through or spread energy too thin.

Enthusiasm · Optimism · Contact · Influence
S
Steadiness

Patient, loyal, methodical. Values stability, teamwork and predictable environments. May resist change and find it difficult to express disagreement openly.

Cooperation · Loyalty · Consistency · Harmony
C
Conscientiousness

Analytical, precise, quality-focused. Needs data and logic before committing. Can be perceived as slow or excessively critical by D and I profiles.

Precision · Analysis · Quality · Method

Important: no one is a pure profile. Each individual has a combination of tendencies, with dominant dimensions that express differently depending on context — under pressure, in a meeting, one-to-one. DISC® measures tendencies, not fixed categories.

Why DISC® changes team dynamics

It makes conflict legible

The majority of interpersonal tensions in organisations do not stem from bad intentions. They come from different ways of processing information, communicating urgency, or reaching a decision. A D profile saying "it's simple, let's decide now" is not being disrespectful: they are operating naturally in action mode. A C profile saying "I need more data" is not being slow: they cannot commit without feeling adequately informed.

DISC® gives teams a shared language to name differences in how people work — without judging them.
Samuel Schaller — Schaller Consulting

It improves managerial communication

An effective manager does not communicate identically with everyone. Telling a D profile "here is the full process breakdown and every step involved" is counterproductive. Telling them "here is the goal and the deadline" works. Doing the reverse with a C profile produces anxiety.

DISC® is not manipulation: it is adjusting the form so that the substance lands. Much like naturally adapting vocabulary to match your audience.

Team collaboration with complementary profiles
The highest-performing teams are not those where everyone thinks alike — they are those where DISC® complementarities are understood and deliberately leveraged.

It informs recruitment and team design

The highest-performing teams are not those where everyone is similar. They are those where complementarities are conscious and valued. Having a D profile to challenge and decide, an I to generate buy-in, an S to stabilise and sustain, and a C to verify and quality-check — this is a genuine strength, provided each person understands their contribution.

10+ years applying DISC® with teams across all sizes and sectors
4 behavioural profiles, combined differently according to context

How DISC® is used in training

In the programmes I run, DISC® is almost always used as a starting point rather than an end goal. Participants complete their profile assessment beforehand, arrive with an understanding of their natural tendencies, and the training builds on that self-knowledge to work through the concrete situations that cause friction in their day-to-day reality.

It is not "here is your profile, now adapt." It is "here is what your combined profiles reveal about how you work together — and here is how to use that information to collaborate differently."

The combination of DISC® and intergenerational management is particularly powerful: it allows teams to distinguish between what stems from individual behavioural tendencies and what stems from generational cultural references — two things that teams routinely conflate.

DISC® certification alone is not sufficient to use it well. What matters is the ability to anchor it in real situations, not in theory. That is what I have been doing for over ten years with teams of all sizes and from every sector. Let's talk about your team.

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