Member Story

The Five Leadership Languages

Rebecca Brasfield
|
October 18, 2016

The five leadership languages are the different ways we communicate our leadership style — and knowing your primary language can help you maximize your leadership goals.

Inspired by the “The Five Love Languages” by Gary Chapman, these Leadership Languages are not mutually exclusive, and may overlap. Understanding the range of ways we communicate our leadership ability helps us identify how we differ in our individual style of being leaders.

What are the Five Leadership Languages?

Speech and Talk leadership

Using language and different forms of communication (speech, written, braille, sign, media, art, etc.) to advance your goal or mission in leadership.

Examples: Giving speeches; providing direction to others; sharing your vision or mission; giving feedback on evaluations to motivate the performance of others; creating a symbol of your vision.

Doing and Action leadership

Taking action steps to “get things done” and “make things happen.”

Examples: Editing a document when you notice errors; identifying a problem with service and correcting the problem; noticing delays in performance and stepping in to do whatever work is needed to get the team on schedule.

Time and Attention leadership

Being present, listening to concerns, showing up for others.

Examples: Recognizing work anniversaries, important accomplishments and milestones with recognition; calling someone or attending a funeral to give your condolences when a loved one passes away; taking the time to listen to complaints from a customer or staff member.

Learning the Five Leadership Languages helps us recognize exceptional leaders, who often maximize all five. Although some may come more naturally to each of us, they can all be learned and improved.

Results leadership

Affirming high quality performance, and successfully meeting controllable objectives — not necessarily outcomes, which often we cannot control.

Examples: Putting in a certain number of hours on a project each week; providing a client with a variety of tangible options; submitting a high quality proposal on time; making a certain number of sales calls per week to meet your goal.

Modeling leadership

Being a living example of characteristics such as trust, integrity, honesty, reliability, accountability and fairness.

Examples: Keeping your word or informing others in advance when you cannot keep commitments; communicating your professional role honestly without exaggerating your capacity; being honest but prudent in your business negotiations; holding all staff accountable in a fair way that builds trust.

Learning the Five Leadership Languages helps us recognize exceptional leaders, who often maximize all five of these languages. And, although some may come more naturally to each of us, they can all be learned and improved.


Becky Brasfield is an Inaugural Disability Lead Fellow. In 2016, she was a featured speaker at a BMO Harris executive roundtable luncheon on diversity, equity and inclusion, where she shared her perspective on the connection between disability and leadership—including her observations on the Five Languages of Leadership, excerpted here. This article was originally posted on
The Chicago Community Trust blog on October 18, 2016.


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