When a team looks reactive: fear or stress?
How do thinking styles and motivational drivers influence team decisions and overall performance? In today’s article, Irena Grofelnik – a certified MindSonar®️ Professional and leadership transformation coach – shares her expert insights on navigating complexity in the modern workplace.
Specializing in systemic team development and cognitive profiling, Irena excels at translating complex psychological insights into practical leadership tools. Through her work, she helps organizations reduce friction, build resilience, and unlock the full potential of their people. Dive into her latest piece below.
In one recent MindSonar® assessment conducted in an organization with more than 40 participants, an interesting pattern appeared: most profiles showed a Reactive orientation in the Proactive–Reactive thinking style.
The immediate reaction from my professional observation was concern:
Are employees blocked by fear, or are they simply responding to high stress levels?
This question is more important than it seems, because reactivity can have very different meanings depending on the context.
What the reactive thinking style actually means
In the MindSonar® model, the Proactive–Reactive dimension describes how people initiate action.
Proactive individuals tend to initiate action independently and quickly. Reactive individuals prefer to observe, collect information, and respond after signals from the environment.
A key point that is often misunderstood: Reactive does not mean passive.
Many high-quality professionals — analysts, engineers, compliance experts — naturally operate in a more reflective and reactive way. The real question is therefore not whether someone is reactive, but why.
Two possible sources of reactivity
When a team appears predominantly reactive, two explanations are typically possible.
1. Natural Cognitive Preference
Some individuals simply prefer to think before acting. Their profiles often combine reactive orientation with patterns such as:
- Procedures
- Detail orientation
- Cause–effect thinking
In such cases, reactivity reflects analytical processing, not hesitation.
2. Stress or Organizational Pressure
However, reactive behavior can also appear when employees operate in environments where:
- mistakes are penalized
- decision authority is unclear
- approval from superiors is required
- workload or uncertainty is high
Under these conditions, people often reduce initiative and wait for signals, which shows up as reactive patterns in the measurement.
In other words: Sometimes people are not reactive by preference, but by adaptation.
How to interpret the results correctly
To understand the real meaning of reactive results, it is important to look at thinkig styles combinations and values.
For example:
Reactive + Procedures → careful and methodical thinking
Reactive + Detail focus → analytical work style
Reactive + External reference → reliance on approval
Reactive + Away-from motivation → risk avoidance
When reactive orientation is combined with strong security values or authority orientation, the pattern may reflect organizational culture rather than personality.
What leaders should do
If reactive patterns come from analytical thinking, the team may actually be well suited for roles requiring precision and risk awareness. However, if reactivity stems from stress or fear, the solution is not training individuals but adjusting the environment, for example:
- clarifying decision authority
- increasing psychological safety
- encouraging responsible initiative
- balancing risk control with autonomy
Understanding the difference is essential. Because sometimes the problem is not that people cannot act — but that the system signals they should not.
Irena Grofelnik, TTPC, Certified Mindsonar Professional, Slovenia, irena@spiriton.si

