Fiedler's Contingency Model
Leadership effectiveness isn’t just about the leader’s style but about how well that style fits the situation.
4 Patterns of Team Conflicts
Summary of typical conflicts in the workplace, discover proven strategies
5Ps Leadership Framework
Simple models enhance your leadership skills.
Thomas-Kilmann Conflict Mode Instrument (TKI)
Using dual concern theory to understand and resolve conflicts.
SBI Model
Deliver objective feedback by separating situation, behavior, and impact.
7% Rule for Organizational Change
Start with 7%, Spark the Rest.
3A Trust Model
Gives you a simple and clear structure to build trust fast.
10-10-10 Meeting Model
Structure 30-minute meetings into focused parts for better feedback.
Johari Window
Expand self-awareness, uncover blind spots, and strengthen trust through structured feedback.
Tuckman Model
Help you better structure, understand, and develop the team.
GREAT Coaching Model
Emphasis on timing, ensuring actions are strategically aligned with deadlines for effective goal setting.
SOAR Self-Leadership Model
Built on four essential components that guide personal and professional development.
Leadership Success Model
Define the success of leadership via team engaged, personal satisfaction, and organizational success.
Three Circles of Influence
Grow your influence via focusing what you can control.
Bridges Transition Model
Focus on the emotional and psychological transitions individuals experience during change.
Goleman Emotional Intelligence Model
Foundation for personal success and leadership.
Satir Change Model
Details the process of change through five stages.
ABCD Trust Model
Increase engagement and commitment in the workplace.
SCARF Model
Uncovers the emotional drivers behind employee reactions.
CLEAR 1
Strengthen alignment between your priorities and your manager’s expectations.
GROW Model
Helps people clarify goals, assess situation, explore options, and take actions.
SCARF Model: Understanding the 5 Drivers of Human Behavior
Uncovers the emotional drivers behind employee reactions.
SCARF Model
Problems Behind Workplace Struggles
In modern workplaces, people often feel unheard, anxious about change. These experiences lead to low morale, poor communication, resistance to change, and high turnover.
Whether it's during a major organizational shift or day-to-day operations, leaders constantly struggle to keep teams engaged and motivated. But what if there was a simple model that could explain and even fix these recurring issues?
The SCARF model was developed by David Rock in 2008 as part of his work on neuroleadership. It draws on neuroscience to explain how social interactions affect the brain.
The model identifies five key domains that influence our behavior. These domains trigger reward or threat responses in the brain, directly affecting motivation, collaboration, and performance.
The 5 Domains of the SCARF Model
Status
This refers to a person’s sense of worth and relative importance in comparison to others.
When status is threatened (like being excluded or overlooked), it activates the same brain response as physical pain. Supporting growth mindsets, recognition, and inclusion boosts this domain.
Certainty
People crave predictability.
When the future is unclear, anxiety increases. Certainty is about providing clear goals, consistent communication, and long-term strategies. Clarity makes change feel safer and easier to embrace.
Autonomy
This is the sense of control over one’s environment or decisions.
When people feel powerless, motivation drops. Empowering individuals with decision-making rights, flexible work structures, and ownership restores a sense of autonomy.
Relatedness
Humans are social beings.
We instinctively look for belonging and connection. Relatedness grows when people feel safe, included, and able to trust others. Building strong, cross-functional relationships increases collaboration and loyalty.
Fairness
This is the perception that decisions and actions are just and unbiased. Inconsistent rules or favoritism destroy trust.
Fairness thrives in environments where expectations are transparent and rewards are based on contribution, not competition.