1. Introduction
Leadership research continues to emphasize the value of adaptability for managing today’s dynamic and multicultural workplaces (
Schulze & Pinkow, 2020;
Ramesh et al., 2024;
Del Pino-Marchito et al., 2025). This importance was underscored during the COVID-19 pandemic, when leaders had to adapt almost overnight to remote teamwork, extreme uncertainty, and unprecedented challenges to employee well-being (
Dirani et al., 2020;
Contreras et al., 2020;
Rudolph et al., 2021). The crisis showed that adaptability is not just a helpful managerial skill but is essential for modern leadership (
Bartsch et al., 2021).
Situational Leadership Theory (SLT) remains one of the most widely used leadership frameworks in management training and practice (
Johansen, 1990;
Avery & Ryan, 2002;
Egan, 2023). SLT’s intuitive premise—that leaders should vary their task and relationship behaviours in response to follower readiness—has found a place in countless executive programmes and consulting toolkits. Nevertheless, decades of research have revealed two persistent limitations. First, SLT’s two-dimensional model oversimplifies leader–follower interactions, overlooking factors such as psychological safety and organizational culture (
Graeff, 1997;
A. Edmondson, 1999;
McLaurin, 2006;
Omilion-Hodges & Ptacek, 2021). Second, SLT tends to neglect relational and emotional dynamics, favouring rational assessments of competence and commitment while giving less attention to affective signals, shared meaning making, and dialogic sensemaking (
Humphrey, 2013;
Thompson & Glasø, 2015;
Jäppinen, 2017). These issues are not merely theoretical. Practitioners have observed that traditional SLT assessments can misjudge follower “readiness” in fast-changing, high-emotion situations such as crises, post-merger transitions, or remote work (
Zhang & Fjermestad, 2006;
Kashive et al., 2022;
Westover, 2024). Yet, to date, SLT offers no framework to capture these subjective facets of readiness.
The primary objective of this study is to help address SLT’s limitations by developing a more nuanced model of follower readiness. Therefore, a 4D model was developed, containing Drive, Dare, Decode, and Dialogue as a multidimensional framework for the richer assessment of subjective readiness. This structured “4D” model extends SLT’s traditional focus on competence and commitment by explicitly incorporating motivational (Drive), confidence-based (Dare), cognitive (Decode), and relational/communicative (Dialogue) facets. In doing so, it addresses a key theoretical gap in leadership research: the lack of a multidimensional, subjective readiness construct that captures the full range of follower capabilities and engagement. Notably, scholars have long called for richer, multidimensional, and more subjective conceptions of readiness (
Avolio & Hannah, 2008;
Carsten & Uhl-Bien, 2012;
Thompson & Glasø, 2018). This study responds to that call by proposing the 4D Model of Subjective Readiness as a new diagnostic framework. The 4D model is intended to broaden leadership readiness assessments and serve as a concise tool for managers to better align their behaviour with follower needs across contexts. Accordingly, this study asks the following research question: can a 4D subjective readiness model better capture follower readiness and relate to outcomes (satisfaction, adaptability) beyond traditional one-dimensional indicators?
To test the 4D model empirically, this study draws on cross-sectional survey data from full-time employees and managers who completed a newly developed 12-item readiness measure, along with established assessments of satisfaction, perceived team adaptability, and traditional readiness indicators such as tenure and training. This study aims to provide two primary contributions to the situational leadership literature. It proposes a broadened conception of follower readiness that incorporates motivational, cognitive, and relational dimensions alongside traditional competence and commitment, and it provides initial correlational evidence that these subjective facets are associated with important workplace outcomes beyond conventional indicators—though these insights should be interpreted cautiously given the design and psychometric limitations noted. The remainder of the article first examines the theoretical grounding and development of the 4D model, and then describes the research approach and presents the empirical findings. This is followed by a discussion of their implications and the study’s methodological constraints, after which we conclude with suggestions for future research.
4. Results
Consistent with Hypothesis 1, employees’ overall 4D readiness was moderately and positively correlated with satisfaction with the supervisor (r = 0.53,
p < 0.001, n = 169). Multiple regression including all four readiness dimensions explained 32.9% of the variance in satisfaction (R
2 = 0.329; F(4, 164) = 20.09,
p < 0.001). Because both readiness and satisfaction are perceptual self-reported constructs, and CMV tests indicated a non-trivial method factor, these associations should be interpreted as upper-bound estimates rather than precise effect sizes. Residuals deviated from normality (Shapiro–Wilk
p < 0.001), so robust regression results are reported. In this model, Drive (β = 0.38,
p < 0.01) and Dialogue (β = 0.51,
p < 0.01) were significant positive correlates, while Dare and Decode were not. Given the weaker measurement reliability of the Drive facet in the employee sample, all Drive effects in this section should be viewed as tentative. Analyses using a shortened two-item Drive scale (excluding the weakly loading item) yielded a very similar pattern of results. However, results involving the Drive facet should still be interpreted cautiously due to this facet’s weak psychometric properties (notably low reliability) in the employee sample (see
Appendix A Table A6).
Dare’s regression coefficient was negative when controlling for the other 4D facets, even though Dare’s zero-order correlation with satisfaction was near zero (slightly positive). Diagnostic checks indicated that this negative partial effect was not an artifact of multicollinearity or model misspecification. Collinearity was low (max condition index ≈ 13, with no severe dimensions), linearity and homoscedasticity assumptions were satisfied, and the negative effect of Dare persisted under robust estimators (HC3, WLS) and after removing outliers. Dare showed virtually no positive association with satisfaction on its own, yet after accounting for Drive and Dialogue, its coefficient turned negative, with higher Dare associated with lower satisfaction.
Consistent with Hypothesis 2, managers’ satisfaction with collaboration was strongly correlated with employees’ overall 4D readiness (r = 0.80,
p < 0.001, n = 91). Follow-up validity checks indicated that this extremely high correlation reflects substantial conceptual overlap between managers’ readiness ratings and their satisfaction judgments: the shared variance (r
2 ≈ 0.64) exceeded the average variance extracted for readiness, and a two-factor CFA did not clearly separate readiness and satisfaction as distinct latent constructs (see
Appendix A Table A12). A regression model including the four 4D facets explained a substantial 69.9% of the variance in manager satisfaction, F(4, 86) = 49.83,
p < 0.001 (R
2 = 0.699), though this estimate is likely inflated by conceptual overlap, shared response format, and the modest manager sample size. Accordingly, the findings should be interpreted as convergent rather than predictive evidence.
Robust regression again showed Drive (β = 0.20, p < 0.05), Dare (β = 0.20, p < 0.05), and especially Dialogue (β = 0.61, p < 0.01) as positive correlates. Given the evaluative similarity of the constructs, these associations reflect shared impressions rather than independent predictive effects. Diagnostic tests showed no concerning multicollinearity (all VIFs < 3.4), and excluding four influential outlier cases did not materially change the model (final R2 ≈ 0.698).
To evaluate incremental validity (Hypothesis 3), hierarchical regression analyses were conducted to compare traditional readiness markers with the 4D readiness dimensions. In Step 1, the three traditional indicators—tenure, training completion, and self-rated performance—accounted for 24.4% of the variance in employee satisfaction and 15.9% of the variance in perceived team adaptability. In Step 2, adding the four subjective 4D dimensions significantly increased the explained variance to 38.8% for satisfaction (ΔR2 = 0.144, FΔ(4, 157) = 9.25, p < 0.001) and to 26.6% for adaptability (ΔR2 = 0.107, FΔ(4, 157) = 5.67, p < 0.001). Given the presence of a common method factor in the measurement model, these incremental R2 values should be viewed as upper-bound estimates rather than precise effect sizes. In the final combined model (using robust estimation), Drive (β = 0.29, p < 0.01), Dialogue (β = 0.43, p < 0.01), and Dare (β = −0.29, p < 0.05) emerged as significant unique correlates of employee satisfaction (with self-rated performance also remaining significant). Supplementary analyses using the shortened two-item Drive subscale yielded a comparable pattern, but the Drive results should still be interpreted with caution in light of this facet’s weaker psychometric performance for employees. For perceived team adaptability, Decode (β = 0.26, p < 0.05) and Dialogue (β = 0.24, p < 0.05) emerged as significant positive correlates. No concerning multicollinearity was evident (all VIFs < 2.7), and all other model diagnostics fell within acceptable limits.
5. Discussion
Overall, the findings provide support for our hypotheses, albeit with some nuanced patterns across the 4D facets. Hypothesis 1, which proposed that followers’ subjective readiness would predict their satisfaction with superiors, was confirmed: facets reflecting intrinsic motivation and two-way communication (Drive and Dialogue) showed significant positive links with employees’ satisfaction. The overall 4D model explained roughly one-third of the variance in satisfaction, indicating a moderate effect size. However, because the data were cross-sectional self-reports and the Drive facet had weaker measurement reliability, these results should be considered upper-bound estimates rather than strong evidence of prediction. In essence, employees were most satisfied when they felt autonomously motivated and had clear, supportive communication with their leader—a pattern that aligns with self-determination theory’s emphasis on fulfilling autonomy and relatedness needs (
Deci & Ryan, 2000).
By contrast, Dare (D2) and Decode (D3) did not make significant unique contributions to employee satisfaction. In routine day-to-day work, employees may prioritize feeling energized and understood over autonomy or complex sensemaking, valuing the “will” (Drive) and the “way” (Dialogue) more than independent decision confidence or contextual interpretation. This interpretation is consistent with work indicating that supportive and clarifying leadership behaviors are more effective than autonomy-focused approaches for sustaining engagement in routine tasks (
Ferrari, 2024). In this cross-sectional context, all four readiness facets remain conceptually important, but Drive and Dialogue were the primary correlates of satisfaction, whereas Dare and Decode were comparatively less influential.
Hypothesis 2, which examined managers’ satisfaction with their employees, was supported (though, as noted, the result is based on a small sample and should be viewed as exploratory). Managers’ 4D readiness ratings were extremely strongly associated with their satisfaction with employees (around 70% shared variance), but this is likely inflated by conceptual overlap since the same individuals provided both ratings. Thus, the result is better viewed as convergent evidence of aligned perceptions than as an independent test of predictive power. Even so, Dialogue stood out as the strongest facet influencing managers’ satisfaction, with Drive and Dare also showing positive (if lesser) effects, while Decode had no notable unique impact. The prominence of open dialogue aligns with transformational leadership theories that stress high-quality communication in driving positive leader–member evaluations (
Bass, 1990;
Thompson & Glasø, 2018;
Palupi, 2020).
Hypothesis 3 was supported: adding the four subjective 4D facets to traditional readiness metrics yielded a modest but significant boost in explained variance for both employee satisfaction and team adaptability (on the order of a 10–15% increase). This suggests that perceptual readiness factors capture motivational and relational qualities beyond what structural indicators alone reflect, consistent with prior evidence that attitudinal measures provide added value in explaining outcomes (
Huselid, 1995;
Lynch et al., 2011;
Bonini et al., 2024). In the full models, Drive and Dialogue remained significant positive predictors of employees’ satisfaction, while Decode (with some contribution from Dialogue) was the strongest predictor of perceived team adaptability. Dare’s role was more complex: it showed no benefit for employees’ satisfaction (even a slight suppression effect when other facets were controlled) despite relating positively to managers’ satisfaction. Because this minor negative effect for employee satisfaction appeared only under statistical controls and not in simple correlations, we interpret it as a tentative artifact rather than a true negative influence.
Overall, the pattern indicates that in situations requiring adaptability, employees value shared sensemaking and open communication (Decode and Dialogue), whereas under routine conditions their satisfaction depends more on intrinsic motivation and supportive communication (Drive and Dialogue). This aligns with theoretical perspectives that different leadership behaviors matter for different outcomes—for example, situational leadership frameworks highlighting task-versus-relationship focus depending on context (
Wang et al., 2024) and transformational leadership’s call for intellectual stimulation to foster adaptability versus relational support to sustain satisfaction (
Bass, 1990).
If the negative association between Dare and employee satisfaction were to generalize, one plausible explanation is that bold or risk-taking behavior without corresponding relational support may be perceived as overconfident or disruptive, reducing others’ satisfaction with the relationship. From a self-determination perspective, high-Dare behavior lacking autonomy-supportive cues can appear controlling rather than empowering; without the relational warmth conveyed through Dialogue, “daring” initiatives may undermine connectedness and psychological safety (
Deci & Ryan, 2000;
A. Edmondson, 1999). Research on assertiveness similarly suggests an inverted-U pattern, with moderate risk-taking viewed positively but excessive or unmodulated assertiveness perceived negatively (
Ames & Flynn, 2007). Cultural context may further modulate these reactions: in high power-distance or high uncertainty-avoidance settings, unrestrained risk-taking may be interpreted as challenging hierarchy or creating instability, thereby eliciting stronger negative responses to unmitigated Dare (
Rockstuhl et al., 2011;
Taras et al., 2010). Overall, these considerations suggest that Dare’s impact is likely context-dependent and, given the present data, should be interpreted cautiously rather than as a robust negative effect.
Across the three outcomes, the 4D model explained a moderate proportion of variance (R
2 values of roughly 0.16–0.39), which is typical for organizational behavior research where many factors jointly shape results. In theory-driven work, the pattern and consistency of individual effects (such as the recurring contributions of Drive and Dialogue) are often more informative than the absolute R
2 values themselves (
Abelson, 1985;
Shmueli, 2010). Nevertheless, the evidence is cross-sectional and based entirely on self-reports, so the associations observed here should be viewed as suggestive rather than causal and may be inflated by common method variance.
Although the sample spanned multiple industries, it did not explicitly account for cross-cultural differences, so any cultural interpretations remain speculative. Cross-cultural frameworks suggest that societal values could shift the relative importance of the facets (
Hofstede, 2001). In more collectivist environments, Dialogue (D4) may exert an even stronger influence on satisfaction and adaptability because of the emphasis on harmony and group cohesion, whereas in more individualistic contexts Dare (D2) may be evaluated more positively, in line with norms favoring autonomy and initiative (
Fernandez & Vecchio, 1997). The sensemaking captured by Decode (D3) may also differ, with collectivist teams leaning toward collective interpretation and consensus and individualistic teams relying more on individual cognitive processing (
Yeo et al., 2025). In the present data, Dialogue remained the most consistent predictor across subgroups, hinting that high-quality communication may be broadly important, while Decode was more strongly tied to perceived adaptability than to dyadic satisfaction, potentially reflecting sample heterogeneity or unmeasured contextual factors.
Finally, our findings on team adaptability underscore that effective leadership requires not only matching one’s style to follower readiness levels, as emphasized in traditional SLT, but also flexibly shifting between different modes as situations evolve. The fact that both Decode and Dialogue predicted adaptability implies that leaders may need to combine “exploratory” behaviors (encouraging new interpretations and sensemaking) with “exploitative” behaviors (providing stable guidance and clear, supportive communication) to help teams respond to change. This view is consistent with accounts of adaptive and ambidextrous leadership, which emphasize flexible, context-responsive behavior rather than rigid adherence to a single style (
Zacher & Rosing, 2015). Overall, the 4D framework appears compatible with established leadership theories and offers a concise way of articulating motivational, cognitive, and relational aspects of readiness, while recognizing that the present evidence is correlational and based on self-reported perceptions rather than objective performance.
6. Conclusions
This study suggests that subjective readiness, as measured through the 4D model (Drive, Dare, Decode, Dialogue), is associated with several key organizational outcomes. In particular, higher 4D readiness was associated with greater employee satisfaction with their supervisors (H1) and higher manager satisfaction with their employees (H2). Moreover, the 4D dimensions explained additional variance in both employee satisfaction and team adaptability beyond that explained by objective readiness indicators (H3). Because all variables were assessed via self-report and CMV diagnostics indicated non-trivial method effects, the associations observed here should be interpreted as indicative rather than as strong predictive or causal evidence. Taken together, the findings suggest that the 4D model offers a useful multidimensional lens for understanding perceived relational and team dynamics, while still requiring refinement—particularly for the Drive facet in the employee sample and for clearer differentiation between readiness and satisfaction in manager ratings.
6.1. Theoretical Implications
At a theoretical level, this study underscores the critical importance of intrinsic motivation and open communication in effective leader–follower relationships. By incorporating these elements into the definition of “readiness,” the 4D model extends Situational Leadership Theory beyond its traditional emphasis on follower competence and commitment to include motivational and relational dimensions that are often overlooked. Defining Drive and Dialogue as distinct facets of readiness is a key conceptual contribution—it addresses a gap in prior SLT research, where such psychological processes were treated as peripheral rather than central. That said, given the weaker reliability of the Drive measure in our employee sample, any conclusions about Drive’s role should be viewed as tentative until this facet is refined and validated in future research.
Moreover, the strong link observed between managers’ readiness ratings and their own satisfaction aligns with transformational leadership’s emphasis on open, empowering communication with subordinates—even if part of this link was likely inflated by the common source of the ratings. Likewise, our finding that 4D subjective readiness accounted for more variance in satisfaction and adaptability than objective credentials highlights the limitation of relying only on tenure or formal qualifications; it demonstrates the added value of including employees’ attitudinal indicators in readiness models. Together, these insights argue for a holistic approach to evaluating readiness: subjective readiness should complement (not replace) objective measures when assessing employee capabilities. However, since our evidence comes from same-source perceptions and lacks behavioural criteria, the influence of subjective readiness should still be interpreted with appropriate caution.
6.2. Managerial Implications
An important practical implication of our findings is the need for leaders to foster open two-way communication (Dialogue) with their followers, as this facet proved to be the strongest positive driver of both employee and manager satisfaction (and was even linked to better perceived team adaptability). Leaders who emphasize transparent communication, frequent feedback, and trust-building interactions are likely to see improvements in these outcomes. In practice, organizations can cultivate such dialogue through measures like regular debriefings, brief team huddles, 360-degree feedback systems, and open-door policies that normalize continuous leader–employee communication.
Organizations may also benefit from integrating the 4D model into training, development, and performance-management systems. By assessing and developing each readiness facet (Drive, Dare, Decode, Dialogue), managers can more holistically gauge and strengthen employees’ motivation, confidence, adaptability, and communication skills. Interventions might, for example, use scenario-based role plays to build Decode (sensemaking under change) and communication workshops to enhance Dialogue when customer or stakeholder interaction is central.
Cultivating employees’ intrinsic motivation (Drive) is generally beneficial for their satisfaction and retention, but our findings on this facet were not especially robust. Organizations should still promote intrinsic motivation by providing meaningful development opportunities, granting employees more autonomy in how they do their work, and designing roles that allow skill growth—all while keeping in mind that our evidence for Drive’s impact is preliminary.
Finally, our results indicate that conventional readiness metrics (like tenure or credentials) have limited value by themselves, whereas adding a structured subjective assessment (the 4D model) provides a more holistic view of readiness by capturing employees’ perceived motivation, confidence, sensemaking, and communication. Organizations should use the 4D framework to complement—not replace—those traditional indicators, so that both objective and attitudinal perspectives inform leadership decisions. Moreover, because our outcomes were all self-reported, any use of the 4D assessment in practice should be paired with monitoring of actual performance indicators to ensure that improvements in perceived readiness correspond to real, tangible results.
6.3. Limitations and Future Research
Although this study provides initial evidence for the 4D model’s explanatory value in a situational leadership context, several limitations warrant consideration. The sample size was relatively small (169 employees; 91 managers), which restricted generalizability, particularly for the manager subgroup. Accordingly, the manager results—especially the high variance explained in H2—should be regarded as exploratory. Replication with larger and more diverse manager samples is needed to determine whether these patterns are robust.
The Drive facet showed low reliability in the employee sample, indicating a measurement weakness for this dimension. Future research should refine or revalidate the Drive items for employee populations before drawing strong theoretical or practical conclusions about this facet. It would also be valuable to include more objective indicators (e.g., behavioural performance metrics, production indicators, professional certifications) alongside subjective readiness measures and attitudinal outcomes, especially given that team adaptability in this study was assessed via employees’ perceptions rather than objective performance.
Another limitation is that the sample, although spanning multiple sectors, was not stratified by cultural dimensions. Because the 4D framework draws on theoretical traditions developed primarily in Western, individualistic contexts, its applicability in collectivist or high power-distance settings remains uncertain. Future work should examine whether cultural values shape how readiness facets are interpreted and how strongly they relate to satisfaction and perceived adaptability to test the model’s generalizability across cultural contexts. In addition, the cross-sectional design means that changes in 4D readiness or its relationships with outcomes over time could not be observed; longitudinal designs are needed to examine temporal dynamics and potential causal ordering.
All measures in this study relied on the same method (self-reported surveys), raising the risk of common method variance (CMV) inflating associations. Post hoc analysis using a common latent factor indicated that CMV was present to a non-trivial degree, so the observed effects should be interpreted as indicative rather than strongly causal or predictive. To strengthen validity, future studies should adopt designs that reduce same-source bias, for example, by collecting predictor and outcome data from different informants (e.g., supervisors rating outcomes when employees rate their own readiness) and by incorporating multiple measurement waves. Additional procedural remedies—such as randomizing item order (including reverse-worded items) and including marker variables to detect response-style bias—would further help to diagnose and mitigate method effects.