A study published in the Journal of Applied Psychology titled “Personality and Leadership: A Qualitative and Quantitative Review,” authored by Timothy A. Judge, Joyce E. Bono, Remus Ilies, and Megan W. Gerhardt in 2002, is one of the most quietly consequential pieces of leadership research produced in the last three decades. It did not make the front page of any business publication when it came out, and it never trended anywhere. It was a meta-analysis of 78 leadership studies spanning several decades, and it sat largely undisturbed in peer-reviewed archives for years before its implications began filtering into the edges of mainstream management thinking. What it found should change how organizations identify, assess, and invest in people with the highest potential to lead.
The study set out to answer a deceptively simple question: are there stable, measurable personality traits that consistently predict who will emerge as a leader and who will be effective in a leadership role once placed there? The researchers examined decades of data through the lens of the Five-Factor Model of personality, commonly called the Big Five, which organizes human personality into five dimensions: conscientiousness, extraversion, openness to experience, emotional stability, and agreeableness. What they found was not that any single trait predicts leadership, but that a specific cluster of traits, present in combination, consistently and meaningfully distinguishes people who lead from those who follow, and those who lead well from those who merely hold the title.
The Traits That Keep Showing Up
Of all five dimensions, conscientiousness emerged as the strongest predictor of both leadership emergence and leadership effectiveness across the studies reviewed. In practical terms, this means that the person on your team who is organized, disciplined, goal-directed, and reliable is not just a good worker. They are, statistically speaking, more likely than their peers to be effective when placed in a position of authority. Conscientiousness in this context is about the internal drive to follow through, the instinct to take responsibility seriously, and the tendency to plan and act with deliberate intent rather than react to whatever is loudest in the room. Organizations have long rewarded this trait with trust and workload. What the research is saying is that they should also be rewarding it with a pathway to leadership.
Extraversion ranked second in predictive power, and this finding deserves more nuance than it typically receives. The study does not argue that introverts cannot lead. What extraversion captures here is not social loudness or the tendency to dominate a meeting. It is energy, assertiveness, and the ability to engage and motivate others over sustained periods. Leaders who score higher on extraversion tend to be more expressive in communicating direction and more naturally inclined to draw energy from group engagement rather than solitary work. In environments that require constant stakeholder management, team motivation, and organizational communication, this dimension shows up as a genuine structural asset rather than simply a personality style that happens to get noticed.
The Quieter Predictors
Openness to experience is perhaps the most underappreciated trait in traditional talent identification. It refers to intellectual curiosity, tolerance for ambiguity, creativity, and a genuine interest in learning beyond what is immediately required. In organizational settings, this trait tends to present as the employee who asks uncomfortable questions at the right moments, who can hold two competing frameworks in their head without becoming destabilized, and who gravitates toward problems that others find too uncertain to engage with. These are not always the easiest people to manage at the individual contributor level, but the research is clear that they carry the cognitive range and adaptive capacity that complex leadership roles demand.
Emotional stability, examined through the inverse of neuroticism, was a consistent predictor of leadership effectiveness, though slightly less dominant in predicting who would first emerge as a leader. That distinction matters for talent management: emotional regulation may be less visible in early career stages, but it becomes a critical differentiator the moment someone is placed under the sustained pressure that leadership carries. The person who manages their own anxiety well, who does not amplify organizational stress by projecting it downward onto their team, and who can absorb uncertainty without losing their effectiveness is not simply a pleasant colleague. They are, in the language of this research, a better-equipped leader for environments where conditions shift and the stakes are real.
Why Organizations Keep Getting This Wrong
Here is where the research becomes genuinely uncomfortable. The traits that predict leadership potential are not the same traits that typically earn visibility in organizational settings. Performance metrics tend to reward output volume, speed of execution, and technical competence. Promotion decisions are often influenced by tenure, availability, and the social confidence to ask for advancement. None of these proxies map cleanly onto the Big Five dimensions the study identifies as predictive. Organizations relying on performance reviews and informal observation to build their leadership pipelines are systematically introducing noise into a process that could be significantly more reliable with structured, personality-informed assessment.
There is also a compounding bias problem the research implicitly highlights. Extraversion is one of the most socially visible traits in any group setting, and people who are expressive, energetic, and assertive tend to be noticed more readily, remembered more favorably, and associated with leadership more intuitively by senior managers. When organizations rely on informal reputation and who speaks most confidently in a room to identify emerging leaders, they are effectively selecting for one trait while filtering out the conscientious, the curious, and the emotionally stable people doing quieter, often more consequential work. The research does not say extraversion is wrong to reward. It says extraversion alone is insufficient and that the cluster is what matters.
What Leaders And Organizations Should Do With This
The most direct implication of this research is that talent identification should be structured, not incidental. If personality traits predict leadership effectiveness at a statistically meaningful level, then organizations relying on gut instinct and informal observation are leaving real predictive information unused. This does not necessarily mean every company needs a full psychometric testing program, though many that have introduced personality-informed assessment into their selection and development processes report measurable improvements in pipeline reliability (hbr.org). At minimum, the criteria used to evaluate potential should include behavioral indicators that correspond to conscientiousness, openness, and emotional stability rather than only task performance and interpersonal likability.
For managers doing talent reviews, this research offers a more concrete vocabulary for what to look for. The staff member who consistently meets commitments and takes ownership without being asked is demonstrating conscientious behavior. The team member who seeks to understand the wider context of their work and tolerates ambiguity without becoming paralyzed is demonstrating openness. The individual who manages their reactions under pressure and maintains effectiveness through organizational change is demonstrating emotional stability. These are observable behaviors, not scores on a test, and they can be factored into leadership readiness conversations with far more intentionality than is common in most organizations today.
What The Research Leaves Unresolved
The Judge et al. study raises at least as many questions as it resolves. The Big Five framework captures broad, stable dimensions of personality, but leadership operates in contexts that are extraordinarily specific. A high conscientiousness score predicts effectiveness across many environments, but what about roles that require creative rule-breaking, tolerance for genuine organizational chaos, or the ability to lead through ambiguity without the structure that conscientious individuals tend to build for themselves? The research aggregates across contexts, which means the individual case is always a question the data cannot fully answer on its own.
There is also the question of what happens when organizational culture systematically misreads or suppresses the traits this research identifies as predictive. In organizations where emotional stoicism is mistaken for strength, where intellectual curiosity is managed as a disruption risk, and where conscientiousness is treated as a compliance function rather than a leadership signal, the pipeline keeps producing leaders who look confident but are not necessarily effective. The research points clearly to what to look for. It says far less about how organizations must change internally to actually see it. That gap, between what the evidence prescribes and what organizational culture permits, remains one of the more consequential unresolved questions in leadership development today.

