
Melissa – The Helper

Melissa was the person everyone naturally gravitated towards. Not because she spoke the loudest or held the most senior role, but because she made people feel genuinely seen. As a Heart Type, she led with emotion — her own and everyone else’s. If you asked how she made decisions, she’d smile and say, “It just felt right,” because intuition and feeling were always part of her process.
In team meetings, Melissa naturally played to the room. She didn’t do it for attention, but because being admired, being likeable, being the connector — that energised her. If someone shared a win, she clapped first. If someone cracked a joke, she laughed loudly. And if someone was struggling, she noticed before anyone else.
Her leadership stance was compliant, but never passive. She moved towards people, arriving fully present, listening deeply, and offering options that worked for them. If a colleague needed help, Melissa would instantly shift her schedule. “Don’t stress, I’ve got it,” she’d say, and she meant it. Her amenable nature made her easy to work with, though it sometimes meant others forgot how much she quietly carried.
Melissa lived very much in the present. She didn’t spend time worrying about long-term forecasts or hypothetical futures. She focused on what mattered now. If a colleague needed a moment, she prioritised that moment. If a client needed an update, she handled it immediately. She was often genuinely content in the current moment — sipping her coffee, listening intently, smiling at someone’s story.
What made her exceptional in operations was a blend of Tenacity and Enablement. She was the queen of checklists, with deadlines highlighted and tasks neatly ticked off. If she committed to something, she ensured it reached completion. But she didn’t only deliver — she supported others too. She quietly passed on skills, encouraged people, and lifted morale with words that felt sincere.
But when it came to big-picture thinking — Wonder, Invention, long-term forecasting — Melissa’s energy dipped. Ask her to dream up a new strategy or imagine multiple future scenarios and she’d smile politely while internally wishing the conversation would end. “Can we just decide and move forward?” she’d ask. Executing a plan energised her; creating one from scratch drained her.
This made her brilliant in her operational leadership style. Melissa was a fixer and a finisher. She didn’t live in theoretical futures — she lived in the practical now. She made decisions quickly, removed obstacles, and jumped on immediate opportunities. If an issue arose, she was already solving it while others were still reading the email.
As a creative leader, she balanced two important worlds. On the task side, she kept systems tight and productivity controlled. On the relational side, she built belonging and collaboration — the glue in difficult conversations, the steady presence in team dynamics.
Her colleagues often joked that she was the “engine room of kindness”, keeping the work moving and the people grounded. Melissa never chased recognition, but she quietly treasured every thank-you, every smile, every “We couldn’t do this without you.”
Because at her core, helping wasn’t just something she did. It was who she was.


