The Driver Spectrum Assessment
Second In Command Club

The Driver
Spectrum Assessment

Find out exactly where you sit on the Driver spectrum — and what's standing between you and leading from the second seat with full authority.

20Questions
4Dimensions
5Archetypes
~8Minutes

This is not a journaling exercise. There are no open-ended questions that require you to already know the answer to evaluate yourself. This assessment puts specific behaviors and patterns in front of you and lets your answers reveal what you might not be able to see on your own.

At the end you'll get your Driver Archetype — a specific, honest picture of where you're currently operating and exactly what's standing between you and leading from the second seat with full authority.

Answer as you actually are — not as you wish you were, not as you were on your best week last year. Your Dreamer already knows the truth. This is your chance to catch up to what they're seeing.

You'll be identified as one of five Driver archetypes:

The Capable Passenger The Reactive Driver The Invisible Engine The Emerging Driver The Strategic Driver
Dimension 1 of 4 Question 1 of 20
Question 1 of 20
When I see a problem in the business that falls outside my formal job description, my default is to bring it to my Dreamer rather than just solving it.
I bring it to my Dreamer firstI solve it and let them know
Question 2 of 20
I regularly make decisions without checking in with my Dreamer first — even on things that feel slightly outside my explicit authority.
I check in before decidingI decide and inform after
Question 3 of 20
When my Dreamer is unavailable, the business continues to move forward because I have the context and authority to keep things running.
Things tend to stall when they're unavailableI keep the business moving independently
Question 4 of 20
I actively push the boundaries of my role — taking on more responsibility and authority than I've been explicitly given when the situation calls for it.
I stay within my defined roleI expand beyond my defined role
Question 5 of 20
My Dreamer would describe me as someone who brings them decisions that are already made — not someone who brings them problems to solve.
I bring problems to themI bring decisions already made
Question 6 of 20
When the vision or direction from my Dreamer is unclear, I create a working framework and move forward rather than waiting for clarity to arrive.
I wait until I have clear directionI build a framework and move
Question 7 of 20
I proactively schedule alignment conversations with my Dreamer rather than waiting for them to initiate check-ins.
I wait for them to reach outI initiate alignment proactively
Question 8 of 20
I can articulate my Dreamer's top three priorities for the quarter without having to ask them.
I'd have to ask themI know their priorities cold
Question 9 of 20
When I receive an incomplete or vague request from my Dreamer, I ask the right clarifying questions to complete it — rather than either guessing or doing nothing.
I tend to guess or waitI extract clarity proactively
Question 10 of 20
I could represent my Dreamer's position in a meeting they couldn't attend — and they'd feel confident that I got it right.
I'd struggle to represent their thinkingI could represent them with confidence
Question 11 of 20
Most of my week is spent solving problems that already exist rather than building systems that prevent them from happening again.
I'm mostly fighting firesI'm mostly building systems
Question 12 of 20
I regularly think three to six months ahead and bring my Dreamer ideas or warnings about what's coming — not just what's happening now.
I'm focused on this weekI'm regularly thinking quarters ahead
Question 13 of 20
When a problem hits my desk for the second time, I stop and build a system so it doesn't hit a third time.
I solve it again and move onI build a system after the second time
Question 14 of 20
I have a clear view of what's coming in the next 30–90 days and I'm actively preparing for it — not waiting for it to arrive.
Things often catch me off guardI'm rarely surprised by what comes
Question 15 of 20
I protect time in my week for strategic thinking and planning — not just execution and response.
My week is all execution and reactionI protect time for strategy and planning
Question 16 of 20
I regularly push back on my Dreamer when I think they're making a decision that will create problems — even when it's uncomfortable.
I rarely challenge their decisionsI push back consistently and directly
Question 17 of 20
People outside my formal team come to me for input, decisions, or guidance — not just the people I directly manage.
My influence stays within my direct teamI'm influential across the whole organization
Question 18 of 20
I bring strategic recommendations to my Dreamer — not just status updates and completed tasks.
I mostly report on tasks and statusI regularly bring strategic recommendations
Question 19 of 20
My Dreamer describes my role to others in terms of what I own and lead — not just what I support and manage.
They describe me as a supporterThey describe me as a leader
Question 20 of 20
If my Dreamer stepped back for 30 days, I could lead the business — not just maintain it.
I could maintain but not leadI could lead, not just maintain
Your Driver Archetype
The Emerging Driver

You're in the transition. The instincts are there. The gaps are specific.

Your Archetype in Full

What's Actually Happening

Your Three Next Moves

These are specific to your archetype — not generic advice. Each one is a concrete behavior change that will shift how your Dreamer experiences you within 30 days.

Passenger Habits to Break

The Full Driver Spectrum

The Capable Passenger
Talented and reliable, but fundamentally waiting to be directed. Performance is conditional on clear instructions.
The Reactive Driver
Owns their lane but stays in firefighting mode. Never quite gets ahead of the chaos because there's no time to build systems.
The Invisible Engine
Does extraordinary operational work that nobody fully sees — including the Dreamer. High execution, low influence.
The Emerging Driver
Genuinely transitioning into strategic leadership. Real strengths and specific gaps. Closest to the breakthrough.
The Strategic Driver
Operating at full capacity from the second seat. Leading up, leading across, building the future while running the present.