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  • Home
  • Courses
    • The ORSC Series
      • Module 1 Fundamentals of ORSC
      • Module 2 Intelligence
      • Module 3 Geography
      • Module 4 Path
      • Module 5 Systems Integration
    • ORSC Fast Track Programme
    • Team Coaching Supervision for the Systems Coach
    • Alchemy
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    • Blog
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Outer Roles

Inner Roles: The Emotional Glue Holding Systems Together

19th October 2025 /Posted byLouise Blackman

If Outer Roles keep the structure of a system running—job descriptions, tasks, titles—then Inner Roles hold the emotional functioning together. 

They’re less visible, harder to name, but absolutely critical. Inner Roles carry the values, emotions, and unspoken functions that allow relationships, teams, and organisations to regulate themselves in times of stress, growth, or change.

 

What Are Inner Roles?

Inner Roles are about how we show up emotionally in relationships. They are not tied to job descriptions or titles, but to the needs of the system itself.

Some examples include:

  • Initiator – sparks difficult conversations or change. 
  • Disturber – challenges the status quo when something isn’t working. 
  • Nurturer – calms tensions and cares for wellbeing. 
  • Devil’s Advocate – questions assumptions and explores risks. 
  • Peacemaker – smooths over conflict when the going gets tough. 

Every system needs these roles. The challenge is that we often don’t notice them—until one person becomes stuck in one role, or when a role is missing entirely.

 

When Inner Roles Become Problems

Just like Outer Roles, Inner Roles can become rigid or unhealthy if they aren’t consciously worked with. ORSC identifies a few common patterns:

  1. Role Nausea
    When someone is exhausted from always holding the same role.
    Mary is always the one calming down the CEO. Over time, she begins to resent it. 
  2. Role Confusion
    When it’s unclear who holds what role.
    In a growing company, is HR or the team leader responsible for conflict mediation? Nobody knows, so issues fester. 
  3. Need for New Roles
    When systems evolve, new emotional needs emerge.
    A startup growing to 50 employees suddenly needs a Disturber to question decisions that were once taken instinctively. 
  4. Poorly Occupied Roles
    When someone is trying to hold a role they aren’t suited for—or when a role has become outdated.
    The “protector” role that parents hold with small children must soften as kids become more independent. 

 

Inner Roles in Organisations: Real-World Impact

We see Inner Roles everywhere in workplaces:

  • A disturber in a boardroom might challenge a “safe” strategy, preventing a costly mistake. 
  • A peacemaker in a project team might diffuse tensions and keep collaboration alive. 
  • A visionary might articulate hope during restructuring, keeping motivation afloat. 

Research supports the importance of these relational dynamics. Gallup consistently finds that employee engagement—and therefore productivity—drops when emotional needs are ignored. McKinsey has shown that teams with healthy communication and psychological safety (functions maintained by Inner Roles) are 20–25% more productive than those without.

In short: Inner Roles are invisible ROI. When they’re recognised and shared, systems thrive. When they’re ignored, morale, innovation, and performance collapse.

 

Why Coaches, Consultants and Leaders Need to Work With Inner Roles

Today’s world of work is in flux. AI is taking over task-based work. Teams are flatter, more fluid, and under constant pressure to adapt. The skills that matter most now aren’t just technical—they’re relational.

This means leaders, consultants, and coaches must learn to:

  • Notice which Inner Roles are present, and which are missing. 
  • Help systems rotate roles more flexibly so one person isn’t always the “nurturer” or the “disturber.” 
  • Normalise emotional roles as functional, not personal. It’s not “Jane is difficult.” It’s “the system needs someone to raise difficult issues.” 

This is where ORSC training comes in. In Module 3, practitioners learn to see roles as functions of the system rather than fixed traits of individuals. That reframe changes everything.

 

Final Thought

Outer Roles keep the engine of the system running. Inner Roles keep the people in the system connected, resilient, and adaptable.

When Inner Roles are ignored, teams and the wider organisations risk disengagement, burnout, and escalating conflict. But when Inner Roles are recognised, valued, and shared, systems gain balance, creativity, and sustainability.

So ask yourself:
👉 Who’s always calming, challenging, or initiating in your team?
👉 Are these roles shared—or is someone carrying the emotional load alone?

Naming and working with Inner Roles is one of the most powerful ways to unlock resilience in your team or organisation. It’s not soft—it’s the infrastructure of trust, motivation, and performance and often referred to as “business critical behaviours”.

 

Ready to Explore Roles in Your Own Work?

The ORSC Series dives deeply into the dynamics of roles, giving you both the theory, and the practical  to bring this into your coaching, leadership, or consulting work.

Sign up for the virtual Fundamentals on 13–14 November 2025—the final introductory course of the year.

Looking ahead? The 2026 ORSC training schedule is now live, giving you the chance to plan your development journey early and secure your place.

Explore Courses & Register

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