Author: [Your Name] Course: Organizational Behavior / Leadership Communication Date: April 14, 2026 Abstract Patrick Lencioni’s The Five Dysfunctions of a Team (2002) remains a cornerstone of leadership literature, diagnosing hierarchical team failures through a pyramid model: absence of trust, fear of conflict, lack of commitment, avoidance of accountability, and inattention to results. While the print version offers a fable-based narrative, the audio format —specifically the 2006 unabridged audiobook narrated by the author—fundamentally alters the pedagogical experience. This paper argues that the audio medium enhances Lencioni’s emotional urgency and behavioral modeling but introduces unique risks of passive consumption, narrative disorientation, and diminished retention of the diagnostic model. 1. Introduction In the modern workplace, leaders increasingly consume professional development content audibly—during commutes, workouts, or routine tasks. Lencioni’s work, already conversational in tone, appears ideal for audio. However, translating a model built on visual hierarchy (a pyramid) and iterative reference (flashing back to earlier dysfunctions) into a purely auditory stream presents unique challenges and affordances.