Leadership is necessary for effective health care teams, particularly for surgeons. Trainees similarly must acquire foundational leadership skills to maximize effectiveness. However, surgical leadership is rarely formally assessed, particularly for junior trainees. We aimed to establish themes of communication, perception and engagement styles, as well as strengths and weaknesses among junior surgical residents at a single institution. The Data Dome Inc. (datadome.com) DISC personality assessment was administered in 2018-2021 to junior residents at an academic general surgery training program at a single institution. Resident demographics were recorded, and themes from deidentified reports were analyzed by year (PGY-1 and PGY-2) using JMP 16 Pro Text Explorer. PGY-1 communication was most frequently described as "accomplished best by well-defined avenues" with "duties and responsibilities of others who will be involved explained" in "friendly terms." PGY-2 communication involved "deal [ing] with people," "strong feelings about a particular problem," and being "good at giving verbal and nonverbal feedback." In ideal environments, PGY-1s self-perceived as "good listener [s]," "good-natured," and "team player [s]." However, under stress, PGY-1s were perceived by others as "poor listener [s]," "self-promoter [s]," "detached," and "insensitive." In ideal environments, PGY-2s were also "good listener [s]," "good-natured," and "team player [s]." However, under stress, PGY-2 external perception was "overly confident," "poor listener [s]," and "self-promoter [s]." Clear expectations, friendly work environments, and opportunities to succeed are key to effectively train junior surgical residents. In environments where time is often a limited resource, surgical simulation, stress training, and standardized teaching methods from attending surgeons are needed to develop competent trainees.