Sunday, June 14, 2009

To Know, Know, Know You

Want to get to know me?

I'm an ENTJ on the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator -- my preference is to be an Extraverted, Intuitive, Thinking, Judger (that last one means I like to decide, and decide now, thank you very much).

On the Kolbe Conative Strengths Index, I am a natural Fact Finder, followed closely by Quick Start. That means I will do the research but then want to get going (see "Judging" above).

The Clifton Strengths Finder indicates that my top strengths are: Strategic, Ideation, Activator, Communication, Input.

"Bunch of assessments, bunch of results. So what?" Hear this a lot from people. "Yeah, yeah. But just tell me what it is I'm supposed to do with my life."

Look, these assessments do serve to tell me more about you -- but, really... they're designed to tell you more about you.

Because one thing I know for sure: the more you know about yourself and your innate preferences, the more clear you are. When you are clear, you make better decisions. When you make better decisions, you're happier and more successful.

And who doesn't want that?

Some people resist assessments because they don't like being "put in a box" or "labelled". These people probably have very high preference toward Perceiving and I love them for sticking to their type. (That's a Myers-Briggs reference -- Perceivers just want to keep all of their options open. In the trade we call this their P-ness, which is a little Myers-Briggs joke. OK, a stupid Myers-Briggs joke, but there you have it.)

But when I see the lightbulb go off over someone's head when they realize they aren't wrong and they don't need to be fixed -- that, instead, they need to play to their innate preferences and solid strengths -- it's a highlight of my work.

I'm talking about the woman who berated herself for years for having to talk to think, until she realized that's the way she's wired. Or the man who shifted his continual "loser" self-talk as he realized that he just liked to be flexible and keep his options open (got in touch with his P-ness, yuk, yuk). Or the woman who, for the first time, figured out why she was so frustrated working for other people -- she has all the attributes of a CEO and needs to move toward that kind of role.

Accepting your preferences, strengths and talents, and then aligning your actions with what it is you do best, naturally, is the easiest and most efficient way toward success.

And when it comes down to it, knowing yourself -- inside and out -- and living authentically, P-ness and all (I couldn't help myself), will make you not only successful, but happy. And you'll do it the easy way -- by just being yourself.

2 comments:

Deb Owen said...

ENFP here

Strengths-Finder: ideation, adaptability, strategic, input, futuristic

DiSC - Very high D!

In working with groups in organizations, I would see people doing what you describe -- fighting to be something else they deemed 'better'.

Then, there were those who wanted to hang a sign on their cubicle that said, "I am (this) type", expecting OTHERS to understand (& work around) THEM. Rather than utilizing the information to better understand, communicate, and work with others.

That always kind of cracked me up. ;-)

All the best!
deb

Jenny said...

Thanks for this post, Michele.

I love taking those tests. I just take them, say "oh yeah, that's me," and forget about them. This time I pulled out my results to look them over.

INTJ

arranger - harmony - discipline - consistency/fairness - deliberative

Follow-Thru, followed by Fact Finder

I forget on the DISC profiler, but I remember that I was NOT a D. (can't find those results)

I'm definitely going to... think them over... this week... make a plan on what to do with it... and then do it.

Jenny