YOU'VE
GOT PERSONALITY!
But which type?
And
does the business world’s
most trusted
psychological test reveal the
real you?
By
Sarah Scott
SO YOU'RE INVITED to
one of those team-building exercises
that your boss thinks is important,
and the trainer hired by human
resources asks you beforehand
to fill out this questionnaire
on the Internet. It’ll
only take 20 minutes, she says.
You start answering the questions:
“Are you more attracted
to a person with a quick and
brilliant mind or a practical
person with a lot of common
sense?” Hey, this one
is easy. This is kind of fun,
like one of those parlour games
to loosen people up before the
night begins. “Which word
appeals to you more: ‘convincing’
or ‘touching’?”
Well, both. Flip a coin and
carry on.

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Illustrations
by Hadley Hooper |
A couple of
days later, the team-building
exercise is about to begin,
and guess what? You’re
an ENTP! It’s a four-letter
description of your personality
that comes out of the test you
just took, the Myers-Briggs
Personality Indicator. It’s
supposed to describe how you
prefer to live and work, how
you absorb information, how
you make decisions. As an ENTP,
you’re a gregarious Extrovert,
you’re Intuitive (the
N, a big-picture person), you’re
a Thinking person (logic rules,
never mind someone else’s
feelings) and you’re a
Perceiving person (you’re
spontaneous, and your desk is
messy). The Myers-Briggs test
says you’re an enthusiastic
innovator who dislikes routine.
So, you wonder, just what are
you doing as a Bay Street manager?
You’re supposed to be
an artist or an entertainer
or maybe a writer!
You know what
you’re doing there, of
course: making money, a lot
more than you would as a lounge
singer. Maybe this Myers-Briggs
test is just a waste of time.
But is it? It sure is popular.
According to its publisher,
CPP Inc., Myers-Briggs is the
world’s most trusted and
widely used personality assessment
tool. It’s administered
two million times each year
in the United States alone.
Eighty-nine of the Fortune 100
companies use it. It’s
the most popular of an estimated
2,500 personality tests on the
market, a $400-million industry
built on the premise that a
quick test can somehow reveal
key facets of a complex personality.
These days,
businesses are herding their
employees, and would-be employees,
into the offices of personality
testers for apparently legitimate
reasons. If you want to be a
leader, you need the personal
skills to understand yourself
and your ability to deal with
others, in order to motivate
people to follow you. If you
want to be seen as a good team
player, you had better understand
how other people behave so you
can adjust your personal style
accordingly—or at least
not get angry when the guy across
the table insists on a step-by-step
plan to achieve a goal when
all you care about is the big
picture. You know it’s
true: think of all the guys
who came in with straight A’s
from some fancy MBA school and
then flamed out because they
couldn’t get along with
anybody.
Really, though,
does this Myers-Briggs reveal
your innate personality, as
the test’s proponents
say? Or can you forget about
your secret wish to be a singer,
and go back to your day job,
trying to make the big bucks
on Bay Street?
It’s
easy to find people who criticize
this test, and the whole personality-testing
industry, as a lot of hogwash.
“The use of personality
tests is growing despite decades
of research casting doubt on
their effectiveness,”
writes Annie Murphy Paul, author
of the 2004 book The Cult of
Personality: How Personality
Tests Are Leading Us to Miseducate
Our Children, Mismanage Our
Companies, and Misunderstand
Ourselves. “The Myers-Briggs,
for example, claims to reveal
to test takers their inborn,
unchanging personality type,
but, in fact, research shows
that as many as three-quarters
of test takers are assigned
a different type when they take
the Myers-Briggs again,”
she writes.
The accuracy
of the test does depend on the
circumstances of the people
taking the test, says Jean Kummerow,
who has co-authored several
books on Myers-Briggs that are
also published by CPP Inc. Myers-Briggs
is supposed to detect your innate
characteristics, but “sometimes
people might not answer that
way, consciously or unconsciously,”
she says. The questions may
not be the right ones for your
individual personality either,
she added. “It’s
not perfect; we never said it
would be.” Still, between
58 and 85 percent of the people
who have taken the test agreed
with their four-letter profile.
“These
are just preferences, natural
tendencies, things you would
typically do,” she noted.
It’s not meant to be used
to select people for a job,
or rule anyone out, since it
cannot predict how people will
behave on the job. But it’s
extraordinarily useful for team
building, said Kummerow. “You
can understand that people who
are doing things in a different
way are not out to annoy you.
That’s their style. You’ll
understand people are different,
and because they’re different,
they’re not bad.”
What does
this test tell you about you
anyway? You could ask Vicky
Stikeman, an advertising executive
turned executive coach, who
now administers the Myers-Briggs
test to Rotman School of Management
executive MBA students and other
corporate clients. She gave
the test to the writer of this
article and says the ENTP descriptor
is dead on. The Myers-Briggs
test, she explained, is based
on the theories of Carl Jung,
who suggested we have opposite
ways of gaining energy, gathering
information, deciding what to
do based on that information,
and dealing with the world around
us.
Extroverts
like Stikeman focus on the outside
world to gain energy. They’re
expressive, gregarious people
who come out of a party energized,
not drained. Introverts, on
the other hand, gain energy
from their inner world. They’re
reflective, quiet, the type
who’d prefer an intimate
conversation to a large gathering.
Introverts reflect on information
before speaking; extroverts
are big talkers. “We can
talk and listen at the same
time,” says Stikeman.
An introvert will listen and
wait for a pause before saying
something. The misunderstood
difference between extroverts
and introverts causes a lot
of friction at the office, she
says. Extroverts will dominate
the meeting, while introverts
will sit quietly, thinking.
That doesn’t mean introverts
don’t have something to
say. They’re just waiting
for a lull in the conversation
to pitch their idea. So, Stikeman
advises fellow extroverts: remember
to give the introverts a chance
to contribute to the meeting.
It’s easy. Just ask the
question: “Charles, do
you have a view on this?”
INSTEAD
OF BEING A BAY
STREET MANAGER, MAYBE
YOU'RE MEANT TO BE AN
ARTIST OR A LOUNGE SINGER |
The second
dimension in the Myers-Briggs
world is sensing versus intuition.
People who prefer sensing are
the step-by-step linear types.
They trust facts, details, tangible
reality. Intuitive people, on
the other hand, are big-picture
thinkers—imaginative,
creative. These two polar opposites
can easily rub each other the
wrong way, says Stikeman. If
you’re intuitive, you
need to be more patient as the
sensing type describes in detail
what he’s done. Or you
can just say: “I’m
the big-picture type. I don’t
need all the steps. Just give
me the bottom line.” The
sensing type, on the other hand,
might say to Ms. Intuitive:
“Great idea, but how are
you going to get there? Describe
the steps.” If you’re
intuitive, you might not like
it, but you should at least
know that the sensing individual
isn’t just trying to drive
you nuts.
Then there’s
thinking versus feeling. Stikeman
says she can always spot a thinker.
When he or she is trying to
decide something, they look
out the window. A feeler, on
the one hand, looks down. Thinkers
make decisions using logical,
objective analysis. Feelers,
on the other hand, try to create
harmony and consider other people’s
feelings. They’re empathetic,
compassionate, accommodating.
The fourth
dimension of the Myers-Briggs
personality indicator is judging
versus perceiving. You can tell
a judger: look at his desk.
It’s neat, organized—just
like him. He plans carefully,
lives by the schedule, maps
out his activities in a methodical
way. Perceivers are messy, spontaneous,
casual. They work best when
a deadline is looming. They
pull all-nighters to get the
job done.
Stikeman says
that once you understand the
four polar opposites (extroverts-introverts,
sensing-intuition, thinking-feeling,
judging-perceiving), you can
read other people’s styles
and adapt your style to theirs
in a meeting, on a team or even
in personal encounters. “Once
you realize others operate differently,
you can adjust, and not jump
to the wrong conclusions,”
says Stikeman.
Each person
who takes the test ends up with
a four-letter description of
their personality preferences.
“Its biggest strength
is also, in a sense, one of
its biggest weaknesses,”
says Reg Ellis, a senior partner
at Ellis Associates, a Toronto
firm that administers a wide
variety of tests for the hiring
and development of executives.
“The simplicity of the
Myers-Briggs makes it quite
useful in helping people understand
important differences in how
they see the world and how they
respond to one another. But
sometimes people treat the four-letter
MBTI code as if it says everything
there is to say about the individual
involved, when that’s
manifestly not the case. This
can lead to oversimplifying
the reasons behind another person’s
behaviour and a sort of labelling
that can interfere with real
insight into people.”

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How should
tests be used? Critics of the
Myers-Briggs test and its defenders
both agree on one thing: it
should never be used to hire,
or to rule out, anybody for
a job, because it doesn’t
predict how one will perform
on the job. For one thing, it
has not been constructed to
detect lying. If you want a
job in a customer-focused company
that’s looking for extroverts,
it’s easy to answer the
questions in a way that makes
you look like one. “There
is no correlation between performance
in this test and performance
in the workplace,” said
Mary Jo Ducharme, assistant
professor of human resources
at York University. You might
be rated an extrovert, but that
doesn’t mean you’ll
be good at making cold calls.
There’s
also a limited relationship
between a person’s four-letter
type and his or her leadership
style, according to a 2003 review
of the research on Myers-Briggs
in The Journal of Leadership
& Organizational Studies
by James Michael, a business
professor at Wagner College
in Staten Island, N.Y. It turns
out that people are often more
influenced by their company
culture or their position than
their personality type. What’s
more, an executive’s needs—for
power, affection, achievement—are
probably more important in determining
their leadership style than
their personality type. So,
should Myers-Briggs be used
in leadership training? “Use
with caution,” counsels
Michael. “Understand that
their type provides a limited
view of what their behaviour
might be.”
Well, what
about teamwork? That’s
why you had to do this test
in the first place, right? It
might be a fun way to open a
conversation between co-workers
that will eventually make them
understand one another better
and improve lines of communication,
says Ducharme. But John Oesch,
assistant professor of organizational
behaviour at the Rotman school,
is skeptical. “I cannot
say it’s useless if people
reflect on themselves ... and
learn something,” he said.
But consider the bottom line:
does a team act effectively?
A good team makes explicit goals—ones
that everyone agrees on and
acknowledges. Second, a team
plans a process, says Oesch:
“Usually, the amount of
time planning is inverse to
the amount of scrambling at
the end.” Naturally, it’s
vital to get to know other people
on the team, but taking a Myers-Briggs
test to discover personality
types isn’t necessary,
he said. You can get to know
your team members over lunch.
Still, it
sure is fun guessing what four-letter
type your co-workers are, and
who is made for the job they’ve
chosen. There are many free
tests on the Internet you can
do at lunch to see what you
should be doing, if you didn’t
have to pay the mortgage on
that house that’s bigger
than what you need. You’re
an ENTP: you would prefer to
work on something new and exciting
every day—writing or art
or some other creative pursuit.
But then, that would neglect
the need you have, wouldn’t
it, the need that drives you
to the BMW dealership on the
way home to that million-dollar
house. Maybe that professor
in New York has a point: your
basic need is more powerful
than your preference. 
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