Continuous thinking: How your MBTI type can help you

by Tom 6. October 2011 02:38

Introduction

I just finished commenting someone's opinion on the MBTI personality type in a linkedin status update.

As you might have read in my previous post regarding "The secret sauce of great leadership - IMO ;)" I am an avid fan of determining your own personality type in order to improve yourself.

Because this person had seen a presentation by Patrick Vermeren on the myth of MBTI, he retweeted the following:

I wish there was a test to take to find out how much you hate Meyers-Briggs (MBTI). I'd score off the charts.

Since I most certainly do not agree, I commented some things on the linkedin thread. As I think the comment might have some value for my blog readers as well, I decided to post it here as well:

 

Here is my opinion

I believe your personality can change during puberty, but afterwards it is pretty much fixed. 

MBTI made me aware of my personality, and how to bridge to other types of personalities, by making the differences explicit. 

While the test might not be spot on for some (f.e. my sister), it was spot on for me; the description matched me in both positive and negative ways. Since then I have learned to accept my personality, and being aware of your shortcomings and strengths helps you to improve yourself (i.e. self-awareness is key here). Once you master handling yourself, you can attempt to guess your discussion partner's MBTI type, which is quite obvious for the first letters,  but harder for the next: 

 

  1. Introvert or Extravert ? (easy) 
  2. Sensing or iNtuitive (i.e. perception by facts or intuition) 
  3. Feeling or Thinking (i.e. subjective vs objective) 
  4. Judging or Percepting (i.e. judge and get done with it vs constantly looking for alternative options/possibilities) 

 

Once you realize the type of your conversation partner, you should know how to talk to him/her...

 

Conclusion

While the MBTI test is certainly not a solution to everything, it can increase your self-awareness, and in the next phase also the awareness on how to interact with your discussion partner. You could compare this to level 3 and level 4 thinking in poker.

In my opinion anything that builds your self-awareness can be a good tool to expand your personal horizon.

 

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About Tom

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Tom Janssens is an independent freelance ICT consultant that has been "into computers" ever since the age of 7.

Typing source code from a book evolved into exploring the limits of coding in procedural, assembly and object-oriented languages.
As he matured in software coding, he started focussing on the problems surrounding software development, and learned that software development is usually about people and interactions first, and about technology second.

Due to his diverse track record he gained insights in a lot of aspects of the software development process. Currently his main focus is on strategic ICT advice, lean product/project development and improving the software development process and architecture.

He avoids ivory-tower-approaches by applying and verifying the applicability of the latest tech buzz in software experiments.

He is also the founder of the following LinkedIn groups:

CQRS Professional
BDD Professional
Asp.Net MVC professional

More info about Tom and his company...


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