The TypeFinder is a revolutionary new tool to reveal your personality type.
Based on the original 16 types created by Isabel Briggs Myers, the TypeFinder uses adaptive technology to unlock your true type in the most convenient, efficient way available today.
The goal of the TypeFinder is to help you find the personality type, out of sixteen possibilities, that best reflects your attitudes and behavior. By asking you questions about your approach to each aspect of life, we aim to help you understand how you can best describe your own personality.
The TypeFinder explores your style on four dimensions of personality:
Learn your four-letter type, on these four dimension combine to give you a four-letter
code for your personality type, such as ENFJ, INTP, or ISFJ, and find out what it means for you in life and work.
Plus, discover your personal strengths so that you can plan a life that sets you up for success.
From each pair, choose the phrase that describes you best.
After completing the tool, you'll get the crucial info you need to make the most of your potential and be the best you that you can be...
You're an ESFJ
You are a conscientious helper, sensitive to the needs of others and energetically dedicated to your responsibilities. You are hardworking and practical, dutifully putting business before pleasure—especially the business of caring for others. You like a sense of harmony and cooperation, and are eager to please and provide.
E Extraversion
Your Energy Style
Communicative
Your energy style is Extraversion (in contrast with Introversion). This dimension describes how you manage your energy.
Extraverts are energized by engaging with other people. They approach the world enthusiastically and want to experience the excitement of life.
You enjoy:
S Sensing
Your Cognitive Style
Practical
Your cognitive style is Sensing (in contrast with Intuition). This dimension describes how you process information.
Sensors process information in a concrete, realistic way. They focus on observing and recalling facts and details.
You like to focus on:
F Feeling
Your Values Style
Nurturing
Your values style is Feeling (in contrast with Thinking). This dimension describes your orientation to personal values.
Feelers value empathy, cooperation and compassion. They believe that everyone has a responsibility to take care of those around them.
You are concerned with:
J Judging
Your Self-Management Style
Disciplined
Your self-management style is Judging (in contrast with Perceiving). This dimension describes how you organize your life.
Judgers like structure and order. They keep organized and plan ahead, resist distractions, and stay focused on their goals.
You prefer to:
Your ESFJ Type
You are organized and conscientious in your efforts to help other people. You feel a sense of personal responsibility for other people's needs, and are usually eager to get involved and help out. You typically enjoy routine and often keep a regular schedule that allows you to be organized and productive. You work methodically and consistently to make the world a better place.
Your Core Values
Your Key Motivators
You value loyalty and tradition, and usually make your family and friends your top priority. You are generous with your time, effort, and emotions. You are highly attuned to your emotional environment and attentive to both the feelings of others and the perception others have of you. You often take on the concerns of others as if they were your own, and will attempt to put your significant organizational talents to use to bring order to other people's lives.
You seek harmony and cooperation, and feel this is best accomplished when everyone follows the same set of rules. You have a sense of order in the way people relate to one another, and often take on roles that allow you to help enforce that social order. You act according to a strict moral code, and look for others to do the same. You often see things in terms of black and white, right and wrong, and are typically not shy about sharing your evaluations of others' behavior.
Cost: $29
Click on the link to start on the TypeFinder Test.