21 Ways To Use MBTI To Help You and Your Team

MBTIMBTI is an essential tool for you and your team.

As a leader, manager or HR Professional, one of your foundational strengths is the depth of your own self-awareness and awareness of how other’s tick.   You know the key to motivating people is being completely open and transparent and being able to be yourself, which in turn allows your team to follow suit.

One of the easiest and globally credible tools to develop self-awareness and understanding is Myers Briggs Personality Type Indicator (MBTI).   Carl Jung, the great psychologist developed a model of personality type which was later refined by the mother and daughter team, Isobel Myers and Katherine Briggs.

One of the principles of Jung’s model, “Psychological Types” developed in 1921, was each person has an innate urge to grow.  Part of our growing process is to learn how we individually operate, develop the parts of us that we need to learn more about, and learn about the people around us.

Understanding difference is a real people skill.  Differences occur through cultural, physical and psychological factors.  Mix this up with differing beliefs and temperaments, and no wonder managing and understanding people can be challenging.

In the UK, we have travelled some distance in identifying equality and cultural issues; the Equality Act 2010 takes that thinking even further.  Some organisations are still learning how to get to grips with difference, and some excel.  But I’m sure you will agree it is fair to say we always have room to improve.

When it comes to understanding psychological differences, we still have some way to go, but understanding such difference is important from a leadership or management perspective. Not only is it important;  it is relatively simple to grasp.

If you’ve experienced MBTI, you may have found learning about your own psychological type a key starting point for self-development.  Once you have an understanding of what makes you really tick, then your whole world will look different.  Not only will it lead to greater self-acceptance, but it will also help you accept and value the differences of others.

Many leaders,managers and HR professionals are familiar with and use Myers Briggs extensively so I will skip going into more detail.  If you haven’t come across the tool before, you can find out more about Myers Briggs on the link.

If you haven’t used Myers Briggs or you don’t feel you’ve fully realised the benefits from using the tool, here are 21 compelling reasons why you might want to look again.

Learning and understanding how each other tick can help to:

  1.  Avoid and resolve conflicts
  2.  Play to an individual’s strengths
  3.  Identify gaps in the team
  4.  Discover how your team style works best with customers
  5. Enable self-understanding and so reduce stress
  6. Help you learn to relax
  7. Aid career development
  8. Assist communication strategies
  9. Provide managers with the understanding to give effective feedback
  10. Inform personal development plan
  11. Work together more effectively
  12. Relate to each other with greater understanding
  13. Encourage true psychological diversity
  14. Support people through life transitions
  15. Inform your  own and others decision making
  16. Develop thinking skills
  17. Develop emotional intelligence
  18. Identify and develop strengths and weaknesses
  19. Develop leaders,  managers, teams and HR expertise
  20. Encourage team members to understand and appreciate different strengths
  21. Improve and change culture.

There are some circumstances where it can be dangerous to use Myers Briggs such as recruitment selection, judging performance or by making assumptions because of type indicators. The 8 elements of Myers Briggs can be used interchangeably, and people can be just as accomplished using their non-preferred type

If you have used personality type as part of your leadership, management, team development, or HR strategy;  I’d love to know how you got on and what you got out of your experience……or not!

 

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This great article is from the our 6 months themed series based on the Centre for Creative Leaderships Report of 2013, in which they identified the 6 top challenges for leaders across the globe:   Don't Miss Out! Sign up here to be notified of subsequent issues and posts

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If you are a leader, you are continually developing and "Sharpening the Saw".  If you lead and manage teams, then you must read about our Inspirational New Leadership Programme.  Sign up now to find out more details when we launch in July 2014.  There is no obligation to undertake the programme, if you sign up today, you will simply be sent more information about the programme.  You can unsubscribe at any time!  Click below to register for further information.

   

12 Ways To Illuminate The Vision, While Dealing With The Realistic Stuff

134829714 (1)It’s challenging being realistic, when you are chasing a vision.

I write a lot about leadership  and how leaders can choose to see things from another perspective.  One of my inspirations is Carl Jung, especially his work on archetypes and dream analysis.  I see patterns and connections all around me, and if you know anything about Myers Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) , you will understand it’s because I have a preference for intuition.

Being intuitive means I prefer using my imagination to find meaning.  I am fairly future focused, and a “towards” motivated person.   To those who don’t really know me, I can sound idealistic, looking towards a “happy ever after” future.   Self-awareness, however, keeps my feet on the ground mostly, although I do actually believe we can influence our future by what we think, feel and believe in the present, but that’s another story.

The other part of the MBTI Dichotomy around how we see things is the “sensing” type.  This type of person prefers to see the world through their 5 senses, and so can be fairly factual about what they are seeing.  They are “realistic” and prefer facts, and a pragmatic approach.  Sensors like to live in the present, and generally call upon past experiences to inform their decision making.

Intuition and Sensing are not labels

The problem with is that some people believe the word “type” traps people into one of the two parts of the dichotomy, and it becomes a label.  The truth is of course that we all take in information through our senses and our intuition in different quantities and in a variety of situations.  We just can’t be taking in information from both sources at once.  One day we could be realistic and down to earth, and the other might be finding joy in our dreams and vision.  Our type is determined by how we feel most comfortable, taking in information.

Idealism and Realism are necessary for real growth

I remember talking to a friend about my plans and aspirations, and how I wanted to change the world and make a real difference.  I rambled on for about 15 minutes, enthused by my theme and feeling passionate about what I wanted to do.  She listened attentively, smiling and nodding.  When I finished, before I got the last words out of my mouth she said “Lovely, but let’s get back down to earth now shall we?”

I laughed and nodded.  As you can see we are very different.   When I was younger and less experienced, I might have felt she had deliberately rained on my parade.  Older and wiser, I knew she was right.

In order to grow as leaders and effective people whether in a leadership role or not, it is healthy and right to be both idealistic and realistic.  If your preference is more prevalent either way  you might find it more difficult to get that balance right.

Leaders who get the balance right will take in information either through their own inner processes or through their team and:

  1. Use their imagination and aspirations to develop a clear vision, and convert to understandable outcomes
  2. Make connections; develop big picture and systems thinking to have an overview of how things will be.
  3. Harness the power of  strategic plans as well as action plans
  4. Assess the current situation or reality and understand where they are right now.
  5. Bridge the gap between current and future reality with communication, plans and milestones.
  6. Connect the past, present and future through storytelling and timelines
  7. Work towards outcomes through believable milestones, so both realistic,  and idealistic,  can buy –in
  8. Be tuned into and help solve day to day problems
  9. Support and give credit and reward for  “here and now” achievements
  10. Listen to and understand both intuitive and sensory input.
  11. Harness appropriate change strategies
  12. Realise they have to understand the “here and now”  to be able to turn idealistic dreams into reality

Do you get frustrated with others because they seem to live on a cloud?  Do you get disheartened because someone can’t seem to focus on anything beyond tomorrow?

 

Join us on this amazing journey!

This great article is from the our 6 months themed series based on the Centre for Creative Leaderships Report of 2013, in which they identified the 6 top challenges for leaders across the globe:   Don't Miss Out! Sign up here to be notified of subsequent issues and posts

121242255

If you are a leader, you are continually developing and "Sharpening the Saw".  If you lead and manage teams, then you must read about our Inspirational New Leadership Programme.  Sign up now to find out more details when we launch in July 2014.  There is no obligation to undertake the programme, if you sign up today, you will simply be sent more information about the programme.  You can unsubscribe at any time!  Click below to register for further information.