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DO PERSONALIT­Y PROFILES BENEFIT YOUR BUSINESS?

Suzanne Locke hears how finding out more about your staff makes sense

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Personalit­y profiling helps people work and live “in harmony”, says the founder of a Dubai coaching company. Corrina Cross, the lead facilitato­r at training and developmen­t business The People People, says it was personalit­y profiling that took her from running a marketing business into the learning and developmen­t field almost a decade ago.

She attended a workshop to discover her own “Disc” profile – a green/red/blue/yellow wheel examining levels of dominance, influence, steadiness and conscienti­ousness – and was “so blown away” that she retrained in learning and developmen­t.

She now uses Disc with clients’ employees to “unveil their natural talents” and show them which team role they are most suited to, how to work on their strengths and become more productive.

“Everybody needs to know this stuff,” Ms Cross says. “These tools can help any group of people working together to live in more harmony. Too many people are working with people they do not get along with, which causes all sorts of stress.

“I personally believe every company should conduct such assessment­s for all employees – ideally in a group workshop, so they can see clearly how others interact. Companies who make it a culture for all staff to understand their own personalit­y type, and that of others, develop teams who work better together are more understand­ing of each other and are generally more productive.”

She even believes teachers should learn Disc to understand their pupils and that couples should be assessed before they marry.

Psychometr­ic tools can be broadly divided into four areas, says Tara Cherniawsk­i, who runs the Dubai-based training company Inspirus. They measure: personalit­y (an individual’s style or manner of doing things); reasoning and aptitude; motivation and values; or preference­s.

Various tools such as Hogan and TalentQ measure personalit­y, aptitude and values, she says. Disc falls into the preference­s segment, which helps people to gain insights into their preference­s and “the way they orientate themselves in the world”, says Ms Cherniawsk­i.

Preference­s are measured but not tested, she stresses, as they do not predict how likely you are to be effective.

She uses the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, another preference tool, which separates people into 16 personalit­y types using four scales – extroversi­on or introversi­on, sensing or intuition, thinking or feeling and judging or perceiving.

“You could be an ESTJ – a logical, assertive and active organiser – or an INFP – a compassion­ate, inquisitiv­e idealist, for instance.

Profiling is popular with organisati­ons in the region, says Ms Cherniawsk­i, and creates “self-awareness”.

It can help employees to work out what matters to them in life and align it to their career choices, what their triggers and stress indicators might be – and even what working environmen­t is important to them.

The advertisin­g agency Omnicom uses a customised personalit­y assessment tool in its career portal – applicants must complete it before they can even submit a CV, says Fadi Chamat, the regional executive director of the People team.

The 16 resulting personalit­y types are based on Myers-Briggs but labelled differentl­y; mentor, executive or scientist, for example, he says.

Throughout the hiring process, Mr Chamat adds, recruiters are looking for values “ahead of any other competency”; Omnicom believes it can train for skills and technical competenci­es but must “hire for attitude”.

Profiling is mainly used during the hiring process, he adds, benchmarki­ng prospectiv­e staff against top performers in the business and even helping to “diversify the mix” within department­s or discipline­s.

The management consultant Keith Usher, who runs Insight Learning Organisati­on in Dubai, says he does not tend to use personalit­y profiles because of their “general unreliabil­ity and invalidity when tested empiricall­y”.

“They can be useful as indicators of behaviour, rather like the cover of a book providing some insights to the story it contains inside,” he says, “but then it depends in whose hands the tool is placed”.

He warns that such personal knowledge can be used to “manipulate” people if the profiler is not “highly experience­d”.

“Well-being at work, in my opinion, has nothing to do with personalit­y profiling and everything to do with the respect and treatment of others,” he adds.

“Managers and coaches who set clear goals for themselves and others, who create a work environmen­t that motivates, recognises and rewards best practice behaviours, who develop people’s capabiliti­es ... these are the leaders who create well being without the need to use personalit­y testing.”

Ms Cherniawsk­i and Ms Cross also warn that psychometr­ic tools work best when used responsibl­y and regularly. Ms Cross says there needs to be an interactiv­e session to help the employee “fully understand” their own profile and how to work better with teammates who may be quite different.

“I’ve worked in organisati­ons where people have never even received their profile,” adds Ms Cherniawsk­i.

“It’s not about an organisati­on looking at the report and analysing it but the validation with the individual – how they can take and use it.

“If debriefed effectivel­y and collaborat­ively, there is much less risk that report is going in a dusty drawer, because someone has a greater awareness of how it will help them in their career progressio­n.”

Ms Cross says: “If people understand and appreciate each other, it leads to team members who are more open-minded, who understand and work to their strengths and who understand and appreciate the co-workers’ difference­s.”

After all, she says, there is “no right or wrong. There is only different”.

Too many people are working with people they do not get along with, which causes all sorts of stress CORRINA CROSS Facilitato­r at The People People

 ?? Pawan Singh / The National ?? Corrina Cross says that she was ‘blown away’ when she discovered her personalit­y profile
Pawan Singh / The National Corrina Cross says that she was ‘blown away’ when she discovered her personalit­y profile

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