Your Father’s DISC Personality Type

There isn’t a better way to say ‘I love you, Dad,’ than by giving him an Extended DISC assessment so that he can learn his DISC personality type! Your father will gain a better understanding of himself, and even learn how to adjust his behavior with others!

Okay, so the beginning of this blog may have sounded like a cheesy ad to sell you a DISC assessment. I promise, this blog is not intended to sell. It is important to understand the natural way you prefer to do things. It is also important to understand the natural style of others. Understanding the DISC personality type of yourself and others will help you adjust your behaviors. Adjusting your behaviors will enhance communication, decision-making, teamwork and so much more. Out of all of the important things I have just previously mentioned, the most important thing of all is to understand the DISC personality type of your dad!

Why I wasn’t surprised by the DISC personality type of my dad.

About a year ago I went through an DISC Certification session. After the session, I was eager to figure out the DISC styles of those I was closest to; especially my dad. After working at Extended DISC for an entire year, I had only my observations to base my guess for my dad’s DISC style on. To inspire me to write this blog, I asked my dad to take our DISC assessment. He was eager to help.

When I received my father’s DISC assessment, I was happy to see that my gut feeling of what his DISC personality would be was correct all along. My dad has always been a funny, outgoing person who I would say is a ‘go-getter’. From my many examples in my mind, I knew for certain by dad fit the I-Style Personality Type. From the assessment I received, I also learned his natural DISC profile included the D-Style Personality Type. This came to no surprise to me as well.

It is important to remember that when thinking of someone and trying to figure out their DISC profile, an individual can possess a combination of DISC profiles. For example, my father is a ‘DI’ DISC profile, whereas I am an ‘IS’ DISC profile. Everyone also has all four DISC styles represented in their behaviors too! It may just take more effort for some DISC styles to show up in your behaviors.

What DISC Personality type is your father?

Need some assistance in figuring out the DISC style of your dad? The infographic below helps you put the pieces together to give you a clearer idea on his DISC personality type.

DISC Personality Type

As mentioned earlier, your dad, or anyone in general doesn’t always fit into only one of the four DISC profiles. Anyone can be a combination of them! If you know your DISC style already, you can learn how to successfully communicate with your father by adjusting your behaviors. I know this definitely would have come in handy when I was under ‘his roof’ growing up. This may also come in handy for all of the hard-working dads reading this blog too! If you are a father reading this blog today, I hope you found out a little more about your DISC personality type, and Happy Father’s Day to you!

 

Join Extended DISC® at the SHRM 2017 Annual Conference & Expo in New Orleans June 18-21!

Extended DISC® will be at the SHRM 2017 Annual Conference & Expo at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans from June 18-21!

Extended DISC® offers customizable, online DISC assessments for leadership, sales, customer service, team and communication training. Our Unlimited Use DISC License allows you to use an unlimited number of assessments for a fixed fee. Our Public and Virtual Certification options are approved for PHR, SPHR and GPHR recertification credits.

Visit Extended DISC® at booth #3015 at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans for your chance to win all of the cash from the Extended DISC® Original Money Jar!

Insperity Blog: Self-Awareness and Understanding Others

The key for successful interactions, relationships and more is to enhance your self-awareness. The next step is to understand other individuals natural behaviors.

Extended DISC client, Insperity, shared a blog ‘4 mistakes managers make that can destroy trust‘. The blog stresses the importance of self-awareness. Being aware of what you are doing in a situation can help you see issues from a different perspective. The blog also shared the importance of understanding others. Becoming familiar with other individuals DISC styles can help you comprehend why they engage in the behaviors that they do.

The Millennial Generation: A Popular Topic

As more and more of the millennial generation is enter the workforce, more and more articles about them are emerging too!

Earlier this year, we shared a discussion in our webinar about the millennial generation. However, we are not the only outlet discussing millennials. USA Today recently shared an article ‘Why You Should Consider Hiring More Millennials’. In both articles, like many, misconceptions about millennials are reviewed. Are you taking the time to understand each and every individual, no matter their generation?

William Moulton Marston and the DISC Model

William Moulton Marston was famous for several accomplishments, including the creation of the DISC Model!

Popular Instagram account, ‘UberFacts‘ shared an interesting fact on the DISC Model creator, William Moulton Marston. While William was popular for creating the DISC Model, he was also famous for creating the globally-recognized comic book character, ‘Wonder Woman’!

Marshall Goldsmith: Behavioral Change in the Age of Social Media

Marshall Goldsmith explains one of the most devastating causes of career lag, and how to fix it.

Visit the blog and video ‘Behavioral Change in the Age of Social Media‘ by Marshall Goldsmith. You will learn just how the digital age has changed human behavior, and how you can avoid the ‘career killer’.

Adjusting your behaviors is as simple as taking an Extended DISC® assessment! Get started today with a free demo.

Team DISC Assessments Webinar: Managers: June 15th

In the 2nd installment of our Using Team Assessments series, Team DISC Assessments Webinar: Managers, learn how managers can use the tool to more effectively manage and develop their teams.

The Team DISC Assessment is a very popular tool. It shows a team’s dynamics, strengths and development areas and it can be highly effective in team development. In the Team DISC Assessments webinar: Managers, Markku Kauppinen talks about how managers can better letter their team and help their teams achieve better results.

Date and Time

Thursday, June 15, 2017

10:00 AM – 10:30 AM CDT

Registration

To register click here

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar. Sign up even if you are unable to make the live webinar. We will notify you when the recorded webinar is available.

View Part I, Using Team Assessments Webinar: The Team by clicking here.

DISC Leadership Style

With the Extended DISC Leadership Assessment, understanding your DISC leadership style has become a whole lot easier!

Read ‘How Leaders Can Push Employees Without Stressing Them Out‘ from Harvard Business Review. Extended DISC offers Leadership Assessments that give insight on how you motivate your employees. We also offer reports that inform you on what motivates your employees. Using the information from Extended DISC assessments can help you push your employees without stressing them out!

 

Using Team DISC Assessments: Team Application

Team DISC Assessments are highly useful tools in helping identify a team’s preferred way of doing things, natural strengths, and areas of development. In addition, team DISC reports can provide supporting information on how teams can work more effectively.

Team DISC Assessments Cover
We rely on teamwork to get things done, but not all teams function smoothly. Teams need tools that help them to become more effective; even successful teams can improve. Team DISC Assessments can provide supportive information for teams to achieve success.

Stop! Before You Use Team DISC Assessments!

team meeting comic

First off, team members only need to take one DISC test. The resulting DISC report is designed to help the respondent understand his/her own preferred ways of behaving. One of the goals, leading to the team DISC assessment, is to increase self-awareness and understanding of how each respondent interacts within the team. You can use the 4 Steps to Effective Communication approach to debrief the individual’s DISC profile. Start by helping team members understand the 4 DISC types. Then focus on their own styles, learning to identify DISC styles of others, and finally, practice how to adapt to be more successful. The goal here is to increase self-awareness.

After the individual review, now focus on how the respondent fits in the team. Team members can better understand how their preferred DISC personality type shows up in a team. They learn what strengths they can bring to a team. In addition, they can become aware of how their team members view their DISC style. They can use the DISC results to learn how to be an even more effective team member.

Where Can You Use Team DISC Assessments?

Now, respondents can come together as a group and progress to use the team results. Team DISC Assessments can help identify the relationship dynamics of teams. However, there is more than one way to use team results beyond just the team setting. Managers can use it to better manage and lead their employees. CEOs and business owners can use the DISC tool to make strategic decisions. You can also use the team DISC tool at an organizational level. For example, how can we better understand why we have high turnover rates? Are certain DISC profile types leaving our company at a higher rate than others? Leadership then may have more valuable information to make strategic decisions.

The bottom line is that it’s not just a team development tool. Our webinar and blog will address more ways to use team DISC assessments in a continuing Using Team DISC Assessments series.

Using Team DISC Assessments in Team Applications

Teams have challenges that may be highly visible, including inter-personal issues, conflicts, and friction. Therefore, it’s difficult to understand what’s underneath all those overt and sometimes distracting issues. The team report maps can really simplify complex issues because it’s a visual image of how team members relate to one another.

Another strength of DISC is that it does not make value judgments; there is no good or bad, high or low scores when it comes to DISC styles. We simply have preferred ways of doing things. Teams can then have a safe and well-defined setting to discuss and understand their team’s dynamics. Team members can talk about their teams using the DISC language in a way that is non-judgmental. Additionally, people can be more self-aware when seeing team members’ results and how their own style interacts with others.

Why Start with Team DISC Assessments Exercise?

Team Building Exercises Comic

There is no set way to use the team assessment, but a great place to start is with a DISC exercise. Do it before presenting the team DISC results. A simple DISC exercise can help to start discussion.

First, ask the team to identify their primary goals to achieve success. Next, ask team to identify the behaviors needed for the team members to practice daily to achieve those goals. Lastly, map the behaviors in the DISC quadrants. Try using a blank DISC Diamond flip-chart paper. Focus solely on behaviors when mapping on the DISC quadrants.

Typically, behaviors tend to focus in on two of the DISC quadrants. Before further discussion, ask the team to agree, that if they practice these identified behaviors they will more likely reach their goals. Now you have an upfront commitment from the team. It’s candid feedback.

Understanding the Team DISC Profile Using the Shotgun Map

Team Shotgun DISC map

People typically start with the Shotgun Map. The Shotgun Map will show the natural styles of the team members. We can look at the team more objectively because there are no names. The Shotgun Map can be used to view the team at a macro level and focus on the big picture. There is no ideal team make-up. Teams are not usually distributed evenly amongst the 4 DISC quadrants. Context is everything. For example, think of the distribution of a sales team versus an auditing department. We need to understand job functions and goals teams need to accomplish.

We can look at the Shotgun map to help identify strengths and weaknesses. Groups of styles (dots) in any quadrant may be identified as a strength because it’s comfortable for members to handle those behaviors. However, if the team doesn’t have identified behaviors in those DISC quadrants then it may be a liability; always keep in mind the context of the team and goals it is trying to achieve. Weaknesses may occur if there is no concentration of styles in a DISC quadrant, but again context is important.

Concentration of DISC Styles of a Team

A simpler way to look at the DISC Diamond is to divide the model into halves. The top half of the DISC model reflects DISC styles that are task-oriented versus the bottom half, which are DISC styles that are more people-oriented. You can divide the DISC models from left and right. DISC styles are more reserved on the left side, whereas, the DISC styles are more active on the right side.

Dividing the DISC model allows us to focus on concentration of DISC types. People tend to gravitate to roles that fit their style. Think of a job in your career that has been of a struggle and think of the job requirements. Where do they tend to fall on the DISC Diamond? Though many of us can thrive when we are forced out of our comfort zone, most people tend to gravitate to jobs and roles that match their DISC style. That is one reason why we tend to see concentrations of DISC styles when we look at Team DISC Assessments.

Concentrations of styles can amplify strengths of the group, but it can also amplify the areas of development. Similar styles tend to feed off the energy of each other. Make sure to ask the team for examples of when concentrations of styles work and don’t work. Discussions can focus on identifying settings where it happens, but also how it may not benefit to the team’s goal.

Using Team DISC Arrow Map

Team DISC Arrow Map

The Team DISC Arrow Map shows the natural style of team members and the adjustments they may be making. Team members needed to have taken the DISC assessment around the same time. Arrows are like a snapshot of the time in which the team member took the DISC questionnaire.

When looking at the arrows, focus on where the arrow is moving towards, but also focus on where the arrow may be moving away from. Also, look to see if there is a pattern of movement. Are the team members’ arrows moving in a similar direction?

Do the arrows make sense? This team may feel more motivated or the need to focus on more people-oriented behaviors. In the sample Arrow Map, there appears to be some pressure, motivation, or demands that are pushing the arrows primarily downwards. Tie the arrows back to the behaviors the team originally identified as necessary to achieve goals. If the arrows don’t make sense, then why don’t they? What changes does the team need to make in its behaviors to achieve the goals?

What Do We Do with DISC Team Profile Results?

Generations in team comic
Modifying behavior takes energy. There are two components in the context of the team. The first looks at what individual changes does the team member need to make to help the team. Then, what changes does the team collectively need to make? Remember, we can only control our own behaviors. We cannot force others to change and therefore, team pressures can prevent change. Teams must be committed to making changes; individually and collectively. Team members have different roles and styles, and therefore, may have differing adjustments in order for the team to succeed.

Don’t forget to keep revisiting the exercise results because it’s difficult for the team to argue on goals and behaviors the team itself identified. We have covered just a few sections of the team report. There are different sections of the team report that DISC facilitators favor. The team DISC report is highly valuable even if team members have taken it at different times. Ultimately, teams can use the team DISC results to identify the natural style of each team member, how it affects team dynamics, and what behavioral adjustments can be made to meet the goals of the team.

Team DISC Assessments Pt II: The Manager, on June 15, 2017

Sign up for the next webinar in our continuing series, Team DISC Assessments Pt II: The Manager, on June 15, 2017. How can managers use the DISC tool to better manage, develop, and lead their employees?

D-Styles Know How to Handle Chaos

DISC styles handle chaos differently. For some DISC styles, the ability to handle chaos may take more effort.

One of the fundamental characteristics of individuals that grow successful businesses is the ability to handle chaos. Read the article ‘To Successfully Grow A Business, You Must ‘Expect Chaos’  from the Entrepreneur. D-Styles are most comfortable with handling chaos. For other DISC styles, handling chaos may take more effort.