The Irony Behind Personality Models
It’s a little embarrassing to admit, but I was never fond of the various personality models that appeared over the years.? These were the programs that identified various personality types and provided insight into the things about yourself that you never quite understood before.?
For a period of time, it seemed as if every company I worked with was investing in these programs to help them sell more effectively.? After all, once you went through this extensive, multi-page assessment, you had a pretty accurate understanding of what motivates you, what demotivates you, how you want to be managed, strengths and weaknesses of selling, and much, much more.?
Personally, I fought these programs for one, stubborn reason: I felt the information I was gaining from these assessments was absolutely perfect… as long as I was selling to ME for the rest of my life!
I always felt the information was aimed at the wrong person!? I’m as interested as the next guy to learn more about myself, and be a better person, but quite frankly, I didn’t want this to be about me.? I wanted it to be about the person sitting across from me!?
So I treated these programs with disdain often claiming: “Who needs them?!”? I can’t go to my clients and say, ‘Uh, pardon me, would you mind taking this assessment so I can figure out how to sell to you more effectively?” In my book, this conversation about personality had no business in the trenches with real sales training.? It was insulting to me that these models even dared to try and pass themselves off as sales models!?
And then I realized I was wrong.? So often, I would field questions from audience members and I would hear things like: ?“How long should I spend chitchatting with a client before I move into the business side of things?”? Wouldn’t that depend of the personality of the client?
The fact is that I needed those personality models, and I appreciated their attention to learning more about individual human behavior. ?But those personality models needed more attention to skills that taught true selling techniques as well.
Full personality assessments are great as management tools, and wonderful to show family and friends at parties, but they won’t be a lot of help when you are training your eyes on someone else you are meeting for the first time.? What will work is studying how someone dresses, how an office or home environment is set-up, or even learning to read personality from emails and voicemails. These kinds of reads will give you a head start, and your early questions will allow you to fine tune how you adjust to match the personality of those you are communicating with.? ?
In the real world, many personality reads are made on the fly so it’s extremely difficult to juggle the level of detail in multi-level assessments. You don’t need such in depth assessments.? Quite frankly, after polling well over a hundred of my own workshop audiences, I found there are just three personality types that will cover all of the bases for you.? They are the dominant, the analytical, and the social personality.?
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Our natural behavior is to try and communicate with people with whom we would likely feel comfortable: People who are like us.? Unfortunately, when you are working with others, it’s his or her personality that matters, and that means communicating in the way that person would like to be communicated with.? When you take a moment and think about it, it’s kind of ironic that despite all the traditional testing of personalities that goes on, when working with others clients, it’s not your personality that matters; it’s theirs.
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2 个月What do you think of the Merrill and Reid Social Styles Model? Some descriptions, for reference: https://www.clickthrough-marketing.com/blog/merrill-reid-social-styles-model https://www.bitesizelearning.co.uk/resources/how-social-styles-can-help-you-to-achieve-your-communication-goals https://biz.libretexts.org/Courses/Northeast_Wisconsin_Technical_College/Power_of_Selling_%28NWTC%29/05%3A_The_Sales_Presentation/5.06%3A_The_Social_Style_Matrix
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2 个月Great to hear about your experience with personality tests, Rob. I totally agree, we at DOOR developed about 30 years ago an easy to use personality model for sales reps to adopt to their clients preferred style, which was about dominant, reserved and social behavior, pretty much the same what you discovered. In the end it is about understanding what makes people feel safe and what are their needs, you don't need a 10 pages report to find out about this
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2 个月Got to love this expose, especially from a mental health standpoint
Corporate Sales Trainer/Consultant/Author/Sales Best Practices/
2 个月Rob, this is an interesting take on the personality tests. I did find some of these tests and analysis interesting. When I was presenting to a former engineer that became a financial advisor, they wanted the facts and full details. Chit chat and a personal relationship wasn’t as important as ALL the details about the fund. They were more Business/Business minded. Other clients wee more relationship/rapport minded. Great sales reps know how to be chameleons that adjust to the person they’re talking with, if they don’t have the Personality test results. That comes with experience, Insight and good training like you provide. But I do believe I could have been more effective early in my career of if I knew their personality before my first visit. Terrific post my friend!!