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Uses of MBTI Understand yourself and your behavior Appreciate others and their contributions Make constructive use of differences.

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Presentation on theme: "Uses of MBTI Understand yourself and your behavior Appreciate others and their contributions Make constructive use of differences."— Presentation transcript:

1 Uses of MBTI Understand yourself and your behavior Appreciate others and their contributions Make constructive use of differences

2 What Does It Do? Identifies preferences, not skills Open possibilities, not limit options All preferences are valuable All preferences can be used by each person

3 IMPORTANT!!!!! Everyone is unique Everyone uses every preference sometime We can all improve communications Relationships will improve with practice

4 Myers-Briggs Extravert Sensing Thinking Judging Intravert Intuitive Feeling Perceiving

5 Terms Extravert IS NOT “talkative or loud” Introvert IS NOT “shy or inhibited” Feeling IS NOT “emotional” Judging IS NOT “judgmental” Perceiving IS NOT “perceptive”

6 Extravert - Introvert How you get and use your energy

7 Extravert - Introvert E – People, activity, talking (external world) –Readily takes initiative –“Act first, think later” –Enjoys a wide variety and change in people and relationships –Very approachable –Develop ideas through discussion I – Thoughts, feelings, writing (internal world) –Think/reflect first, then act –Needs “private” time to reflect –One-on-one relationship or conversations –Great listeners –Enjoys focusing on a project

8 Sensing (S) – Intuitive (N) How do you take in information?

9 Sensing (S) – Intuitive (N) S – Facts – real & tangible - now –Carefully thought out conclusions –Lives in the present –“Do something” rather than “think about it” –Fantasy is a dirty word –Common sense solutions N – Possibilities – Inspiration - future –Use personal feelings to make decisions –Comfortable with fuzzy data –Inventing new possibilities is automatic –Sometimes considered absent-minded

10 Thinking (T) - Feeling (F) How do you make decisions?

11 Thinking (T) - Feeling (F) T – Decision through logic and truth –More important to be right than liked –Viewed as unemotional –Focus on tasks –Provides objective and critical analysis F - Decision through emotion –Follow hunch to make quick conclusions –Sensitive to feelings of others –Toxic reaction to disharmony, prefer to accommodate –Takes things too personally

12 Judging (J) - Perceiving (P) How do you organize your life?

13 Judging (J) - Perceiving (P) J – planned, orderly, reach closure quickly –Get things done –Punctual –Likes to use a list, make plans –Structure and order –Works best and avoids stress when keeps ahead of deadlines and not given too much information at one time P – flexible, spontaneous, stay open –Lives for the moment –Works well under pressure and deadlines –Creative –Multitasks –Avoids commitments, it interferes with flexibility

14 Tips for Extraverts Style can overwhelm intraverts Recognize the need for written communications

15 Tips for Intraverts Be assertive Let others know where you are and what you need Ask for time to respond Recognize the need for face to face communications

16 Tips for Sensors Your helpful questions and useful details may cut off others’ sharing of ideas Ask others for their ideas and perspective Allow time for brainstorming

17 Tips for Intuitives Others may need to do a reality check on your ideas or compare them with past experience While brainstorming, think of what it will take to make the idea work

18 Tips for Thinking Types Personal connection and acknowledgement are necessary to Feeling types to commit to a project Your idea of a “lively difference of opinion” may represent a “conflict” tp Feeling types, creating tension

19 Tips for Feeling Types Logical structure and clarity are necessary for Thinking types to commit to a project T types may see your relationship-oriented approach as obscuring your commitment to planning and completing tasks Let others know if their style is bothering you

20 Tips for Judging Types Recognize that structure is restrictive to P types - limit to essentials Allow time for deliberation and decision Hold others responsible for results, rather than dictating the process Use asking tones, rather than insisting tones

21 Tips for Perceiving Types Recognize that your exploratory style may seem like a waste of time to Judging types Set deadlines for your own results and decisions Follow through on your commitments


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