From Strengthsfinder.com via "Now, discover your strengths" by Marcus Buckingham and Donald O. Clifton. "Many
years of research conducted by The Gallup Organization suggest that the
most effective people are those who understand their strengths and
behaviors. These people are best able to develop strategies to meet and
exceed the demands of their daily lives, their careers, and their
families. A
review of the knowledge and skills you have acquired can provide a
basic sense of your abilities, but an awareness and understanding of
your natural talents will provide true insight into the core reasons
behind your consistent successes. Your Signature Themes report presents your five most dominant themes of talent, in the rank order revealed by your
responses to StrengthsFinder. Of the 34 themes measured, these are your "top five." Your
Signature Themes are very important in maximizing the talents that lead
to your successes. By focusing on your Signature Themes, separately and
in combination, you can identify your talents, build them into
strengths, and enjoy personal and career success through consistent,
near-perfect performance." My Signature Themes are:
Your Responsibility theme forces you to take psychological ownership
for anything you commit to, and whether large or small, you feel
emotionally bound to follow it through to completion. Your good name
depends on it. If for some reason you cannot deliver, you automatically
start to look for ways to make it up to the other person. Apologies are
not enough. Excuses and rationalizations are totally unacceptable. You
will not quite be able to live with yourself until you have made
restitution. This conscientiousness, this near obsession for doing
things right, and your impeccable ethics, combine to create your
reputation: utterly dependable. When assigning new responsibilities,
people will look to you first because they know it will get done. When
people come to you for help—and they soon will—you must be selective.
Your willingness to volunteer may sometimes lead you to take on more
than you should.
You are inquisitive. You collect things. You might collect
information—words, facts, books, and quotations—or you might collect
tangible objects such as butterflies, baseball cards, porcelain dolls,
or sepia photographs. Whatever you collect, you collect it because it
interests you. And yours is the kind of mind that finds so many things
interesting. The world is exciting precisely because of its infinite
variety and complexity. If you read a great deal, it is not necessarily
to refine your theories but, rather, to add more information to your
archives. If you like to travel, it is because each new location offers
novel artifacts and facts. These can be acquired and then stored away.
Why are they worth storing? At the time of storing it is often hard to
say exactly when or why you might need them, but who knows when they
might become useful? With all those possible uses in mind, you really
don’t feel comfortable throwing anything away. So you keep acquiring
and compiling and filing stuff away. It’s interesting. It keeps your
mind fresh. And perhaps one day some of it will prove valuable.
You love to learn. The subject matter that interests you most
will be determined by your other themes and experiences, but whatever
the subject, you will always be drawn to the process of learning. The
process, more than the content or the result, is especially exciting
for you. You are energized by the steady and deliberate journey from
ignorance to competence. The thrill of the first few facts, the early
efforts to recite or practice what you have learned, the growing
confidence of a skill mastered—this is the process that entices you.
Your excitement leads you to engage in adult learning experiences—yoga
or piano lessons or graduate classes. It enables you to thrive in
dynamic work environments where you are asked to take on short project
assignments and are expected to learn a lot about the new subject
matter in a short period of time and then move on to the next one. This
Learner theme does not necessarily mean that you seek to become the
subject matter expert, or that you are striving for the respect that
accompanies a professional or academic credential. The outcome of the
learning is less significant than the “getting there.”
Relator describes your attitude toward your relationships. In
simple terms, the Relator theme pulls you toward people you already
know. You do not necessarily shy away from meeting new people—in fact,
you may have other themes that cause you to enjoy the thrill of turning
strangers into friends—but you do derive a great deal of pleasure and
strength from being around your close friends. You are comfortable with
intimacy. Once the initial connection has been made, you deliberately
encourage a deepening of the relationship. You want to understand their
feelings, their goals, their fears, and their dreams; and you want them
to understand yours. You know that this kind of closeness implies a
certain amount of risk—you might be taken advantage of—but you are
willing to accept that risk. For you a relationship has value only if
it is genuine. And the only way to know that is to entrust yourself to
the other person. The more you share with each other, the more you risk
together. The more you risk together, the more each of you proves your
caring is genuine. These are your steps toward real friendship, and you
take them willingly.
You are a conductor. When faced with a complex situation
involving many factors, you enjoy managing all of the variables,
aligning and realigning them until you are sure you have arranged them
in the most productive configuration possible. In your mind there is
nothing special about what you are doing. You are simply trying to
figure out the best way to get things done. But others, lacking this
theme, will be in awe of your ability. “How can you keep so many things
in your head at once?” they will ask. “How can you stay so flexible, so
willing to shelve well-laid plans in favor of some brand-new
configuration that has just occurred to you?” But you cannot imagine
behaving in any other way. You are a shining example of effective
flexibility, whether you are changing travel schedules at the last
minute because a better fare has popped up or mulling over just the
right combination of people and resources to accomplish a new project.
From the mundane to the complex, you are always looking for the perfect
configuration. Of course, you are at your best in dynamic situations.
Confronted with the unexpected, some complain that plans devised with
such care cannot be changed, while others take refuge in the existing
rules or procedures. You don’t do either. Instead, you jump into the
confusion, devising new options, hunting for new paths of least
resistance, and figuring out new partnerships—because, after all, there
might just be a better way.
Responsibility
Input
Learner
Relator
Arranger
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