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What does it take to use type well as a coaching tool? Coaching ranges from
supporting the client and asking powerful questions to giving information, suggestions,
and assignments. No matter what your coaching approach, you will be more effective
if you use more than one lens and you have a solid knowledge of each of the
16 types as a whole.
I use five lenses when working with clientsWhole Type, Temperaments,
Interaction Styles, Cognitive Dynamics, and Systemic Influences. In coaching,
getting people to find the best-fit type is crucial. One of my Qualifying Program
graduates had a coaching client who had been through a leadership program where
the MBTI® was used. When he questioned his instrument results (INTP), he
was told thats what he was. Then he made career choices based on those
results and started a home-based research business. As my client worked with
him, she quickly recognized that INTP did not seem to fit. Through self-discovery
using these five lenses, the client decided that INFJ was the best-fit type.
This process was very valuable. The client had very valuable information from
each lens to help him make decisions that were right for him and the coach had
a better idea of how to communicate with her client more effectively.
Whole Type
To recognize a type by the whole pattern is very useful in helping people clarify
their types as the coach can quickly see what is fitting and suggest a description
to read for a better fit. And you will find the other lenses of type work even
better because you will be more accurate. Using whole type is not just about
the characteristics of the preferences or type dynamics. Notice aspects of the
INFJ theme developed by Dario Nardi that you cant quite attribute to a
preference in the following excerpt:
Foreseer Developer Personal growth. Sustain the vision. Honoring
the gifts of others. Taking a creative approach to life. Talent for foreseeing.
Exploring issues. Bridge differences and connect people. Practical problem
solving. Live with a sense of purpose. Living an idealistic life often presents
them with a great deal of stress and a need to withdraw.(page 8)
This lens is essential for self-knowledge as clients read and learn more about
themselves. It is also useful for coaches in identifying sources of blind spots
and foibles the client may be having trouble with. Notice the INFJ theme in
this excerpt from Dr. Nardi under the heading Reminders for Personal Growth.
. . . . Balance what is supportive, friendly, and safe with what challenges
the thinking behind your opinions. Have outlets to express lifes many
layers and levels.(page 33) This could spark a coach in how to help the client
with appropriate suggestions or questions.
Temperament
Temperament information is so powerful and profound that people remember it
long after they forget other information. It gives information about core psychological
needs and values and the talents that help get those needs met and values realized.
We usually are unaware of these needs, yet they are so important that when not
met, they often unconsciously drive ineffective behavior. As a coach, the most
powerful questions you can ask yourself when someone is trying to change or
seems blocked in their growth is How is this problem getting their needs
met? and then How else could they get their needs met? Often,
what they need is a place to exercise their talents. In the case above, the
INFJ client wasnt using his talents of diplomacy in the research job he
had set up for himself. No wonder he was dissatisfied!
It also can serve as a cross-check for type verification.
If the clients identified type code is truly the best-fit one, the predicted
temperament pattern will match and they will relate to the core needs and values
and talents.
Interaction Styles
Temperament tells us why we do things, our deep motivations. Interaction Styles
tells us how we do them. The four Interaction Styles gives us information about
the psycho-physiological drives we have. These patterns are often the source
of conflict as well as dissatisfaction with our roles. Interaction Styles information
will open your clients eyes to many ways to adapt and change their behaviors
as well as their life choices. Like temperament, this lens can provide a good
cross-check for type verification. In the case, INFJ has a Chart-the-Course
style and the INTP code, a Behind-the-Scenes style. This helped clarify the
clients best-fit.
| Urgent
need to accomplish |
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Pressing
need to integrate |
| It’s worth the
risk to go ahead and act or decide. |
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It’s
worth the time to integrate and reconcile many inputs. |
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Get
the best result possible |
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| ENFJ,
ESTJ, ENTJ, ESTP |
INFJ,
ISTJ, INTJ, ISTP |
ENFP,
ESFJ, ENTP, ESFP |
INFP, ISFJ, INTP, ISFP
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Cognitive Dynamics
This lens is one of the most powerful in coaching. Cognitive Dynamics includes
dynamic relationships among preferences for using the cognitive processes (function-attitudes)
whether as in Beebes model or the hierarchy of functions model. It also
includes type development. Like the other lenses, it helps greatly in type clarification.
In the example above, the coach was able to help her client see how he might
have reported preferences for INTP since it was a time in his life where he
was likely developing introverted Thinking. In this way, the client was able
to feel good about his earlier choices that were growth oriented. It also made
sense that there was some appeal to research.
Systemic Influences
Type cannot effectively be used for any application without attention to systemic
influencesthose aspects of life that often complicate type identification
and clarification. These are often the sources of pressure in the clients
life. They include culture, gender, responses to developmental spaces, Life
Themes and organizational culture or name a few. The professional coach must
always use type in relation to these forces. With the INFJ client, reporting
INTP as male, HR manager in an administrative role might make a lot of sense.
Also, being in a developmental space of values identification, he may have been
in a more skeptical wondering mode at the time, rather than a believing mode.
These five lenses work well together and can open up a world of difference
to the client and make your work as coach more effective.
Sections of this article appear in the Spring volume of
TypeFace, the British Association for Psychological Types Quarterly review.
Berens, Linda V. And Nardi, Dario. The 16 Personality Types, Descriptions
for Self-discovery. Huntington Beach, Calif.: Telos Publications, 1999.
Berens, Linda V. et al. Quick Guide to the 16 Personality Types in Organizations.
Huntington Beach, Calif.: Telos Publications, 2001.
Adapted from Berens, Linda V. Understanding Yourself and Others, An Introduction
to Temperament 2.0. Huntington Beach, Calif.: Telos Publications, 2000.
Adapted from Berens, Linda V. Understanding Yourself and Others, An Introduction
to Interaction Styles. Huntington Beach, Calif.: Telos Publications, 2001.
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