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Myers-Briggs Type Indicator®
   Interpretive Report




                                                                                                                                                                       Report prepared for
                                                                                                                                                                             JANE SAMPLE
                                                                                                                                                                               October 28, 2009




                       CPP, Inc. | 800-624-1765 | www.cpp.com

Myers-Briggs Type Indicator ® Interpretive Report Copyright 1988, 1998, 2005 by Peter B. Myers and Katharine D. Myers. All rights reserved. Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, Myers-Briggs, MBTI, Introduction to Type, and the MBTI logo
are trademarks or registered trademarks of the MBTI Trust, Inc., in the United States and other countries. The CPP logo is a registered trademark of CPP, Inc.
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator®                                                               JANE SAMPLE / ENFP
            Interpretive Report                                                                                    Page 2


Introduction
This report is designed to help you understand your results on the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator® (MBTI®)
assessment. The MBTI assessment is a tool for identifying 16 different personality types that can be used
to describe people.

                                     Your responses to the MBTI
   ISTJ    ISFJ     INFJ    INTJ     items indicate that your
                                     four-letter type code is:
   ISTP    ISFP     INFP    INTP     ENFP
                                     Extraverted Intuition with Feeling
  ESTP    ESFP ENFP ENTP


  ESTJ     ESFJ    ENFJ ENTJ



Where Do Personality Types Come From?
The MBTI instrument is based on the work of psychologist Carl Jung and the instrument’s authors,
Isabel Briggs Myers and her mother, Katharine Cook Briggs, all of whom spent years observing human
behavior. Their ideas help explain why different kinds of people are interested in different things,
prefer different kinds of work, and sometimes find it hard to understand each other—all due to basic
differences in how people take in information and make decisions about it.
The MBTI instrument was developed with great care and has been used by people around the world for
more than 60 years.


 •	 Organizations use it to improve employee communication, teamwork, and leadership.
 •	 Adults and young people use it to choose careers that are likely to hold their interest and use their gifts.
 •	 Teachers and students use it to make learning more interesting and efficient.
 •	 Family members use it to better understand each other.



Isabel Briggs Myers created descriptions of each of the 16 types, including the description for your type
that is included in this report. Your Interpretive Report also provides information on why the 16 types
are different from one another and clarifies how ENFP is distinctive from the others.
A clear understanding of the basics of personality type and type development will help you gain greater
understanding of yourself and others and the impact type has on your daily interactions.
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator®                                                                        JANE SAMPLE / ENFP
              Interpretive Report                                                                                                       Page 3


How Your Responses Indicate Your Type: ENFP
When you completed the MBTI assessment, you made choices on four dichotomies, each of which is
made up of two opposite preferences:


 Where you focus your attention 	           Extraversion (E)	         7	 or	 8	   Introversion (I)
 The way you take in information 	                Sensing (S) 	 7	 or 	 8	        Intuition (N)
 The way you make decisions	                     Thinking (T) 	 7	 or 	 8	        Feeling (F)
 How you deal with the outer world 	               Judging (J) 	 7	 or 	 8	       Perceiving (P)



Although everyone uses all eight of these preferences, people find one preference in each pair more
interesting or comfortable than its opposite. Think of your choices as somewhat like being right- or
left-handed. Both hands are valuable, but most people reach first with the hand they prefer. They usually
use that hand more often and become more skillful with it. In the same way, your type preferences are
choices between equally valuable and useful qualities.
Your responses to the MBTI instrument indicate that you expressed preferences for ENFP, as shown in
the chart below and described further in the pages that follow.


  Reported Type: ENFP
                       Extraversion                                               Introversion
   Where you           People who prefer Extraversion tend to relate              People who prefer Introversion tend to relate
   focus your
     attention    E    easily to the outer world of people and things.
                                                                            I     easily to the inner world of ideas and impressions.


                       Sensing                                                    Intuition
      The way          People who prefer Sensing tend to be interested            People who prefer Intuition tend to use their
    you take in
   information    S    in what the five senses show them—what
                       exists in the present.                               N     imagination to see new possibilities and insights—
                                                                                  focusing on the future.

                       Thinking                                                   Feeling
     The way           People who prefer Thinking tend to base                    People who prefer Feeling tend to base decisions
    you make
    decisions     T    decisions on objective analysis and logic.
                                                                            F     on values and people-centered concerns.


                       Judging                                                    Perceiving
     How you           People who prefer Judging tend to like to                  People who prefer Perceiving tend to not want
 deal with the
  outer world     J    have things decided; life is likely to be planned
                       and orderly.                                         P     to miss anything; life is likely to be spontaneous
                                                                                  and flexible.
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator®                                                       JANE SAMPLE / ENFP
            Interpretive Report                                                                                Page 4


Your Type Description: ENFP

  ENFP
  •	 Warmly enthusiastic and imaginative
  •	 See life as full of possibilities
  •	 Make connections between events and information very quickly, and confidently proceed based on the patterns
     they see
  •	 Want a lot of affirmation from others, and readily give appreciation and support
  •	 Spontaneous and flexible, often rely on their ability to improvise and their verbal fluency




People with ENFP preferences see life as a creative adventure full of exciting possibilities. They are keenly
perceptive of people and the world around them and insightful about the present and future. ENFPs
experience a wide range of feelings and intense emotions. They need affirmation from others and readily
give appreciation and support to others.
ENFPs are innovators, initiating projects and directing great energy into getting them under way. Using
Intuition primarily externally, they are stimulated by new people, ideas, and experiences. They find
meaning and significance readily and see connections that others don’t. They are likely to be curious,
creative, imaginative, energetic, enthusiastic, and spontaneous.
ENFPs value harmony and goodwill. They like to please others and will adapt to others’ needs and
wishes when possible. ENFPs use Feeling primarily internally, making decisions by applying personal
values through identification and empathy with others. They are likely to be warm, friendly, caring,
cooperative, and supportive. They have exceptional insight into possibilities in others and have the
energy to help actualize the possibilities.
ENFPs are usually lively, gregarious, and sociable, with a large circle of friends. They are interested
in almost everything and bring a zest for life that draws others to them. At the same time, they value
depth and authenticity in their close relationships and direct great energy to creating and supporting
open and honest communication. ENFPs hate routine, schedules, and structure, and usually manage to
avoid them. They are normally verbally fluent, even in extemporaneous situations; however, when their
deepest values need expression, they may suddenly be awkward. Their articulation of their judgments
will often come out with great intensity. Others usually see ENFPs as personable, perceptive, persuasive,
enthusiastic, spontaneous, and versatile. ENFPs are also seen as persons who give and want to receive
affirmation.
Sometimes life circumstances have not supported ENFPs in the development and expression of their
Feeling and Intuition preferences. If they have not developed their Feeling, they may go from enthusiasm
to enthusiasm, never committing the energy necessary to actualize their insights. If they have not
developed their Intuition, they may rely too much on personal value judgments and fail to take in
enough information. They then will not trust their own insights, will be uncertain, and will accept
others’ perceptions too quickly.
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator®                                                 JANE SAMPLE / ENFP
              Interpretive Report                                                                          Page 5


Your Unique Pattern of Preferences: ENFP
Your personality type is much more than the combination of your four individual preferences. Each
of the 16 types has its own unique pattern of preferences; this helps explain why the things that are
interesting or easy for your type are uninteresting or difficult for a different type.
The two middle letters of your four-letter type code indicate which of the four mental processes you prefer.


  Sensing (S) 	      7	 or 	 8	         Intuition (N)
  Thinking (T) 	     7	 or 	 8	         Feeling (F)


Everyone uses all four mental processes, but each of the 16 types has its own pattern showing which of
these is first in importance or the most preferred, the second most preferred, the third most preferred,
and the least preferred.
ENFPs like and use Intuition first and Feeling second. Their third favored process is Thinking, and their
least preferred is Sensing. Youth is the time for ENFPs to develop Intuition and Feeling. At midlife,
Thinking and Sensing often become more interesting and easier to use.


  #1		 Intuition	          Most preferred
  #2 	 Feeling       	     Second most preferred
  #3 	 Thinking          	 Third most preferred
  #4 	 Sensing       	     Least preferred


The patterns for each type also show whether the first—or most preferred—process is used mostly in the
world of people and things (in an Extraverted way) or in the inner world of ideas and impressions (in an
Introverted way). Here is how the whole pattern works for type ENFP.
ENFPs mainly use their first or most preferred process, Intuition, in the outer world of people and things.
This is the preference most readily observable by others, since it is expressed in the outer life of ENFPs.
They use their second most preferred process, Feeling, in the inner world of ideas and impressions. ENFPs
also use Thinking and Sensing, but not so readily or easily as Intuition and Feeling. Sensing is the process
most likely to be overlooked.

  #1		 Intuition 	         Used in the outer world
  #2 	 Feeling       	     Used in the inner world



Your type description takes all these patterns into account in describing ENFP types in everyday life.
Review this description carefully, matching it against your own self-knowledge. If the description makes
you feel comfortably understood, your four-letter type code is probably right for you. The description is
intended to help you trust and develop the preferences that come most naturally to you, while keeping
in mind that, like most people, you use all eight preferences from time to time, depending on what the
situation calls for.
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator®                                                                                                     JANE SAMPLE / ENFP
             Interpretive Report                                                                                                                                     Page 6


Clarity of Your Preferences: ENFP
Your MBTI responses also indicate the clarity of your preferences, that is, how clear you were in selecting
each preference over its opposite. This is known as the preference clarity index, or pci, which is reported in
the bar graph below. A longer bar suggests you are quite sure of your preference over its opposite, while a
shorter bar suggests you are less sure about that preference. Do your choices seem to fit you?

  Clarity of Reported Preferences: ENFP

             	        Very Clear	    Clear	           Moderate	          Slight	        Slight	        Moderate	         Clear	        Very Clear	

 Extraversion E                26                                                                                                                    I 	 Introversion
     Sensing S                                                                                                                     26                N 	 ntuition
                                                                                                                                                       I
     Thinking T                                                                          3                                                           F 	Feeling
     Judging J                                                                                                                    25                 P 	Perceiving
                  	 30	        25	    20	       15	     10	         5	             0	             5	      10	      15	    20	      25	          30
                  	


  PCI Results         Extraversion 26         Intuition 26        Feeling 3             Perceiving 25


If the ENFP Pattern Does Not Seem to Fit You
The human personality is too complex to be fully accounted for by a set of questions, no matter how
good those questions may be. Here are some suggestions if your reported type does not seem to fit you:
•	 Think back to your frame of mind when you completed the MBTI assessment. Were you describing
   the preferences that come most naturally and easily to you? Or were you influenced by the way you
   think you ought to be, or the way someone else thinks you ought to be? If your responses did not
   reflect your own true way, do you have an idea of which preferences seem to describe you better?
•	 Was it difficult to determine your preference on many of the questions? If so, what would your type
   be if the choice had gone the other way? You will find complete descriptions of each of the 16 types in
   Isabel Briggs Myers’ Introduction to Type® booklet. Your type professional can also help guide you in
   finding the type that fits you best.


 For more than 60 years, the MBTI tool has helped millions of people throughout the world gain a deeper understanding of
 themselves and how they interact with others, helping them improve how they communicate, work, and learn. For resources
 to help you further your knowledge, visit www.cpp.com to discover practical tools for lifetime learning and development.




            CPP, Inc. | 800-624-1765 | www.cpp.com
            © Full copyright information appears on page 1.

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Mbti interpretive report

  • 1. Myers-Briggs Type Indicator® Interpretive Report Report prepared for JANE SAMPLE October 28, 2009 CPP, Inc. | 800-624-1765 | www.cpp.com Myers-Briggs Type Indicator ® Interpretive Report Copyright 1988, 1998, 2005 by Peter B. Myers and Katharine D. Myers. All rights reserved. Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, Myers-Briggs, MBTI, Introduction to Type, and the MBTI logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of the MBTI Trust, Inc., in the United States and other countries. The CPP logo is a registered trademark of CPP, Inc.
  • 2. Myers-Briggs Type Indicator® JANE SAMPLE / ENFP Interpretive Report Page 2 Introduction This report is designed to help you understand your results on the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator® (MBTI®) assessment. The MBTI assessment is a tool for identifying 16 different personality types that can be used to describe people. Your responses to the MBTI ISTJ ISFJ INFJ INTJ items indicate that your four-letter type code is: ISTP ISFP INFP INTP ENFP Extraverted Intuition with Feeling ESTP ESFP ENFP ENTP ESTJ ESFJ ENFJ ENTJ Where Do Personality Types Come From? The MBTI instrument is based on the work of psychologist Carl Jung and the instrument’s authors, Isabel Briggs Myers and her mother, Katharine Cook Briggs, all of whom spent years observing human behavior. Their ideas help explain why different kinds of people are interested in different things, prefer different kinds of work, and sometimes find it hard to understand each other—all due to basic differences in how people take in information and make decisions about it. The MBTI instrument was developed with great care and has been used by people around the world for more than 60 years. • Organizations use it to improve employee communication, teamwork, and leadership. • Adults and young people use it to choose careers that are likely to hold their interest and use their gifts. • Teachers and students use it to make learning more interesting and efficient. • Family members use it to better understand each other. Isabel Briggs Myers created descriptions of each of the 16 types, including the description for your type that is included in this report. Your Interpretive Report also provides information on why the 16 types are different from one another and clarifies how ENFP is distinctive from the others. A clear understanding of the basics of personality type and type development will help you gain greater understanding of yourself and others and the impact type has on your daily interactions.
  • 3. Myers-Briggs Type Indicator® JANE SAMPLE / ENFP Interpretive Report Page 3 How Your Responses Indicate Your Type: ENFP When you completed the MBTI assessment, you made choices on four dichotomies, each of which is made up of two opposite preferences: Where you focus your attention Extraversion (E) 7 or 8 Introversion (I) The way you take in information Sensing (S) 7 or 8 Intuition (N) The way you make decisions Thinking (T) 7 or 8 Feeling (F) How you deal with the outer world Judging (J) 7 or 8 Perceiving (P) Although everyone uses all eight of these preferences, people find one preference in each pair more interesting or comfortable than its opposite. Think of your choices as somewhat like being right- or left-handed. Both hands are valuable, but most people reach first with the hand they prefer. They usually use that hand more often and become more skillful with it. In the same way, your type preferences are choices between equally valuable and useful qualities. Your responses to the MBTI instrument indicate that you expressed preferences for ENFP, as shown in the chart below and described further in the pages that follow. Reported Type: ENFP Extraversion Introversion Where you People who prefer Extraversion tend to relate People who prefer Introversion tend to relate focus your attention E easily to the outer world of people and things. I easily to the inner world of ideas and impressions. Sensing Intuition The way People who prefer Sensing tend to be interested People who prefer Intuition tend to use their you take in information S in what the five senses show them—what exists in the present. N imagination to see new possibilities and insights— focusing on the future. Thinking Feeling The way People who prefer Thinking tend to base People who prefer Feeling tend to base decisions you make decisions T decisions on objective analysis and logic. F on values and people-centered concerns. Judging Perceiving How you People who prefer Judging tend to like to People who prefer Perceiving tend to not want deal with the outer world J have things decided; life is likely to be planned and orderly. P to miss anything; life is likely to be spontaneous and flexible.
  • 4. Myers-Briggs Type Indicator® JANE SAMPLE / ENFP Interpretive Report Page 4 Your Type Description: ENFP ENFP • Warmly enthusiastic and imaginative • See life as full of possibilities • Make connections between events and information very quickly, and confidently proceed based on the patterns they see • Want a lot of affirmation from others, and readily give appreciation and support • Spontaneous and flexible, often rely on their ability to improvise and their verbal fluency People with ENFP preferences see life as a creative adventure full of exciting possibilities. They are keenly perceptive of people and the world around them and insightful about the present and future. ENFPs experience a wide range of feelings and intense emotions. They need affirmation from others and readily give appreciation and support to others. ENFPs are innovators, initiating projects and directing great energy into getting them under way. Using Intuition primarily externally, they are stimulated by new people, ideas, and experiences. They find meaning and significance readily and see connections that others don’t. They are likely to be curious, creative, imaginative, energetic, enthusiastic, and spontaneous. ENFPs value harmony and goodwill. They like to please others and will adapt to others’ needs and wishes when possible. ENFPs use Feeling primarily internally, making decisions by applying personal values through identification and empathy with others. They are likely to be warm, friendly, caring, cooperative, and supportive. They have exceptional insight into possibilities in others and have the energy to help actualize the possibilities. ENFPs are usually lively, gregarious, and sociable, with a large circle of friends. They are interested in almost everything and bring a zest for life that draws others to them. At the same time, they value depth and authenticity in their close relationships and direct great energy to creating and supporting open and honest communication. ENFPs hate routine, schedules, and structure, and usually manage to avoid them. They are normally verbally fluent, even in extemporaneous situations; however, when their deepest values need expression, they may suddenly be awkward. Their articulation of their judgments will often come out with great intensity. Others usually see ENFPs as personable, perceptive, persuasive, enthusiastic, spontaneous, and versatile. ENFPs are also seen as persons who give and want to receive affirmation. Sometimes life circumstances have not supported ENFPs in the development and expression of their Feeling and Intuition preferences. If they have not developed their Feeling, they may go from enthusiasm to enthusiasm, never committing the energy necessary to actualize their insights. If they have not developed their Intuition, they may rely too much on personal value judgments and fail to take in enough information. They then will not trust their own insights, will be uncertain, and will accept others’ perceptions too quickly.
  • 5. Myers-Briggs Type Indicator® JANE SAMPLE / ENFP Interpretive Report Page 5 Your Unique Pattern of Preferences: ENFP Your personality type is much more than the combination of your four individual preferences. Each of the 16 types has its own unique pattern of preferences; this helps explain why the things that are interesting or easy for your type are uninteresting or difficult for a different type. The two middle letters of your four-letter type code indicate which of the four mental processes you prefer. Sensing (S) 7 or 8 Intuition (N) Thinking (T) 7 or 8 Feeling (F) Everyone uses all four mental processes, but each of the 16 types has its own pattern showing which of these is first in importance or the most preferred, the second most preferred, the third most preferred, and the least preferred. ENFPs like and use Intuition first and Feeling second. Their third favored process is Thinking, and their least preferred is Sensing. Youth is the time for ENFPs to develop Intuition and Feeling. At midlife, Thinking and Sensing often become more interesting and easier to use. #1 Intuition Most preferred #2 Feeling Second most preferred #3 Thinking Third most preferred #4 Sensing Least preferred The patterns for each type also show whether the first—or most preferred—process is used mostly in the world of people and things (in an Extraverted way) or in the inner world of ideas and impressions (in an Introverted way). Here is how the whole pattern works for type ENFP. ENFPs mainly use their first or most preferred process, Intuition, in the outer world of people and things. This is the preference most readily observable by others, since it is expressed in the outer life of ENFPs. They use their second most preferred process, Feeling, in the inner world of ideas and impressions. ENFPs also use Thinking and Sensing, but not so readily or easily as Intuition and Feeling. Sensing is the process most likely to be overlooked. #1 Intuition Used in the outer world #2 Feeling Used in the inner world Your type description takes all these patterns into account in describing ENFP types in everyday life. Review this description carefully, matching it against your own self-knowledge. If the description makes you feel comfortably understood, your four-letter type code is probably right for you. The description is intended to help you trust and develop the preferences that come most naturally to you, while keeping in mind that, like most people, you use all eight preferences from time to time, depending on what the situation calls for.
  • 6. Myers-Briggs Type Indicator® JANE SAMPLE / ENFP Interpretive Report Page 6 Clarity of Your Preferences: ENFP Your MBTI responses also indicate the clarity of your preferences, that is, how clear you were in selecting each preference over its opposite. This is known as the preference clarity index, or pci, which is reported in the bar graph below. A longer bar suggests you are quite sure of your preference over its opposite, while a shorter bar suggests you are less sure about that preference. Do your choices seem to fit you? Clarity of Reported Preferences: ENFP Very Clear Clear Moderate Slight Slight Moderate Clear Very Clear Extraversion E 26 I Introversion Sensing S 26 N ntuition I Thinking T 3 F Feeling Judging J 25 P Perceiving 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 PCI Results Extraversion 26 Intuition 26 Feeling 3 Perceiving 25 If the ENFP Pattern Does Not Seem to Fit You The human personality is too complex to be fully accounted for by a set of questions, no matter how good those questions may be. Here are some suggestions if your reported type does not seem to fit you: • Think back to your frame of mind when you completed the MBTI assessment. Were you describing the preferences that come most naturally and easily to you? Or were you influenced by the way you think you ought to be, or the way someone else thinks you ought to be? If your responses did not reflect your own true way, do you have an idea of which preferences seem to describe you better? • Was it difficult to determine your preference on many of the questions? If so, what would your type be if the choice had gone the other way? You will find complete descriptions of each of the 16 types in Isabel Briggs Myers’ Introduction to Type® booklet. Your type professional can also help guide you in finding the type that fits you best. For more than 60 years, the MBTI tool has helped millions of people throughout the world gain a deeper understanding of themselves and how they interact with others, helping them improve how they communicate, work, and learn. For resources to help you further your knowledge, visit www.cpp.com to discover practical tools for lifetime learning and development. CPP, Inc. | 800-624-1765 | www.cpp.com © Full copyright information appears on page 1.