Someone I know recently typed as ENFP (16personalities) but I'm sure they are ENTJ.
Have you ENTJs ever tested as something else? If so, what?
Have you ENTJs ever tested as something else? If so, what?
Entrepreneur. Extremely gifted at persuading others. Has the odd emotional outburst (but everything is forgotten 10 minutes later). Is obsessed with the future and with the various possibilities that it holds. Gets annoyed by how quiet I am. Very bossy.has great vision but not so great in day-to-day activities.What makes you think your friend is an ENTJ?
I wrote "I'd be classified by a test as a feeler" based on certain answers if those questions had been asked. Tests... stereotype and generalize a lot in order to make classification easy. That process will generate outliers and I, along with a few others, happen to be on that list.I think it's easy to mistype via tests because answers are based on your personal interpretation of questions and the test creator's assumptions of types' behavior.
Sorry if my reply sounded like an attack. It was not. I caught on to what you were saying. I was simply venting my frustration - in extension to your argument - that these tests are mostly inaccurate, biased and unable to capture the full scope of the human psyche to accurately place temperaments. On that note, I also don't think people are in one state of mind all the time and so may deviate based on circumstances. It is certainly an indicator, not a determinant - sadly, many people misinterpret that use it as a very large ruler and box (which frustrates me to no end).@RedOnion, I think you misunderstood me :bwink: It is not my belief that T doms behave that way, but that of test makers. That was my point.
Yes, stereotypes can be frustrating because frequently people misinterpret likelihood of something being true as 'this is absolutely true'. I totally agree with you that the environment, personal experiences/preferences, maturity level and culture have a strong impact! They are what define our behavior, either in terms of 'who I am' or 'what I never want to be.' Is it possible you missed the part where I wrote the below sentence?
I wrote "I'd be classified by a test as a feeler" based on certain answers if those questions had been asked. Tests... stereotype and generalize a lot in order to make classification easy. That process will generate outliers and I, along with a few others, happen to be on that list.
There must be a way to make tests more accurate... I think it's a good business opportunity (80% of Fortune 100 business use MBTI tests and other tests). I hope someone works on it.
Anyway, I hope you see we are probably on the same page or at least in the same book :smile: