Home » General » Currently Reading:

We must beware of changing our frameworks into boxes

July 19, 2005 Jean General 1 Comment

Trapped in a boxI am not fond of psychometric testing. Not because I don’t think these tests have value, but because I have seen how the wrong application of these tests do more harm than good. There is nothing as off-putting (is this a good word for “grillerig”?) as a team building programme where people do a DISC profiling in the morning and are then required to act according to their profiles throughout the day. And many facilitators do this with DISC, MBTI, Belbin – you name it. We should also beware of doing this with our frameworks – especially with the Enneagram and Mind the Gap.


We should remember that any psychological framework is just a framework – or in other words – a way of looking at a person. The depth and complexity and beauty of a human being can never be fully described by any single framework – no matter how scientifically and statistically accredited the instrument you are using. This is why psychologists (the ones who actually like and use psychometrics) do a whole battery of tests and also combine those results with the qualitative outcomes of discussions, pictures and stories told by the client. To the credit of the psychometric movement, I must say that there are some pretty impressive instruments out there. In fact, any instrument that has been accredited by the HPCSA (Health Professions Council of South Africa) has survived some rigorous research and scrutiny. Still such an instrument (when used alone) only gives a one-dimensional picture and still such an instrument can cause harm when used and debriefed by someone who doesn’t acknowledge the complexities and dilemmas accompanying psychometric testing.

To come back to the Enneagram and the Generational framework: We should be careful of not stepping into the trap I mentioned above. I personally think we are making too much out of both these frameworks. Of course they have value. Of course business leaders should understand that a new generation is on its way, but once you move from the general to the specific (the individual that sits in the office next door) it becomes dangerous to simply think of the Genx Type 9 with the black shirt (There’s been some of this kind of language used in our own internal conversations and it is just as “grillerig” as in a team building). We are moving into a connection economy. The world of relationships. The world of valuing people for who they are. The world of story and experience. We shouldn’t dilute this message by telling our generational story in such a way that people start pre-judging individuals because of their age or their Enneagram Type.

The Enneagram and the Mind the Gap Value Sets do give an interesting input into a team conversation where individuals get to know each other. It actually just starts the conversation and leaves it up to the individual and the group to mould the story into their own stories. They should actually be encouraged to say where they disagree with the frameworks as this will shed even more light on the process of understanding each other. I’m not saying throw it away, I’m just saying that we should be careful of not over-applying these two frameworks to all contexts and situations.

There’s a saying that doesn’t apply to us yet, but we should prevent it from applying to us at all cost: “He who is good with a hammer tends to think everything is a nail.”

No related posts.

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

Currently there is "1 comment" on this Article:

  1. Some relationships are more equal than others

    Meg Ellis made some comments on our 4G and Myers Briggs/MBTI posting .

    The MBTI reported type code is a beginning point for people to determine their “best fit” type. They may behave differently from what their preferences are. Life is that way. …

Comment on this Article:







Subscribe to this blog

Subscribe

Category Drop-Down

Posts about Future Trends

Forget creating customer loyalty and focus on building friendships with customers

March 18, 2010 Dean van Leeuwen

Forget creating customer loyalty and focus on building friendships with customers

I’m not talking about the glib friendships companies try to encourage by inviting their customers to be friends or fans on Facebook, but rather intimate and deep relationships that come from having a vested interest in the people that make their business possible. I recently came across a study by Michael Argyle and Monika Henderson [...]

You’re going to have to change your management style

March 17, 2010 Barrie Bramley

You’re going to have to change your management style

I spend a large part of my year in conversation with managers working hard to try and understand today’s younger workforce. The pain they’re feeling is palpable. The evidence of change is overwhelming. Making the necessary changes, at times, seems impossible. The hope is that the challenges are being interrogated and slowly but surely acted [...]

A Radical Proposal for Executive Pay

March 15, 2010 Graeme Codrington

A Radical Proposal for Executive Pay

Everyone agrees that something must be done about executive pay. One of the major contentious issues emerging out of the financial crisis is the way that senior executives and manager, especially in the financial industries, are remunerated. These days, executive pay often seems to be unrelated to the company’s performance, and in many [...]

The future of money

March 12, 2010 Dean van Leeuwen

The future of money

For years banks and credit card companies have held a strangle hold over the movement of money and charged exorbitant rates for doing so. Now this is changing and fast.
Michale Ivey the founder of Twitpay has devised a system, using code that PayPal made available to him, that allows people to make payments [...]

Recent Comments

  • Graeme Codrington: Here is an example of how social media changes the power rel...
  • stace: lazy and sensationalist - I couldn't agree more...
  • Graeme Codrington: Here's another example - a company that developed software t...
  • Graeme Codrington: I agree with you on this point, Barrie. BUT... I just had a...
  • Graeme Codrington: I really wish I could use the main section of this blog site...

Archives

Tweet Blender

codrington: RT @brainpicker: A Short Manifesto on the Future of Attention – insightful look at cognitive investment by Michael Erard http://is.gd/aNUOS
4 hours ago
DeanvanLeeuwen: RT @DeborahInComms: New blog post: iPOD at work http://www.theheromachine.com/ipod-at-work-2/
5 hours ago
DeanvanLeeuwen: RT @codrington: Gary Hamel, #management guru, turns his attention to the #future of #church - interesting long video: http://ow.ly/1o1Ej
5 hours ago
DeanvanLeeuwen: RT @towerswatson: Article discusses the critical link between employees level of #well-being and #engagement. Worth reading again....
5 hours ago
codrington: Gary Hamel, the #management guru, turns his attention to the #future of #church - interesting hour long video: http://ow.ly/1o1Ej
5 hours ago
codrington: RT @HarvardBiz: Real-time #Brand #Management — Lessons from #Virgin America's Hellish Flight http://bit.ly/99VSpj
5 hours ago
codrington: HBR: How BMW Is Defusing the Demographic Time Bomb: http://ow.ly/1o16H // managing an ageing & staying workforce
5 hours ago
DeanvanLeeuwen: Insights into the evolving world of work - TomorrowToday's Blog http://ow.ly/1nVhI
6 hours ago