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Does Your Personality Match Your Career?

Started by kawser.cdc, April 07, 2020, 06:31:38 PM

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kawser.cdc

Although you can succeed in a line of work that does not necessarily mesh with your personality, your personality type can make certain career paths more enjoyable and rewarding for you.

So if you've always dreamed of becoming a doctor, a lawyer, or a teacher, that's great, and you should follow your dreams wherever they may lead. But also remember that real contentment and fulfillment in your career requires considering three different yet interrelated things:

– Your job
– Work environment
– Personality type

The reason for this is that your satisfaction on the job will only reach its pique level when your career lines up nicely with your personal preferences and value system. So after getting a good education and, of course, paying for it all, you owe it to yourself to find the right job for you.

In order to help you decide if your personality type matches your career, this article will look at some benefits of making the right choice, will focus on six personality types, and will provide a number of tests that'll help you find suitable career types.

Benefits of Matching Personality and Career
As a millennial who is likely either on the verge of beginning a career or in the early stages of a career, there are definitely some benefits of finding work that suits your personality. They include:

Focused Set of Options: When you understand the relationship between your personality and your career choice, you'll be able to whittle down your shortlist of possible jobs accordingly. As well, you'll also figure out the sort of workplace environment would be more suited to you. If you've already entered the workforce, you can determine whether or not your job is a keeper.

Know Yourself: Having an idea of your personality type will help you to understand your strengths and weaknesses, and when you know this you'll be positioned to know which jobs you would be a shoo-in for and which ones you should pass on. Remember that there isn't a soul who does not have some shortcomings. When you know yours, you can figure out how to overcome them.

6 Personality Types
When it comes to personality types, there are lots of different lists. One of them is the John Holland theory, which stipulates that there are half a dozen personality types, namely realistic, investigative, artistic, social, enterprising, and conventional.

Realistic: This sort of person likes working with animals, machines, and tools, but he or she typically steers clear of social activities like teaching and instructing others.

Investigative: This sort of person appreciates resolving mathematics and science problems, but he or she also does not like things pertaining to supervising, selling, or persuading others.

Artistic: This type of individual enjoys helping others in ways that include instructing, providing care, and giving information. That said, such a person steers clear of handling machines, animals, or equipment to accomplish a goal.

Social: This sort of person likes opportunities to assist people via teaching, offering first aid, or providing information. Even so, such an individual also tends to avoid handling animals, machines, or equipment to accomplish an objective.

Enterprising: A person with this personality enjoys supervising, convincing people, and selling things. However, such a person eschews activities that necessitate careful observation as well as analytical thinking.

Conventional: A person with this personality type appreciates working with numbers and machines. Such a person likes to stay away from ambiguous activities that lack structure.

Knowing these sorts of personality types will help you to decide which one or ones reflect who you are, which can help to guide you down the right career path. The career/personality test associated with the John Holland theory is available here.

Personality / Career Tests
There are lots of online tests that you can take at your leisure to figure out what sorts of careers your personality particularly suits you for. What follows is a sampling of what's available.

Jung Typology Test: This is a test that requires yes or no responses to a number of statements that are designed to unearth your personality type. When you're done, you'll get a list of possible careers for someone with your personality type.

SimilarMinds: When you take this career test, you'll first have to input your present or hoped for career before taking the actual test. You'll be presented with numerous statements and will need to demonstrate the extent to which you agree or disagree with them. When the test is completed, you will be provided with a list of potential career paths.

The sky's the limit as a 20 something millennial, but that doesn't mean that you can't be all the more content and fulfilled if you ensure that your personality type matches your career. So take the time needed to do some self-exploration and to take a personality/career test to find out what sorts of careers can potentially bring you the most contentment and fulfillment.