Derek Christensen

Gallup StrengthsFinder Assessment

True or False?

Gallup believes most organizations are built on two flawed assumptions about people:
1) Each person can learn to be competent in almost anything.
2) Each person’s greatest room for growth is in his or her areas of greatest weakness.

According to Gallup, talented managers realize that the true assumptions should be:
1) Each person’s talents are enduring and unique.
2) Each person’s greatest room for growth is in the area of his or her greatest strength.

Report Card

In other words, if you get a report card with one A, 3 B’s, and one D, where should you focus your energy? Knee-jerk wisdom says the D, Gallup says the A.

Before you protest, this is just an example and can only be taken so far. Don’t you need a high cumulative GPA to get into a good college? Yes. If you are failing a class, can’t the school hold you back for a year? Potentially. Let’s assume your child has already been accepted to a great college and there is no contingency on grades received during the final quarters.

Focus on the A. If you have 16 units of energy to spend on improvement, focus on the A first. Then a B or two. An investment of 10 hours in an A will yield more impactful results than an investment of 10 hours in a D. You see, in life, “A” isn’t the highest grade possible. In fact, there are no grades.

Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs was a jerk. Horror stories of interacting with him abound in Apple’s mythology, yet he was a brilliant product visionary and inspired people to build that vision. He received a D in Being Human, but an A+++++ in Product Design. While that D in Being Human caused some bumps along the road, he didn’t need to bring the grade up to a B in order to be successful.

Warren Buffett

In Gallup’s book “Now, Discover Your Strengths”, Warren Buffett, CEO of Berkshire Hathaway and one of the richest people in the world, is the shining strengths-based example listed in Part 1, Chapter 1, paragraph 2. I’ve read The Snowball, his biography by Alice Schroeder, and want to point out some things Gallup didn’t. Buffett got an A+++++ in investing, but a C or D in has family life. His wife Susan left him in 1977. They never divorced, but in 1978 she hand picked Astrid Menks to move in and take care of Warren. Susan, his legal wife, still appeared with him at public events, but Astrid became wife in all but name. They even signed their Christmas cards “Warren, Susan, and Astrid”. After Susan passed away, Warren married Astrid.

StrengthsFinder Assessment

StrengthsFinder, an online strengths assessment, was launched in 1998 and rocketed to popularity with the release of the book “Now, Discover Your Strengths” in 2001. The online test was revamped in 2007 and launched as StrengthsFinder 2.0. Test takers answer 200+ questions in 30 minutes. That data is processed and Gallup returns results indicating which of the 34 talent themes are your strengths.

Signature Themes

Your “Signature Themes”, which are your top 5 strengths, are supposed to stay relatively consistent over your lifetime (i.e. Each person’s talents are enduring and unique). Here was my experience with that:

StrengthsFinder 1.0 Assessment (Taken Jan 22, 2010)
1) Learner
2) Analytical
3) Competition
4) Input
5) Individualization

StrengthsFinder 2.0 Assessment (Taken Feb 3, 2016)
1) Learner
2) Relator
3) Responsibility
4) Strategic
5) Intellection

Aside from Learner being my #1 strength (which I agree with), all the other Signature Themes changed. Most still remained in the top 10.

StrengthsFinder 1.0 Assessment >> 2.0 Assessment
1) Learner >> #1
2) Analytical >> #7
3) Competition >> #21
4) Input >> #6
5) Individualization >> #8

What explains the discrepancy? I have some theories.

Should You Take the StrengthsFinder 2.0 Assessment?

Yes, I think so. The best resource Gallup provided was this Strengths Discovery and Development Guide. I’ve linked to mine, and feel free to read it. Here are some of the bullets from Learner which really resonated with me:

Parting Thoughts

A strengths-based approach doesn’t mean you are pigeonholed into one specialization for the rest of your life, but it does assume that you are following a strategy of differentiation. If you are really, really good at something, you stand out. You are offered career and life opportunities because you do something much better than other people.

IDEO, the iconic industrial design company, hires “T-shaped” individuals – people who have a wide breadth of knowledge across multiple areas but deep knowledge in one area. Be T-shaped.

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