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MBTI
Personality Types
ISTJ
Introverted
- Sensing
- Thinking
- Judging
What Is the ISTJ Personality?
ISTJs
begin making sense of any situation by first collecting concrete data.
They want to know how much money there is in the bank account, what the
present product inventory is, when and how often the vehicle was
serviced, how many sales were made, and so on. It is then and only then
that they begin to collect and systematize it according to accounting
procedures, inventory systems, maintenance schedules, and the like.
ISTJs are often seen in accounting, banking, law and law enforcement,
the insurance industry, and professions that require gathering data.
Warren Buffett,
one of the world's wealthiest men, has
taken an ISTJ's approach to investments throughout his life. He
invests in things he knows, those things whose past is known and future
potential can be seen, usually of great utility.
ISTJs are
skilled at arranging and ordering data in a way that is useful to
organizations. ISTJs want to fit data and facts into clear and
established structures and systems.
ISTJs create invaluable pictures of the trends in organizations from
past to present. How well is the organization doing this year compared
to last year? What approaches are working better or worse from previous
years until now? Their contribution allows organizations to make
rational and fact-based decisions.
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Click on any one of the 16
MBTI types for a full description of your type or descriptions
of colleagues, family and friends
ISTJs value
independence and like to work at jobs where they can complete
work without interruption and present the results. They often
contribute to meetings with data and analysis. They see the
meeting as an opportunity to contribute the data they have
produced and expect the meeting to be focused and well run.
ISTJs often appear at a meeting with reams of data and
spreadsheets under their arms that document past performance.
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ISTJs as Team Members
Others may have lost or misfiled them. The ISTJ will usually have
maintained them carefully. The ISTJ is the person within the group with
the facts. They can be quite effective in groups where their
responsibility is to find and present the data. Because the ISTJ is most
often skilled at managing functions that are core to organizations, they
are rarely absent from a department or team. When key decisions are to
be made, the ISTJ will want to know if there is data to support the
decision. ISTJs tend to be very confident about their decisions and
opinions, because they have formulated them from data and proven
experience.
Harry S. Truman unexpectedly became the 33rd President in 1945 when
Franklin
Roosevelt died. As an ISTJ type, the "buck stopped here." Truman was
data-driven
person. He reasoned that more people would die without the bombing of
Hiroshima,
so he made his decision.
If the group
wants to chart a new course, they will more effectively convince
the ISTJ if their strategy has been successful in some organization and
they
have proper supporting evidence. The ISTJ will also usually have to be
convinced that the change will benefit the organization. He or she will
not
usually be attracted to change for change sake.
ISTJs can have very outgoing personalities, but they will tend to be
most effective in groups they know and trust.
In group settings where they feel no direct involvement or
responsibility, they can seem disconnected. ISTJs may appear to be a
"thorn in the flesh" to organizational schemes that don’t fit into what
the ISTJ considers to be clear ethical norms. ISTJs sometimes see things
as "black and white," and they can thwart those types that tend to
believe that the outcome is more important than the means of getting
there. They may not be seen as "team players"
if asked to bend rules or
interpret them in favor of the group in the face of "clear meaning."
John
D. Rockefeller (1839-1937) was one of the
richest of Americans. As an ISTJ type businessman, his attention to
detail and control of data are legendary. He was powerful and
controversial, and known for his philanthropy.
What Are ISTJ Issues and Challenges in Groups/Best
Alliances?
Because the ISTJ supports his or her whole
decision-making process through the use of data, he or she may ignore or
even distrust "blue sky discussions" where groups seek to identify
possibilities and theoretical strategies. In new situations where past
data has no application, the ISTJ can feel immobilized. He or she may
reject experimental strategies and improvisation.
They may also not be well attuned to team dynamics and may mistrust
emotion.
In cases where taking a new, untried direction, is necessary, the ISTJ
should ally with those types who are more inclined to work on theory and
experimentation. The ISTJ will need to learn to trust the intuitive
directions of those who devise new ways of doing things. Even in this
process, the ISTJ will be valuable in measurement and in testing
assumptions. Once a way is devised to quantify and measure new
strategies, the ISTJ will be the natural person for this task.
ISTJs and The Rest of Their Lives
ISTJs, valuing and upholding systems, see society as one huge system
composed of law and social responsibility. For the ISTJ, tradition is
based on what has worked in the past and should be used to guide our
present.
They are very loyal to family and traditional institutions. ISTJs can
be "steady as a rock" as spouses and parents. They are loyal and dutiful
husbands, wives and parents. They care for the needs of their family by
taking care of their financial needs and providing them with security.
They want to uphold traditional values by taking care of their own
financial needs and maintaining security for themselves and their
families. They can be loyal even when their spouse or children do not
act responsibly. They may not understand the need of someone they care
about, but once they recognize that need, they will try to fulfill it.
They value holidays as the marking of times that uphold the
cohesiveness of society around them. They are often the glue that holds
families, corporations, and associations together.
The Delta Associates 1704 Briar Street Austin, Texas
78704
Tel: 512-498-9780 Email: jspeer@delta-associates.com
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Myers-Briggs Type Indicator Trust in the United States
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