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For
Direct Marketers, Personality Is Everything
I’m
sure you’ll find this interesting. While recently wrapping
up a CEO search for a leading consumer catalog and web company,
nearly all the candidates who made our client’s short list
had the same personality. Interesting, yes! But not peculiar.
The
finalist candidates—four men and a woman—a talented
mix of seasoned dm execs from across the country, were representing
career backgrounds in a variety of product categories and company
size.
In fact,
after 12 years of assessment testing hundreds of men and women—senior-level
direct marketing candidates for positions as CEO, President—for
leadership roles in Finance, Marketing, Merchandising, IT, Operations,
I’ve noticed the same thing. Over 75% of these individuals
have the same personality and temperament type. So for me, testing
this most recent group came as no surprise.
Why
Can't We All Just Get Along?
The
direct marketing executive personality type I’m referring
to—and the one you may not be aware of—is shared by
only 12% to 15% of the American population, according to the Myers-Briggs
Type Indicator (MBTI). This is the standard-bearer of all personality
assessments. In fact, it identifies sixteen distinctly different,
universal personality types.
According
to its publishers, Myers-Briggs is used by roughly nine out of 10
Fortune 100 companies and is administered to more than 2.5 million
employees a year. The MBTI was developed 60 years ago based on the
theories of psychoanalyst Carl Jung. It endures, because it does
a great job of improving team relations by pointing out differences
between how personality "types" perceive and process information.
The
Right Fit
A Harvard
University study found that for every dismissal based on failure
to perform, there are two dismissals due to personality and communication
problems. With the high costs of employee turnover, it's no surprise
more and more direct marketing organizations are turning to personality
and behavioral assessments to help evaluate job candidates, build
teams and resolve workplace conflicts.
Think
about it. You’re already testing offers, testing copy, testing
merchandise, and testing catalogs. So why not your people?
If your
business is not doing so, you ought to consider using testing (and
there are numerous pre-hire assessment options to choose from) to
fine-tune your hiring process and bring in top talent. It may help
you get a handle on which candidates are most likely to succeed—evaluating
candidates before they are hired. And give you some kind of idea
of what makes them tick.
This
raises the question: Are certain people genetically bred to go into
direct marketing? Or does the very nature of the business effect
personality and temperament? Take your pick. In my judgment, it’s
a bit of both. "We want to learn more about candidates as individuals,"
says Andy Katz, President & CEO of pet supplies direct marketer,
PetEdge. "Once a candidate is hired, this same information
helps us understand and maximize their talents specific to the role
they have," Katz adds. "And we continue to work on developing
employees' self-awareness throughout their careers to help create
an environment that ensures success."
You
Can’t Study For It
In taking
a personality assessment, experts advise candidates to answer the
questions truthfully, not the way they think the company wants them
to respond. There is often a validity factor built in where many
questions are asked solely to determine whether the subject is answering
truthfully and consistently.
Even
if the candidate does fool the test, he or she will only wind up
in a job or assignment that doesn't fit or will make you—and
those around you—miserable. According to Bonnie Bass, a vice
president of a professional dynametric programs testing organization,
"When people feel the need to act unnaturally, they waste energy,
experience stress and become unhappy and less productive. People
are at their best when they're doing work that draws on their natural
strengths and allows them to be themselves."
Free
Offer: What’s Your Direct Marketing Personality?
I will
give a free, confidential personality and assessment test to the
first 10 senior-level direct marketing executives who respond by
email. Discover your four-letter Myers-Briggs type. Learn how type
affects your career, relationships, and personal growth, management
style, teamwork, leadership, communication, and personal growth
and development. And, I’ll announce the results: how many
share the same personality and what that type is—in next month’s
newsletter.
Feedback
I am
interested in hearing your reaction to and thoughts about my articles.
Tell me…Is your organization currently using or planning to
use personality and behavioral assessments to help evaluate job
candidates? What other recruiting, retention, workplace subjects
would you like covered in upcoming articles? Send me an email at
les@execsearchintl.com.
Executive
Search International is a nationally recognized boutique firm providing
best practice search and recruiting services to the direct marketing
industry.
Les
Gore, founder and managing partner is a 23-year veteran of the "recruiting
wars" and who Don Libey, noted industry guru, calls "The
Dean of Direct Marketing Executive Recruiters."
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