SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Soumettre la recherche
Mettre en ligne
S’identifier
S’inscrire
gallup 2
Signaler
Sandy Meyer
Suivre
3 Jun 2015
•
0 j'aime
•
166 vues
gallup 2
3 Jun 2015
•
0 j'aime
•
166 vues
Sandy Meyer
Suivre
Signaler
gallup 2
1 sur 4
Télécharger maintenant
1
sur
4
Recommandé
GallupReport-2
Warwick Hood
252 vues
•
4 diapositives
Linda Hill, Strengths Finder Insight Guide 060716
Linda F Hill
204 vues
•
4 diapositives
Sharon Smith May 2016 Strengths Report
Sharon Smith
77 vues
•
19 diapositives
GallupReport
Remy Allen
184 vues
•
6 diapositives
Strengths Finder 2.0
Karon Tollefson
92 vues
•
4 diapositives
Gallup Report
Janessa Pritchett
182 vues
•
7 diapositives
Contenu connexe
Tendances
Andrew Willmert Strengths Finder
Andy Willmert
228 vues
•
19 diapositives
StrengthFinder_Report_StrengthsInsight
C. David Kearsley
690 vues
•
4 diapositives
Strength Finders Report
amishg
431 vues
•
4 diapositives
Vita Marie Phares strength finder
Vita Marie Phares
692 vues
•
19 diapositives
GallupReport_Strengths_2004_04_27
Beatriz Gonzalez
238 vues
•
19 diapositives
GallupReport for Yilin Mu
Yilin Mu
156 vues
•
4 diapositives
Tendances
(20)
Andrew Willmert Strengths Finder
Andy Willmert
•
228 vues
StrengthFinder_Report_StrengthsInsight
C. David Kearsley
•
690 vues
Strength Finders Report
amishg
•
431 vues
Vita Marie Phares strength finder
Vita Marie Phares
•
692 vues
GallupReport_Strengths_2004_04_27
Beatriz Gonzalez
•
238 vues
GallupReport for Yilin Mu
Yilin Mu
•
156 vues
StrengthsFinder 2 Assessment
Marty Wallace
•
1.2K vues
Strength Finder Report (Gallup) 2012 - Paul Daniel Bourn
Paul Bourn
•
1.2K vues
Ram Kumarasubramanian - Strengths Finder Report
Ram Kumarasubramanian
•
1.5K vues
Strengths Finder Insight and Action Planning
Julyan Muller
•
1.9K vues
GallupReport
Lola Akhmedova
•
277 vues
GallupReport-milan2
Milan K Dinda
•
165 vues
GallupReport
Christine Ceasar
•
249 vues
GallupReport
Shailja Prakash
•
92 vues
Stengths Based Leadership Report
Colleen Mitchell
•
790 vues
Strength Finder Top 5 — Stephanie Thoe
Stephanie Thoe
•
180 vues
Strength_Kateryna
Kateryna Berezovska
•
239 vues
Leadership_Report
Simon Jenkinson
•
336 vues
Jodi's Strengths Insight Report
Jodi A. Straka
•
104 vues
Strenghts
Francois Haasbroek
•
464 vues
Similaire à gallup 2
GallupReport (1)
David G. Kennedy
328 vues
•
4 diapositives
Gallup Report for Strengths Finder #2
Clint Mitchell
614 vues
•
4 diapositives
1 Strength Finders 2.0 Report for David Combs.rtf 1
David Combs
1.2K vues
•
38 diapositives
GallupReport
mohamed.elsayed
114 vues
•
4 diapositives
Strengths Finder Top 5
Marcus Refsland
272 vues
•
3 diapositives
StrengthsFinder 2.0 - Wes Anderson
Wes Anderson
297 vues
•
4 diapositives
Similaire à gallup 2
(20)
GallupReport (1)
David G. Kennedy
•
328 vues
Gallup Report for Strengths Finder #2
Clint Mitchell
•
614 vues
1 Strength Finders 2.0 Report for David Combs.rtf 1
David Combs
•
1.2K vues
GallupReport
mohamed.elsayed
•
114 vues
Strengths Finder Top 5
Marcus Refsland
•
272 vues
StrengthsFinder 2.0 - Wes Anderson
Wes Anderson
•
297 vues
WebPage
Lyosha Bennett
•
181 vues
Strengthsfinder 2.0 - Michael Deimen
Michael Deimen
•
283 vues
My Strengths Report
Kurt Lugar
•
170 vues
GallupReport
Kendall P. White
•
245 vues
Strengths Insight Report
Yasemin Cengel
•
489 vues
Gallup Leadership Insight
Craig E. Jones
•
489 vues
GallupReport - Strengths Insight Report 032016
Bryan Balch
•
81 vues
Strength Finder
Nita Vaidya-Zannino, MBA
•
521 vues
GallupReport
Eugene Mugen Goh
•
99 vues
Strengths Finder
Amanda Allen
•
221 vues
GallupReport[1]_HG
Hayley R. Kraakevik
•
327 vues
GallupReport (3)
Ashley Whittal
•
173 vues
Strength Finders Report
Heather Nester, MHR
•
321 vues
Mario Molina Gallup Insights Report
Mario Molina, MBA
•
457 vues
gallup 2
1.
Strengths Insight Report SURVEY
COMPLETION DATE: 04-24-2015 Sandra Meyer Your Top 5 Themes Responsibility Harmony Consistency Input Relator Responsibility Shared Theme Description People who are especially talented in the Responsibility theme take psychological ownership of what they say they will do. They are committed to stable values such as honesty and loyalty. Your Personalized Strengths Insights What makes you stand out? Because of your strengths, you likely are a person whose work ethic is as much a matter of conscience as it is a matter of completing tasks. You undoubtedly need to do what you know is right, honest, true, correct, proper, and accurate. By nature, you often describe your life in favorable terms even though obligations force you to keep working until you reach your goal. It’s very likely that you place a premium on doing everything correctly. Whatever you are involved in or associated with must typify — that is, symbolize — accuracy and precision. Your high standards demand exactness. Instinctively, you leave no stone unturned — that is, you do everything possible — to meet your obligations. You are thorough and devoted to doing what you have promised. As a result, others regard you as reliable. Because you have established a reputation for fulfilling your commitments, people naturally depend on you. Chances are good that you feel life is best when you are truthful about your talents, skills, education, successes, experiences, or background. You are determined to dispel illusions you have about yourself and others have about you. This is likely to be one of your top priorities. As long as you do not pretend to be someone you are not, you are a happier and healthier human being. 705820524 (Sandra Meyer) © 2000, 2006-2012 Gallup, Inc. All rights reserved. 1
2.
Harmony Shared Theme Description People
who are especially talented in the Harmony theme look for consensus. They don’t enjoy conflict; rather, they seek areas of agreement. Your Personalized Strengths Insights What makes you stand out? Chances are good that you may be the team member who is naturally congenial, pleasant, and accommodating. Some people appreciate your willingness to let them do things their way or state their views. Others might value your ability to listen, gather facts, or find common ground when discussions become overly emotional. To some extent, you help certain teammates find ways to compromise without losing the respect of others or jeopardizing their status in the group. Driven by your talents, you accept the ongoing challenge of equalizing the amount of time you spend on key parts of your life. For practical reasons, you do not want any one thing to consume every minute of your day. Thus, you choose to handle personal and professional problems logically. You deal with facts unemotionally. You intentionally minimize conflict between people by not taking sides. Instead, you make them aware of things as they actually are. You emphasize what they have in common. Patiently, you move adversaries toward peaceable solutions and general agreement. By nature, you go out of your way to engage others in friendly conversation. This is usually the case when situations warrant a lively exchange of ideas, feelings, or stories. Whenever you have created a climate of open sharing, people just seem to get along with one another better. You help them discover mutual interests, backgrounds, experiences, or acquaintances. Because of your strengths, you may be good- natured and even-tempered in your dealings with individuals. Perhaps your friendly disposition causes people to feel comfortable in your presence. You might accept the differences and commonalities you find between yourself and others. It’s very likely that you may enjoy drawing strangers into casual chitchat or interesting discussions. Perhaps your even-tempered, non-threatening approach tells outsiders and newcomers you are friendly and cordial. Consistency Shared Theme Description People who are especially talented in the Consistency theme are keenly aware of the need to treat people the same. They try to treat everyone in the world with consistency by setting up clear rules and adhering to them. Your Personalized Strengths Insights What makes you stand out? It’s very likely that you probably are one of those people who reads the regulations first, especially when they apply to everyone in a group. Your need to commit these rules to memory is apt to be the way you prepare to play a game, assemble a device, use a computer program, or adhere to a 705820524 (Sandra Meyer) © 2000, 2006-2012 Gallup, Inc. All rights reserved. 2
3.
standard process. By
nature, you notice that people tend to be more cooperative and agreeable when they do whatever needs to be done today. You acknowledge that putting off tasks and chores is impractical. It creates more work and stress for others the next day. You realize that when individuals disappoint one another, tempers can flare and harsh words are uttered. You recognize that doing whatever needs to be done right now prevents discord — that is, an inability to get along with each other. Instinctively, you view your life much more favorably when you can say, “I gave that project my best effort, and I am pleased about the things I did right.” Chances are good that you exhibit a wholesome sense of doubt. Typically you ask lots of questions before you take a position, form an opinion, agree with an action, or embrace an idea. Your thinking process is practical and matter-of- fact. You usually avoid conflict by taking things under consideration before siding with a person or a group. Undoubtedly, you give equal attention to various points of view before endorsing one course of action. Because of your strengths, you are quite content when you have performed to the best of your ability. You probably waste little, if any, time wishing you had put more time or effort into a task. You trust yourself to evaluate the quality and the quantity of your work. Input Shared Theme Description People who are especially talented in the Input theme have a craving to know more. Often they like to collect and archive all kinds of information. Your Personalized Strengths Insights What makes you stand out? Instinctively, you tend to be a critical reader. That is, you take apart writers’ ideas and examine them bit by bit. Only then do you judge whether they have merit. Generally your scrutiny of the printed word, rather than your emotions, guides your decision-making process. Because of your strengths, you tend to express your doubts about various ideas, theories, or concepts. Using your brainpower, you put aside your emotions while calmly absorbing as much information as you can. Even though you may have never experienced a particular situation, event, opportunity, or dilemma, you exhibit the mental capacity to project yourself into it. Lively conversations with intelligent individuals stimulate your thinking about abstract or complex topics. Chances are good that you stay in dialogue with intelligent people to bring to the surface evidence that explains the current state of affairs. You probably choose to converse with individuals who talk about ideas. You are apt to avoid those who gossip or complain. As you amass knowledge and tangible proof, you are likely to enliven the discussion with your valuable insights and ideas. Driven by your talents, you relish reading about topics that fascinate you. People are not surprised to find you with your nose in a book — that is, reading all the time. When a subject intrigues you, you review a wide range of printed materials. You glean — that is, collect bits and pieces — as much information as you possibly can about your areas of greatest interest. It’s very likely that you are comfortable saying, “I am a fine educator.” You probably converse with others in your field about ideas, theories, or concepts to gather the latest thinking. Using these insights, you are apt to draw your students into discussions that entice them to explore topics. You want them to really understand the subject rather than memorize a few facts just to pass a test. 705820524 (Sandra Meyer) © 2000, 2006-2012 Gallup, Inc. All rights reserved. 3
4.
Relator Shared Theme Description People
who are especially talented in the Relator theme enjoy close relationships with others. They find deep satisfaction in working hard with friends to achieve a goal. Your Personalized Strengths Insights What makes you stand out? By nature, you are quite content with your results as long as you can honestly say you are producing as much as you can. You maintain an optimistic outlook on life regardless of the value some people place on your results. Because of your strengths, you might notice that people regularly ask you the question “What do you think? This might be because they value your views about particular people, situations, rules, news events, or decisions. It’s very likely that you may have quick and ready insights into the moods and emotions of specific individuals. This awareness might enhance your effectiveness as a trainer, guide, or instructor. Perhaps your sensitivity allows you to help certain people express what they are thinking or feeling. Chances are good that you may enjoy sharing your point of view with certain individuals who ask, “What do you think?” When you are familiar with the topic, problem, or people involved, you might be comfortable expressing yourself. From time to time, you set out to discover specific facts and weigh them with care before speaking your mind — that is, giving advice or openly stating your ideas. Driven by your talents, you might be an individual who wants to know a little bit about the hopes or objectives of each group member. Perhaps the more you understand people, the easier it is for you to establish or sustain personal partnerships with them. 705820524 (Sandra Meyer) © 2000, 2006-2012 Gallup, Inc. All rights reserved. 4