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DISC Behavior Profile

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Title: DISC Behavior Profile


1
DISC Behavior Profile
  • Module 00-2
  • Modified 10/25/2013

2
Purpose
  • To provide a means of sorting class participants
    into teams with diverse skill sets.
  • To provide team members with some sense of why
    their team members behave the way the do.

3
Learning Objectives
  • Class participants should be able to determine
    their DISC behavior type for purposes of this
    exercise.
  • Class participants should be able to describe the
    four basic DISC behavior types.

4
RAT 00.1
  • Take out a piece of paper, and put your name on
    it, etc.
  • You have 2-minutes to write down
  • What is an Inbetweener behavior type?
  • You have 30 seconds to get the paper to the
    aisles and hence to the front.

5
The DISC Profile of Outward Operating (Behavior)
Styles
  • These Profiles were excerpted from The Mysteries
    of Motivation or Why People Do The Things They Do
    by Michael J. O'Connor and Sandra J. Merwin.
  • In this book they describe the following
    Principles of Motivation

6
The Basic Behavior Principles
  • 1.  All people are motivated, one way or
    another
  • 2. People are motivated for their reasons, NOT
    yours.
  • 3. There is no "best" motivational pattern.
  • 4. A motivational strength over-used or used
    inappropriately becomes a weakness.

7
The 4 Distinct Styles
  • The Authors explain how such needs driven
    behaviors could be understood as four distinct
    types or styles of behavior which we describe as
    the DISC Model.

8
The D Style 
  • The Directive style individual is determined,
    straightforward, and motivated by competitive
    opportunities. This person is direct and
    assertive.  This style prefers talking and
    exploring new ideas rather than listening and
    doing the work.  They are not afraid of new ideas
    or new ways of doing things in fact, they seek
    them out.

9
The I Style
  • The Interactive style individual focuses his or
    her energies on others.  This individual tends to
    be casual, talkative, eager to please, and seeks
    social recognition.  This style tends to seek
    solutions that will please the most people and
    create the least amount of friction.  This style
    is often accused of holding no firm opinions and
    of being hard to pin down.

10
The S Style
  • The Steadiness style is predictable, low-keyed,
    and typically follows through on things because
    of the individual's high need for stability. 
    This style prefers listening and doing the work
    rather than talking and exploring new ideas. 
    Teaming a D with an S will usually result in
    innovative projects carried to completion.

11
The C Style
  • The fourth style is the Cautious style.   They
    like to have things done the correct or right way
    as they see things.  They have a strong need for
    caution in order to fulfill their strong need for
    accuracy.  Their actions tend to focus on or
    comply with their own standards of proper
    action.  Teaming an I and a C together will
    usually result in a well thought through approach
    that embraces a wide point of view.

12
DISC Sorting Exercise Step 1
  • Normally Talkative
  • Go to the Right Side of the Room.
  • (My Left)
  • Normally Quiet
  • Go the the Left Side of the Room.
  • (My Right)

13
DISC Sorting Exercise Step 2
  • Talkative Side
  • I Toward the Front
  • D Toward the Back
  • Quite Side
  • S Toward the Front
  • C Toward the Back

14
DISC Sorting Exercise Step 3
  • Return to your seat.
  • Write your Name and Behavior Style on a piece of
    paper.
  • Add two sentences on your Construction
    Experience.
  • Add two sentences on your Computer Skills
  • Pass the papers toward the front for pick-up.

15
There is another Side to this.
  • To better understand yourself and others you must
    also be aware of the TICS, or Value driven,
    Model.
  • 5 People Choose Whether To Live By Needs
    Alone.
  • 6 People Cannot Live by Values Alone.

16
Traditionalist
  • The Traditionalist values system includes those
    people who believe in "people working together
    for a greater good." There values motivated
    behavior is directed toward a goal of responsible
    living. Their core values are loyalty and
    responsibility. 
  • They find ways to work together with others in
    their group making the best of conditions no
    matter how difficult

17
Challenger
  • The Challenger values system includes those
    people who are driven by the values-based goals
    of self-preservation and satisfaction. The are
    the most individualistic of the four values
    systems. The believe in the importance of
    individual freedom. 
  • They tend to express their individuality through
    their clothes, mannerisms, or other experimental
    or non-conventional practices.

18
 A Combination of the Two
  • The In-Betweener values system includes those
    people who believe in "having it both ways."  In
    other words, they are simultaneously
    values-driven toward asserting themselves as
    individuals, while also maintaining a pleasant
    public or social behavior.
  • Their core values are equality, fairness, and
    niceness for both themselves and others -- have
    your cake and eat it too.

19
  Synthesizer
  • The Synthesizer values system includes those
    people whose behavior can be explained by their
    goal to integrate themselves with others. These
    individuals seek to bring together their own
    needs and values with the needs and values
    expectations of the other types of individuals so
    that a spirit and environment of collaboration is
    achieved. 
  • They consider how other people feel, think, and
    interact before making their choice rather than
    being controlled by other forces in either the
    situation or themselves.

20
Some Additional Principles
  • 7 Each Person's Motivational Pattern Has Its Own
    Inherent Strengths and Limitations
  • 8  Productive Motivation Begins With Awareness.
  • 9  Acceptance of Who We (and Others) Are is
    Essential to Our Collective Well-Being.
  • 10  Motivation is Where Our Behavior Begins and
    Returns.

21
Behavior and Values Combined
  • Combining these models offers a powerful, yet
    simple, way of answering the question(s)
  • Why do my associates Do the things they do? or,
  • Which candidate for this position should I hire? 
    or,
  • Who can I trust to do this job right? or, better
    yet, Who should I marry?

22
Class Assessment
  • Please write 1 sentence on What was the least
    clear part of this exercise?
  • And turn it in at the end of class.
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