This is a 2500 word assignment that needs to be completed based on the Strengthscope report.
2. "Assignment Submission Form AS2 MN7028SR Aug 24" is the requirements and grading table for this assignment.
3. "MN7028SR Assignment 2 Guide" is the guidance provided by the teacher regarding this assignment. You must complete the assignment according to the process and structure of this document.
4. 'Strengthscope-ACTC761325_Shinenglish' is a unique Strengthscope report for each individual, and you must complete the assignment based on the content of this report.
5. The remaining files are courseware for this course. You must read and complete this assignment. And appropriately incorporate the theories and models learned in this course into this assignment.
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AssignmentSubmissionFormAS2MN7028SRAug24.docx
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MN7028SRAssignment2Guide.docx
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Strengthscope_ACTSC761325_English.pdf
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Topic1.2OrganisationalDesign-MechanisticorOrganic.pptx
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Topic1.1-MN7028ManagementandLeadershipIntro-Tagged.pptx
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Topic1.3-LeadershipTheoriesthatHarnessMotivation.pptx
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Topic4.1Negotiations.pptx
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Topic4.2-DiversityandInclusiveLeadership.pptx
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Topic2.1MotivationRewardandEngagementatWork1.pptx
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Topic4.3-InternationalperspectivesonNegotiationandEthicalDilemmas.pptx
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Topic3.3IntroductiontoCoachingandTGROW.pptx
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Topic3.2InterpersonalCommunications.pptx
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Topic2.3MBALeadershipacrosscultures.pptx
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Topic3.1LeadingChange.pptx
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Topic2.2OrganisationalPerformance.pptx
Master of Business Administration
Assignment Submission Form
Guildhall School of Business and Law
Feedback/Feedforward Coversheet
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MN7028SR Breakthrough Leadership Skills |
Academic Year 2024/25 Assessment #2 Individual Work (70%) Reflection Report: maximum 1,250 +/- 10% words Personal Development Plan: 1,250 +/- 10% words |
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First Marker: |
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Second Marker: |
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Title of presentation: A Reflection Report and A Personal Development Plan |
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Assessment criteria |
Tasks |
1st Marker |
2nd Marker |
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An introduction to the concept of reflection and it’s importance in considering our professional development. (10 marks) |
Explain what does reflection means and its purposes (10 marks) |
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To undertake the Srenthscope self- evaluation profiling (35 marks) |
Write your Strengthscope Report based on 1. What are your main strengths and evidence of these in the past (evidence can be personal or work related, but must be specific i.e. rather than “I lead a team” you need to say what the team was, what you did and what the outcome was.) 2. Are there any challenges where your strengths go into “overdrive”? 3. What are your main “bubbling unders” i.e. where you have sometimes been able to demonstrate the strength but you recognise that with further development it could be a useful tool. 4. What are your main energy drainers and where have these affected your performance in the past? 5. What theories of leadership or management or culture that have been covered in class can be applied to your examples in reflecting back on your personal experience. |
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To provide Personal Development Plan (35 marks)
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Write your Personal development Plan based on 1. Are there any strengths in overdrive that need to be managed? What tactics will you adopt to do this? 2. What are the “bubbling unders” that you want to develop into strengths? How will you do this? This must be specific e.g. rather than “I will become a stronger leader” you might say “I will develop my assertiveness to allow be to be a stronger leader and I will do so by reading Book X, watching a TED talk on Y and asking my own boss if I can shadow them in a negotiation”. Again, refer to the slide deck on how to develop bubbling unders. 3. What are your main energy drainers you want to manage and how can you manage these to mitigate any challenging outcomes (refer to the slide deck on how to interpret the Strengthscope report to help). 4. What theories of leadership or management or culture that have been covered in class can be applied to your plan? |
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Presentation Format (20 marks) |
1. Clarity, intext citation and references |
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Total Marks (100 marks) |
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From First Marker |
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Knowledge and understanding |
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Analysis and evaluation |
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From Second Marker |
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Knowledge and understanding |
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Analysis and evaluation |
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First Marker’s marks/date: Second Marker’s marks/date:
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Please upload the Turnitin Report |
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MN7028SR Breakthrough Leadership Skills Assignment 2 Guide
Process:
1st Step – Complete the Online Strengthscope Self-Assessment – https://profile.strengthscope.com and key in your USERID and Password given by Strengthscope to your Email. Click “ Testing ”.
2nd Step – Collect the Strengthscope Individual Report Online through your Email.
3rd Step – Watch the Strengthscope Video Online `- In your Strengthscope Dashboard – Under Courses – Click “ Know Your Strengths ”.
4Th Step – Follow this suggested guide with your Strengthscope Individual Report to start writing this assignment. Please refer to your Strengthscope Individual Report for detailed explanations of your Strengths, Bubbling Unders, Energy Drainers and more.
Note: The suggested guide below follows closely to the Marking Rubric as given to all students. In this guide, many relevant hints and examples are given to help you with your thinking and writing for this assignment.
The Assignment 2: A Reflection Report and A Personal Development Plan
Introduction to Reflection (Approx. 250 words)
Purpose of Reflection:
– Definition: Reflection is the process of thinking critically about your experiences to learn and grow. It helps you understand what you did well and what you could improve.
– Importance: Explain how reflection helps you become more self-aware and make better decisions in your professional life. It allows you to learn from both successes and failures.
**Hints:**
– **Example Quote:** Use a quote such as, "Reflection is the key to personal growth" (Author, Year). This can set a thoughtful tone for your report.
– **Personal Anecdote:** Share a specific experience where reflection helped you learn something valuable. For instance: "After a group project that did not meet our goals, I reflected on my communication style and realised I needed to encourage more input from my team members."
Understanding Strengthscope (Approx. 300 words)
Overview of Strengthscope:
– Introduction: Define Strengthscope as a tool that helps identify your strengths, energy drainers, and areas for improvement. It focuses on what you do well rather than what you need to fix.
– Significance: Discuss how knowing your
· Seven Significant Strengths,
· Bubbling Unders, and
· Energy Drainers
can lead to better performance and job satisfaction.
**Hints:**
– **Example of Strengths:** Mention strengths like "communication," "problem-solving," or "adaptability." For example: "One of my strengths is 'communication,' which I used effectively in team meetings by ensuring everyone felt comfortable sharing their ideas."
– **Research Backing:** You might refer to studies that show focusing on strengths can improve performance significantly (Author, Year).
Strengthscope Self-Evaluation Profiling (Approx. 1,200 words)
Main Strengths (Approx. 300 words)
– Identification of Strengths: List your 7 main strengths identified through the Strengthscope assessment.
– Evidence: Provide specific examples from your experiences. For example: "I led a marketing campaign that increased our online engagement by 30% in three months. My strength in strategic thinking allowed me to create a clear plan that aligned with our business goals."
**Hints:**
– Use numbers or statistics to show your achievements. For example: "Our campaign resulted in a 15% increase in sales."
– Relate your strengths to specific situations at school or work.
Challenges with Overdrive (Approx. 200 words)
– Overdrive Situations: Describe times when your strengths became overwhelming or counterproductive.
– Example: "Being detail-oriented sometimes leads me to micromanage projects, which can frustrate my team members."
**Hints:**
– Think about feedback you've received from others about this behaviour. For instance: "A colleague mentioned that while my attention to detail is helpful, it can stifle creativity when I don't allow others the freedom to explore their ideas."
Bubbling Unders (Approx. 200 words)
– Identification of Bubbling Unders: Discuss strengths you occasionally show but want to develop further.
Example Situation: "I have shown leadership qualities in group projects but often hesitate to take charge because I am naturally introverted."
**Hints:**
– Identify specific instances where you could have used these bubbling unders more effectively. For example: "During presentations, I contributed ideas but avoided leading discussions."
Energy Drainers (Approx. 300 words)
– Identification of Energy Drainers: List tasks that drain your energy and discuss how they affect your performance.
Specific Example: "I find administrative tasks draining; during my last project, this led to delays because I struggled with motivation."
**Hints:**
– Reflect on how these energy drainers impact not just your performance but also your overall well-being. For instance: "The pressure of administrative duties left me feeling overwhelmed, which affected my ability to contribute creatively during brainstorming sessions."
Application of Theories (Approx. 200 words)
– Connection to Theories: Relate your experiences to leadership theories covered in class, such as transformational leadership or emotional intelligence.Need to have in-text citations.
Example Application: "Using Goleman’s emotional intelligence framework helped me understand my interactions with team members better, especially during conflicts."
**Hints:**
– Cite specific theories discussed in class and connect them directly to your experiences. For example: "Transformational leadership principles guided me when I aimed to inspire my team during challenging phases of our project."
Personal Development Plan (PDP) (Approx. 1,000 words)
Managing Overdrive Strengths (Approx. 250 words)
– Identification of Overdrive Strengths: Identify any strengths that need management.
Tactics for Management of Overdrive Strengths: Specify tactics you will adopt, such as setting boundaries or seeking feedback from peers. For example: "I will schedule regular check-ins with my team every two weeks to ensure they feel empowered rather than micromanaged."
**Hints:**
– Use SMART goals for clarity—Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound. For instance: "By the end of next quarter, I aim to reduce instances of micromanagement by 50% through better delegation."
Developing Bubbling Unders (Approx. 250 words)
– Bubbling Unders Development Goals: Specify which 3 bubbling unders you want to develop into strengths.
Actionable Steps: Provide specific actions you will take for the selected 3 bubbling unders. For example: "To enhance my assertiveness, I will read 'Crucial Conversations,' attend a public speaking workshop, and practice leading smaller team meetings."
**Hints:**
– Identify resources such as books or online courses that can help you develop these skills.
Managing Energy Drainers (Approx. 250 words)
– Strategies for Energy Drainers Management: Discuss strategies for managing energy drainers effectively.
Example Strategy: "To manage administrative tasks better, I will use tools like Trello for task management and set aside specific times dedicated solely to these tasks."
**Hints:**
– Explore time management techniques like the Pomodoro Technique or batching similar tasks together.
Application of Theories in PDP (Approx. 250 words)
– Theoretical Frameworks for Development Plan: Reflect on how leadership theories can inform your PDP. Need in-text citations when writing about the theories.
Example Application: "Applying Maslow's hierarchy of needs will help me understand how meeting my team's psychological needs enhances their motivation."
**Hints:**
– Discuss how integrating theory into practice can enhance both personal growth and team effectiveness.
Reference Page
Important Notes for Students:
In-text Citations and References
Make sure to include in-text citations throughout your report whenever you reference theories or research findings. For example:
– “Reflection is essential for personal growth” (Author, Year).
At the end of your report, include a reference page formatted according to London Metropolitan University Harvard Referencing guidelines:
1. Author(s) Last name, Initial(s). (Year) *Title of Book/Article*. Publisher/Journal Name.
2. Author(s) Last name, Initial(s). (Year) ‘Title of Article’, *Title of Journal*, Volume(Issue), Page numbers.
By following this guide with clear hints and examples, you'll be well-equipped to reflect on your leadership journey using the Strengthscope tool and develop a comprehensive Personal Development Plan aligned with your growth objectives.
All the best to your Assignment 2!
Confidential
© S
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21 October 2024
Contents Page N
1. Introduction 2
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths 3
3. Your strengths profile 4
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance 5
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths 12
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®
1. Introduction
The following Strengthscope report is based on your
responses to the questionnaire completed on 21/10/2024.
Strengthscope allows you to bring your best to work, and to
life, every single day through the discovery and development
of your strengths.
We define strengths as the underlying qualities that energize
you and that you are great at (or have the potential to become
great at).
Your Strengthscope report will help you to enhance your
performance and energy at work by improving your
understanding of:
Your unique combination of strengths and how to develop
these to achieve exceptional results
Positive ways of working that will improve your confidence,
motivation and success in any situation
Why focus on your strengths?
Our strengths are the qualities that energize us and enable
us to perform at our best.
By getting the balance right between developing your
strengths and reducing performance risks, you will achieve
higher levels of:
Resilience
Confidence
Engagement
Success
®
®
®
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths
Based on your responses to the questionnaire, your Significant 7 strengths, and the productive behaviours related to
each strength, are listed in alphabetical order. These are the most energizing qualities for you. By focusing on
developing these strengths you will be able to achieve your best results and career success.
Your Significant 7 strengths When performing at your best you:
Common sense
You make pragmatic judgments based on
practical thinking and previous experience
Make good judgments based on careful observation of what works in different
situations
Enjoy learning from experience
Rely a lot on obvious and pragmatic answers that have worked well in the past
Courage
You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Are able to stand up for what you believe in, even when challenging authority
or the status quo
Are able to withstand personal risk, pressure and difficult circumstances
Take tough stands based on your convictions, even if they are unpopular
Creativity
You generate new ideas and original solutions to
move things forward
Encourage others to explore new and creative perspectives when problem
solving
Enjoy coming up with new ideas and original solutions
Have the ability to ‘think outside the box’ to find an original solution to a tough
problem
Critical thinking
You approach problems and arguments by
breaking them down systematically and
evaluating them objectively
Easily spot flaws in arguments and problems based on logical analysis
Enjoy bringing objectivity and clarity to complex situations
Spend time defining and simplifying problems, understanding underlying
assumptions, facts and evidence, before seeking solutions
Decisiveness
You make quick, confident, and clear decisions,
even when faced with limited information
Are willing to make decisions in high pressure situations when time is critical
Are able to make effective and timely decisions even when the data is limited
or decisions produce unpleasant consequences
Quickly perceive the impact and implications of decisions
Persuasiveness
You are able to win agreement and support for a
position or desired outcome
Are able to persuade others to your way of thinking based on the merits of your
position
Enjoy negotiation and debate as they provide opportunity for you to state your
case and win people over
Find that there are times when you will stop at nothing to persuade and
convince others
Relationship building
You take steps to build networks of contacts and
act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Have a wide network of colleagues and contacts
Enjoy meeting new people and getting to know them
Are the sort of person who knows everybody and often introduces people in
your network to one another
3. Your strengths profile
The wheel below shows all of the 24 strengths with your scores
rated on a standardized scale from 1-10. Your scores are
compared to a relevant comparison group, with higher scores
showing areas that energize you the most. It is more important
to focus on the overall distribution of your strengths and
which clusters they fall in rather than your individual score for
each strength.
Your Significant 7 strengths are displayed as purple bars
while the other strengths are shown as blue bars. Higher
bars represent those strengths that are more natural and
energizing for you. The lowest bars represent non-strength
areas that provide you with less energy and enjoyment in
your work.
In the centre of your wheel, you can see percentage scores for each of the four cluster areas. The baseline is 25% for each cluster, so the further
away your scores are from 25%, the greater preference you show towards, or away from, that cluster. Consider this when thinking about your work
and what energizes you more, and less.
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance
While awareness of your strengths is crucial, it is important to translate this awareness into action in order to achieve
peak performance.
This section will help you to develop your strengths and strengthen your performance by providing guidance on ways
to stretch beyond your comfort zone, plus identify and minimize potential risk areas to performance.
Top Tip: create your own strengths habit tracker
To get the most from your strengths, we recommend creating your own strengths habit tracker to help you
build new habits over the coming weeks and months.
Following the suggestions on the following pages, pick out the best development ideas for you and turn them
into new habits to build for the next 30-60 days. Let us know how you get on, we would love to hear from you.
Adopt a ‘less is more’ approach and identify a few priority areas to focus on at any one time to maximize your success.
Your ‘Significant 7’ strengths are listed below.
Common sense You make pragmatic judgments based on practical thinking and previous experience
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Spend time with your organization’s customers to get hands-on knowledge of their experiences with your products and
organization, including their feedback on what works and what doesn't. Use this knowledge to make practical
recommendations to improve your organization and products
Volunteer to test or 'pilot' ideas for their practical relevance and present your findings to the team and/or organization
Study for a project planning qualification that can use your Common sense to deliver successful outcomes
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren’t practical or don’t fit with conventional logic. You may tend to
stifle creative and inspirational ideas
If you have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren't practical or don't fit with conventional logic…
Practise being curious and open-minded to discover new ways of approaching problems and tasks
If you tend to stifle creative and inspirational ideas…
Listen to your creative colleagues and ask lots of probing questions to understand how these ideas could be applied in practice
If you rely too heavily, and expect others to rely too heavily, on processes and past experiences…
Conduct better practice research using your network and online resources to understand how other organizations (within and
outside your sector) approach things
Courage You take on challenges and face risks by standing up for what you believe
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Research effective influencing skills and practise these skills to ensure you can easily stand up for what you believe in ways that
foster healthy working relationships
Seek out hot topic debates and innovation projects that you can contribute to that will help co-workers/stakeholders to look
at problems and issues in a different way
Go outside of your comfort zone by seeking to take on a project that you really believe in that not only stretches your current
skillset, but confidence levels and levels of self-belief
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You readily take on risky positions and challenges that have a high probability of failure. You may be perceived as reckless or
extreme in defending your beliefs
If you find that you are being seen as reckless or extreme in defending your beliefs…
Ensure that you develop a range of influencing skills so that you can gain support for your position without always having to
‘fight’ for the cause. And remember to choose time and prepare for your battles wisely
If you find that you have taken on too many ‘causes’ and that this is starting to exhaust you…
Prioritize those challenges/changes that will contribute greatest value to your team and organization and focus on gaining a
positive outcome in these areas only
If you find that you have become isolated in defending your beliefs…
Take time to listen to, and understand, others’ points of view so that you can modify your approach or bring in others’
perspectives
Creativity You generate new ideas and original solutions to move things forward
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Ask your manager for an opportunity to run short 'creative burst' or brainstorming sessions to improve work processes and
practices or to deal with specific challenges
Identify the three top problems or challenges facing your team or organization currently and use your Creativity strength to
address these
Observe and reflect how you use your intuition – gut feelings and hunches – and learn how to listen to these more consciously
in order to generate ideas and original solutions that move things forward
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context. You may
overlook the more obvious, tried and tested solution
If you generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context…
Partner with colleagues who have more pragmatic, common-sense thinking styles to ensure you understand what is likely to
work taking account of the organization’s history, context and stakeholders
If you tend to overlook more obvious, tried and tested solutions…
Balance your creativity with proven solutions from colleagues and other, similar organizations; avoid re-inventing the wheel
If you feel bored and disengage when your ideas are not considered…
Be open to different thinking styles and remember that some of the biggest breakthroughs can come through building on
what’s already worked well in the past
Critical thinking You approach problems and arguments by breaking them down systematically and evaluating them
objectively
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Discuss your interpretation of data, problems and situations with others and reflect on how effectively you are able to both
interpret and communicate the findings of your analysis
Read online articles about how to take a solutions-focused, problem-solving approach rather than a problem-focused
perspective to maintain a positive, constructive approach
Educate others to use analysis and thinking tools (SWOT, Impact-Effort Grid, Decision Tree, BCG Box, etc.) which will give you
an opportunity to refresh and build out your knowledge and skills of these critical decision tools
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments. This may be perceived as negative or over-
critical by others
If you continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments…
Spend more time listening and using your strength to ask open-ended and probing questions to uncover both benefits and
risks associated with others’ ideas and arguments
If your Critical thinking may be perceived as negative and over-critical by others…
Take time to signal to others in meetings and interactions that you are a strong critical thinker and will at times take a ‘devil’s
advocate’ role to analyze information, ideas and proposals
If colleagues who used to seek your opinion no longer do…
Explain how their strengths complement yours and call on them to balance your thinking style with other strengths, including
Creativity, Optimism and Common sense
Decisiveness You make quick, confident, and clear decisions, even when faced with limited information
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Apply a range of decision-making tools (e.g. Force Field Analysis, Cost Benefit Analysis, Effort-Impact Analysis) to ensure high
quality decision-making
Practise presenting the rationale behind your decisions and recommendations so that others can follow your judgement,
particularly to those who are less decisive than yourself
Identify how colleagues, stakeholders, friends and acquaintances can support you to identify new opportunities where you can
use your decisiveness strength
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You are overhasty or rash in your decision-making, spending little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes
If you are overhasty or rash in your decision-making…
Practise stepping back and reflecting on decisions, as well as gaining others’ views
If you spend little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes…
Use a model such as De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats to ensure you have considered alternatives
If you are perceived by colleagues as bossy, or even a bully…
Take time to consider how you communicate your decisions and consult others first
Persuasiveness You are able to win agreement and support for a position or desired outcome
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Take the initiative in volunteering for assignments where you are required to persuade others to agree to adopt a product,
position or idea
Coach or mentor colleagues who could benefit from developing their ability to persuade others
Use both 'advocacy' and 'inquiry' behaviours when trying to influence – push and pull, tell and sell. This will balance the use of
rational persuasive argument with questioning and facilitation skills
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You try to influence most outcomes in your favour, irrespective of the importance of the issue. You may also indulge in debate for
debate‘s sake, rather than focusing on relevant outcomes
If you try to persuade others habitually, without considering the importance of the issue…
Remember to identify those issues which relate most closely to your own or your team’s goals and focus your energies on these
debates rather than on more frivolous issues
If you focus on the debate, rather than the outcome…
Regularly remind yourself and those you are in discussion with of the purpose of the debate and the intended end goal
If you find yourself using emotional tactics to win an argument…
Make sure that you check in with others as to whether they are in genuine agreement with you; if not, continue to explore their
views and modify your position accordingly
Relationship building You take steps to build networks of contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Identify ways to share your knowledge and experience to enable others to also develop their Relationship building, e.g.
blogging, running workshops, coaching or mentoring
Learn about stakeholder mapping and stakeholder management so that you can focus the development of your network on the
most important relationships
Help your team to develop improved knowledge and understanding of each other’s strengths and skills by running some
meetings where this information is shared
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
Your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts may become an end in itself and take up a disproportionate amount of
your energies
If your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts is becoming an end in itself…
Remember to focus on building contacts and networks with people who are likely to have the greatest influence over your
team’s success
If your network is becoming too much of a drain on your time…
Ensure that you limit the amount of time that you are spending responding to requests from people in your network and that
you are gaining value from others too
If you find that your network is built on shallow relationships…
Focus your network on the most productive relationships, strengthening these by spending more time with only those you have
identified
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths
Courage: You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Emotional control: You are aware of your emotional
‘triggers’ and how to control these to
ensure you remain calm and productive
Enthusiasm: You demonstrate passion and energy
when communicating goals, beliefs,
interests or ideas you feel strongly about
Optimism: You remain positive and upbeat about
the future and your ability to influence it
to your advantage
Resilience: You deal effectively with setbacks and
enjoy overcoming difficult challenges
Self-confidence: You have a strong belief in yourself and
your abilities to accomplish tasks and
goals
Collaboration: You work cooperatively with others to
overcome conflict and build towards a
common goal
Compassion: You demonstrate a deep and genuine
concern for the well-being and welfare of
others
Developing others: You promote other people’s learning and
development to help them achieve their
goals and fulfil their potential
Empathy: You readily identify with other people’s
situations and can see things clearly from
their perspective
Leading: You take responsibility for influencing
and motivating others to contribute to
the goals and success of their team and
organization
Persuasiveness: You are able to win agreement and
support for a position or desired
outcome
Relationship building: You take steps to build networks of
contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between
people that you know
Decisiveness: You make quick, confident, and clear
decisions, even when faced with limited
information
Efficiency: You take a well-ordered and methodical
approach to tasks to achieve planned
outcomes
Flexibility: You remain adaptable and flexible in the
face of unfamiliar or changing situations
Initiative: You take independent action to make
things happen and achieve goals
Results focus: You maintain a strong sense of focus on
results, driving tasks and projects to
completion
Self-improvement: You draw on a wide range of people and
resources in the pursuit of self-
development and learning
Common sense: You make pragmatic judgments based
on practical thinking and previous
experience
Creativity: You generate new ideas and original
solutions to move things forward
Critical thinking: You approach problems and arguments
by breaking them down systematically
and evaluating them objectively
Detail orientation: You pay attention to detail in order to
produce high quality output, no matter
what the pressures
Strategic mindedness: You focus on the future and take a
strategic perspective on issues and
challenges
®
Emotional Relational Execution Thinking
Tools to optimize your performance
Want to find out more about your performance at work? Why not take:
Strengthscope360
Strengthscope360™ is a quick and simple multi-rater assessment which builds on the initial Strengthscope® self-report,
plugging in other people’s feedback (e.g. co-workers)
StrengthscopeLeader
This report allows leaders to discover what it is that makes them truly unique, and provides valuable feedback on how to bring
their authentic style into their leadership role
StrengthscopeTeam
The StrengthscopeTeam™ report consolidates individual Strengthscope® reports at team level, as well as assessing current
team behaviour, enabling teams to take their performance to the next level
StrengthscopeEngage
StrengthscopeEngage™ is split into two reports: StrengthscopeEngage™ Baseline and StrengthscopeEngage™ Progress and
together they measure changes in staff engagement and productive use of strengths following on from development initiatives.
For additional resources to optimize your strengths and reduce performance risks, visit
www.strengthscope.com
Strengthscope is a registered trademark of Strengthscope Limited. While utmost care and attention have been
taken in the creation of Strengthscope , the authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any decisions
arising from the use of the data, or any specific interpretations or inferences arising from the report.
Please note that the content of this report remains proprietary to Strengthscope Limited, and that any distribution or
copying of the report or any of its content is prohibited unless prior agreement is given by Strengthscope Limited in
writing.
™
™
™
™
®
®
Confidential
© S
tr en
g th
sc o
p e
20 24
WEI CUI
21 October 2024
Contents Page N
1. Introduction 2
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths 3
3. Your strengths profile 4
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance 5
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths 12
o
®
1. Introduction
The following Strengthscope report is based on your
responses to the questionnaire completed on 21/10/2024.
Strengthscope allows you to bring your best to work, and to
life, every single day through the discovery and development
of your strengths.
We define strengths as the underlying qualities that energize
you and that you are great at (or have the potential to become
great at).
Your Strengthscope report will help you to enhance your
performance and energy at work by improving your
understanding of:
Your unique combination of strengths and how to develop
these to achieve exceptional results
Positive ways of working that will improve your confidence,
motivation and success in any situation
Why focus on your strengths?
Our strengths are the qualities that energize us and enable
us to perform at our best.
By getting the balance right between developing your
strengths and reducing performance risks, you will achieve
higher levels of:
Resilience
Confidence
Engagement
Success
®
®
®
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths
Based on your responses to the questionnaire, your Significant 7 strengths, and the productive behaviours related to
each strength, are listed in alphabetical order. These are the most energizing qualities for you. By focusing on
developing these strengths you will be able to achieve your best results and career success.
Your Significant 7 strengths When performing at your best you:
Common sense
You make pragmatic judgments based on
practical thinking and previous experience
Make good judgments based on careful observation of what works in different
situations
Enjoy learning from experience
Rely a lot on obvious and pragmatic answers that have worked well in the past
Courage
You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Are able to stand up for what you believe in, even when challenging authority
or the status quo
Are able to withstand personal risk, pressure and difficult circumstances
Take tough stands based on your convictions, even if they are unpopular
Creativity
You generate new ideas and original solutions to
move things forward
Encourage others to explore new and creative perspectives when problem
solving
Enjoy coming up with new ideas and original solutions
Have the ability to ‘think outside the box’ to find an original solution to a tough
problem
Critical thinking
You approach problems and arguments by
breaking them down systematically and
evaluating them objectively
Easily spot flaws in arguments and problems based on logical analysis
Enjoy bringing objectivity and clarity to complex situations
Spend time defining and simplifying problems, understanding underlying
assumptions, facts and evidence, before seeking solutions
Decisiveness
You make quick, confident, and clear decisions,
even when faced with limited information
Are willing to make decisions in high pressure situations when time is critical
Are able to make effective and timely decisions even when the data is limited
or decisions produce unpleasant consequences
Quickly perceive the impact and implications of decisions
Persuasiveness
You are able to win agreement and support for a
position or desired outcome
Are able to persuade others to your way of thinking based on the merits of your
position
Enjoy negotiation and debate as they provide opportunity for you to state your
case and win people over
Find that there are times when you will stop at nothing to persuade and
convince others
Relationship building
You take steps to build networks of contacts and
act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Have a wide network of colleagues and contacts
Enjoy meeting new people and getting to know them
Are the sort of person who knows everybody and often introduces people in
your network to one another
3. Your strengths profile
The wheel below shows all of the 24 strengths with your scores
rated on a standardized scale from 1-10. Your scores are
compared to a relevant comparison group, with higher scores
showing areas that energize you the most. It is more important
to focus on the overall distribution of your strengths and
which clusters they fall in rather than your individual score for
each strength.
Your Significant 7 strengths are displayed as purple bars
while the other strengths are shown as blue bars. Higher
bars represent those strengths that are more natural and
energizing for you. The lowest bars represent non-strength
areas that provide you with less energy and enjoyment in
your work.
In the centre of your wheel, you can see percentage scores for each of the four cluster areas. The baseline is 25% for each cluster, so the further
away your scores are from 25%, the greater preference you show towards, or away from, that cluster. Consider this when thinking about your work
and what energizes you more, and less.
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance
While awareness of your strengths is crucial, it is important to translate this awareness into action in order to achieve
peak performance.
This section will help you to develop your strengths and strengthen your performance by providing guidance on ways
to stretch beyond your comfort zone, plus identify and minimize potential risk areas to performance.
Top Tip: create your own strengths habit tracker
To get the most from your strengths, we recommend creating your own strengths habit tracker to help you
build new habits over the coming weeks and months.
Following the suggestions on the following pages, pick out the best development ideas for you and turn them
into new habits to build for the next 30-60 days. Let us know how you get on, we would love to hear from you.
Adopt a ‘less is more’ approach and identify a few priority areas to focus on at any one time to maximize your success.
Your ‘Significant 7’ strengths are listed below.
Common sense You make pragmatic judgments based on practical thinking and previous experience
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Spend time with your organization’s customers to get hands-on knowledge of their experiences with your products and
organization, including their feedback on what works and what doesn't. Use this knowledge to make practical
recommendations to improve your organization and products
Volunteer to test or 'pilot' ideas for their practical relevance and present your findings to the team and/or organization
Study for a project planning qualification that can use your Common sense to deliver successful outcomes
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren’t practical or don’t fit with conventional logic. You may tend to
stifle creative and inspirational ideas
If you have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren't practical or don't fit with conventional logic…
Practise being curious and open-minded to discover new ways of approaching problems and tasks
If you tend to stifle creative and inspirational ideas…
Listen to your creative colleagues and ask lots of probing questions to understand how these ideas could be applied in practice
If you rely too heavily, and expect others to rely too heavily, on processes and past experiences…
Conduct better practice research using your network and online resources to understand how other organizations (within and
outside your sector) approach things
Courage You take on challenges and face risks by standing up for what you believe
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Research effective influencing skills and practise these skills to ensure you can easily stand up for what you believe in ways that
foster healthy working relationships
Seek out hot topic debates and innovation projects that you can contribute to that will help co-workers/stakeholders to look
at problems and issues in a different way
Go outside of your comfort zone by seeking to take on a project that you really believe in that not only stretches your current
skillset, but confidence levels and levels of self-belief
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You readily take on risky positions and challenges that have a high probability of failure. You may be perceived as reckless or
extreme in defending your beliefs
If you find that you are being seen as reckless or extreme in defending your beliefs…
Ensure that you develop a range of influencing skills so that you can gain support for your position without always having to
‘fight’ for the cause. And remember to choose time and prepare for your battles wisely
If you find that you have taken on too many ‘causes’ and that this is starting to exhaust you…
Prioritize those challenges/changes that will contribute greatest value to your team and organization and focus on gaining a
positive outcome in these areas only
If you find that you have become isolated in defending your beliefs…
Take time to listen to, and understand, others’ points of view so that you can modify your approach or bring in others’
perspectives
Creativity You generate new ideas and original solutions to move things forward
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Ask your manager for an opportunity to run short 'creative burst' or brainstorming sessions to improve work processes and
practices or to deal with specific challenges
Identify the three top problems or challenges facing your team or organization currently and use your Creativity strength to
address these
Observe and reflect how you use your intuition – gut feelings and hunches – and learn how to listen to these more consciously
in order to generate ideas and original solutions that move things forward
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context. You may
overlook the more obvious, tried and tested solution
If you generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context…
Partner with colleagues who have more pragmatic, common-sense thinking styles to ensure you understand what is likely to
work taking account of the organization’s history, context and stakeholders
If you tend to overlook more obvious, tried and tested solutions…
Balance your creativity with proven solutions from colleagues and other, similar organizations; avoid re-inventing the wheel
If you feel bored and disengage when your ideas are not considered…
Be open to different thinking styles and remember that some of the biggest breakthroughs can come through building on
what’s already worked well in the past
Critical thinking You approach problems and arguments by breaking them down systematically and evaluating them
objectively
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Discuss your interpretation of data, problems and situations with others and reflect on how effectively you are able to both
interpret and communicate the findings of your analysis
Read online articles about how to take a solutions-focused, problem-solving approach rather than a problem-focused
perspective to maintain a positive, constructive approach
Educate others to use analysis and thinking tools (SWOT, Impact-Effort Grid, Decision Tree, BCG Box, etc.) which will give you
an opportunity to refresh and build out your knowledge and skills of these critical decision tools
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments. This may be perceived as negative or over-
critical by others
If you continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments…
Spend more time listening and using your strength to ask open-ended and probing questions to uncover both benefits and
risks associated with others’ ideas and arguments
If your Critical thinking may be perceived as negative and over-critical by others…
Take time to signal to others in meetings and interactions that you are a strong critical thinker and will at times take a ‘devil’s
advocate’ role to analyze information, ideas and proposals
If colleagues who used to seek your opinion no longer do…
Explain how their strengths complement yours and call on them to balance your thinking style with other strengths, including
Creativity, Optimism and Common sense
Decisiveness You make quick, confident, and clear decisions, even when faced with limited information
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Apply a range of decision-making tools (e.g. Force Field Analysis, Cost Benefit Analysis, Effort-Impact Analysis) to ensure high
quality decision-making
Practise presenting the rationale behind your decisions and recommendations so that others can follow your judgement,
particularly to those who are less decisive than yourself
Identify how colleagues, stakeholders, friends and acquaintances can support you to identify new opportunities where you can
use your decisiveness strength
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You are overhasty or rash in your decision-making, spending little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes
If you are overhasty or rash in your decision-making…
Practise stepping back and reflecting on decisions, as well as gaining others’ views
If you spend little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes…
Use a model such as De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats to ensure you have considered alternatives
If you are perceived by colleagues as bossy, or even a bully…
Take time to consider how you communicate your decisions and consult others first
Persuasiveness You are able to win agreement and support for a position or desired outcome
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Take the initiative in volunteering for assignments where you are required to persuade others to agree to adopt a product,
position or idea
Coach or mentor colleagues who could benefit from developing their ability to persuade others
Use both 'advocacy' and 'inquiry' behaviours when trying to influence – push and pull, tell and sell. This will balance the use of
rational persuasive argument with questioning and facilitation skills
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You try to influence most outcomes in your favour, irrespective of the importance of the issue. You may also indulge in debate for
debate‘s sake, rather than focusing on relevant outcomes
If you try to persuade others habitually, without considering the importance of the issue…
Remember to identify those issues which relate most closely to your own or your team’s goals and focus your energies on these
debates rather than on more frivolous issues
If you focus on the debate, rather than the outcome…
Regularly remind yourself and those you are in discussion with of the purpose of the debate and the intended end goal
If you find yourself using emotional tactics to win an argument…
Make sure that you check in with others as to whether they are in genuine agreement with you; if not, continue to explore their
views and modify your position accordingly
Relationship building You take steps to build networks of contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Identify ways to share your knowledge and experience to enable others to also develop their Relationship building, e.g.
blogging, running workshops, coaching or mentoring
Learn about stakeholder mapping and stakeholder management so that you can focus the development of your network on the
most important relationships
Help your team to develop improved knowledge and understanding of each other’s strengths and skills by running some
meetings where this information is shared
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
Your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts may become an end in itself and take up a disproportionate amount of
your energies
If your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts is becoming an end in itself…
Remember to focus on building contacts and networks with people who are likely to have the greatest influence over your
team’s success
If your network is becoming too much of a drain on your time…
Ensure that you limit the amount of time that you are spending responding to requests from people in your network and that
you are gaining value from others too
If you find that your network is built on shallow relationships…
Focus your network on the most productive relationships, strengthening these by spending more time with only those you have
identified
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths
Courage: You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Emotional control: You are aware of your emotional
‘triggers’ and how to control these to
ensure you remain calm and productive
Enthusiasm: You demonstrate passion and energy
when communicating goals, beliefs,
interests or ideas you feel strongly about
Optimism: You remain positive and upbeat about
the future and your ability to influence it
to your advantage
Resilience: You deal effectively with setbacks and
enjoy overcoming difficult challenges
Self-confidence: You have a strong belief in yourself and
your abilities to accomplish tasks and
goals
Collaboration: You work cooperatively with others to
overcome conflict and build towards a
common goal
Compassion: You demonstrate a deep and genuine
concern for the well-being and welfare of
others
Developing others: You promote other people’s learning and
development to help them achieve their
goals and fulfil their potential
Empathy: You readily identify with other people’s
situations and can see things clearly from
their perspective
Leading: You take responsibility for influencing
and motivating others to contribute to
the goals and success of their team and
organization
Persuasiveness: You are able to win agreement and
support for a position or desired
outcome
Relationship building: You take steps to build networks of
contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between
people that you know
Decisiveness: You make quick, confident, and clear
decisions, even when faced with limited
information
Efficiency: You take a well-ordered and methodical
approach to tasks to achieve planned
outcomes
Flexibility: You remain adaptable and flexible in the
face of unfamiliar or changing situations
Initiative: You take independent action to make
things happen and achieve goals
Results focus: You maintain a strong sense of focus on
results, driving tasks and projects to
completion
Self-improvement: You draw on a wide range of people and
resources in the pursuit of self-
development and learning
Common sense: You make pragmatic judgments based
on practical thinking and previous
experience
Creativity: You generate new ideas and original
solutions to move things forward
Critical thinking: You approach problems and arguments
by breaking them down systematically
and evaluating them objectively
Detail orientation: You pay attention to detail in order to
produce high quality output, no matter
what the pressures
Strategic mindedness: You focus on the future and take a
strategic perspective on issues and
challenges
®
Emotional Relational Execution Thinking
Tools to optimize your performance
Want to find out more about your performance at work? Why not take:
Strengthscope360
Strengthscope360™ is a quick and simple multi-rater assessment which builds on the initial Strengthscope® self-report,
plugging in other people’s feedback (e.g. co-workers)
StrengthscopeLeader
This report allows leaders to discover what it is that makes them truly unique, and provides valuable feedback on how to bring
their authentic style into their leadership role
StrengthscopeTeam
The StrengthscopeTeam™ report consolidates individual Strengthscope® reports at team level, as well as assessing current
team behaviour, enabling teams to take their performance to the next level
StrengthscopeEngage
StrengthscopeEngage™ is split into two reports: StrengthscopeEngage™ Baseline and StrengthscopeEngage™ Progress and
together they measure changes in staff engagement and productive use of strengths following on from development initiatives.
For additional resources to optimize your strengths and reduce performance risks, visit
www.strengthscope.com
Strengthscope is a registered trademark of Strengthscope Limited. While utmost care and attention have been
taken in the creation of Strengthscope , the authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any decisions
arising from the use of the data, or any specific interpretations or inferences arising from the report.
Please note that the content of this report remains proprietary to Strengthscope Limited, and that any distribution or
copying of the report or any of its content is prohibited unless prior agreement is given by Strengthscope Limited in
writing.
™
™
™
™
®
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WEI CUI. 2024 October 21
© Strengthscope Ltd. All Rights Reserved
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Confidential
© S
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20 24
WEI CUI
21 October 2024
Contents Page N
1. Introduction 2
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths 3
3. Your strengths profile 4
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance 5
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths 12
o
®
1. Introduction
The following Strengthscope report is based on your
responses to the questionnaire completed on 21/10/2024.
Strengthscope allows you to bring your best to work, and to
life, every single day through the discovery and development
of your strengths.
We define strengths as the underlying qualities that energize
you and that you are great at (or have the potential to become
great at).
Your Strengthscope report will help you to enhance your
performance and energy at work by improving your
understanding of:
Your unique combination of strengths and how to develop
these to achieve exceptional results
Positive ways of working that will improve your confidence,
motivation and success in any situation
Why focus on your strengths?
Our strengths are the qualities that energize us and enable
us to perform at our best.
By getting the balance right between developing your
strengths and reducing performance risks, you will achieve
higher levels of:
Resilience
Confidence
Engagement
Success
®
®
®
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths
Based on your responses to the questionnaire, your Significant 7 strengths, and the productive behaviours related to
each strength, are listed in alphabetical order. These are the most energizing qualities for you. By focusing on
developing these strengths you will be able to achieve your best results and career success.
Your Significant 7 strengths When performing at your best you:
Common sense
You make pragmatic judgments based on
practical thinking and previous experience
Make good judgments based on careful observation of what works in different
situations
Enjoy learning from experience
Rely a lot on obvious and pragmatic answers that have worked well in the past
Courage
You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Are able to stand up for what you believe in, even when challenging authority
or the status quo
Are able to withstand personal risk, pressure and difficult circumstances
Take tough stands based on your convictions, even if they are unpopular
Creativity
You generate new ideas and original solutions to
move things forward
Encourage others to explore new and creative perspectives when problem
solving
Enjoy coming up with new ideas and original solutions
Have the ability to ‘think outside the box’ to find an original solution to a tough
problem
Critical thinking
You approach problems and arguments by
breaking them down systematically and
evaluating them objectively
Easily spot flaws in arguments and problems based on logical analysis
Enjoy bringing objectivity and clarity to complex situations
Spend time defining and simplifying problems, understanding underlying
assumptions, facts and evidence, before seeking solutions
Decisiveness
You make quick, confident, and clear decisions,
even when faced with limited information
Are willing to make decisions in high pressure situations when time is critical
Are able to make effective and timely decisions even when the data is limited
or decisions produce unpleasant consequences
Quickly perceive the impact and implications of decisions
Persuasiveness
You are able to win agreement and support for a
position or desired outcome
Are able to persuade others to your way of thinking based on the merits of your
position
Enjoy negotiation and debate as they provide opportunity for you to state your
case and win people over
Find that there are times when you will stop at nothing to persuade and
convince others
Relationship building
You take steps to build networks of contacts and
act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Have a wide network of colleagues and contacts
Enjoy meeting new people and getting to know them
Are the sort of person who knows everybody and often introduces people in
your network to one another
3. Your strengths profile
The wheel below shows all of the 24 strengths with your scores
rated on a standardized scale from 1-10. Your scores are
compared to a relevant comparison group, with higher scores
showing areas that energize you the most. It is more important
to focus on the overall distribution of your strengths and
which clusters they fall in rather than your individual score for
each strength.
Your Significant 7 strengths are displayed as purple bars
while the other strengths are shown as blue bars. Higher
bars represent those strengths that are more natural and
energizing for you. The lowest bars represent non-strength
areas that provide you with less energy and enjoyment in
your work.
In the centre of your wheel, you can see percentage scores for each of the four cluster areas. The baseline is 25% for each cluster, so the further
away your scores are from 25%, the greater preference you show towards, or away from, that cluster. Consider this when thinking about your work
and what energizes you more, and less.
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance
While awareness of your strengths is crucial, it is important to translate this awareness into action in order to achieve
peak performance.
This section will help you to develop your strengths and strengthen your performance by providing guidance on ways
to stretch beyond your comfort zone, plus identify and minimize potential risk areas to performance.
Top Tip: create your own strengths habit tracker
To get the most from your strengths, we recommend creating your own strengths habit tracker to help you
build new habits over the coming weeks and months.
Following the suggestions on the following pages, pick out the best development ideas for you and turn them
into new habits to build for the next 30-60 days. Let us know how you get on, we would love to hear from you.
Adopt a ‘less is more’ approach and identify a few priority areas to focus on at any one time to maximize your success.
Your ‘Significant 7’ strengths are listed below.
Common sense You make pragmatic judgments based on practical thinking and previous experience
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Spend time with your organization’s customers to get hands-on knowledge of their experiences with your products and
organization, including their feedback on what works and what doesn't. Use this knowledge to make practical
recommendations to improve your organization and products
Volunteer to test or 'pilot' ideas for their practical relevance and present your findings to the team and/or organization
Study for a project planning qualification that can use your Common sense to deliver successful outcomes
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren’t practical or don’t fit with conventional logic. You may tend to
stifle creative and inspirational ideas
If you have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren't practical or don't fit with conventional logic…
Practise being curious and open-minded to discover new ways of approaching problems and tasks
If you tend to stifle creative and inspirational ideas…
Listen to your creative colleagues and ask lots of probing questions to understand how these ideas could be applied in practice
If you rely too heavily, and expect others to rely too heavily, on processes and past experiences…
Conduct better practice research using your network and online resources to understand how other organizations (within and
outside your sector) approach things
Courage You take on challenges and face risks by standing up for what you believe
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Research effective influencing skills and practise these skills to ensure you can easily stand up for what you believe in ways that
foster healthy working relationships
Seek out hot topic debates and innovation projects that you can contribute to that will help co-workers/stakeholders to look
at problems and issues in a different way
Go outside of your comfort zone by seeking to take on a project that you really believe in that not only stretches your current
skillset, but confidence levels and levels of self-belief
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You readily take on risky positions and challenges that have a high probability of failure. You may be perceived as reckless or
extreme in defending your beliefs
If you find that you are being seen as reckless or extreme in defending your beliefs…
Ensure that you develop a range of influencing skills so that you can gain support for your position without always having to
‘fight’ for the cause. And remember to choose time and prepare for your battles wisely
If you find that you have taken on too many ‘causes’ and that this is starting to exhaust you…
Prioritize those challenges/changes that will contribute greatest value to your team and organization and focus on gaining a
positive outcome in these areas only
If you find that you have become isolated in defending your beliefs…
Take time to listen to, and understand, others’ points of view so that you can modify your approach or bring in others’
perspectives
Creativity You generate new ideas and original solutions to move things forward
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Ask your manager for an opportunity to run short 'creative burst' or brainstorming sessions to improve work processes and
practices or to deal with specific challenges
Identify the three top problems or challenges facing your team or organization currently and use your Creativity strength to
address these
Observe and reflect how you use your intuition – gut feelings and hunches – and learn how to listen to these more consciously
in order to generate ideas and original solutions that move things forward
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context. You may
overlook the more obvious, tried and tested solution
If you generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context…
Partner with colleagues who have more pragmatic, common-sense thinking styles to ensure you understand what is likely to
work taking account of the organization’s history, context and stakeholders
If you tend to overlook more obvious, tried and tested solutions…
Balance your creativity with proven solutions from colleagues and other, similar organizations; avoid re-inventing the wheel
If you feel bored and disengage when your ideas are not considered…
Be open to different thinking styles and remember that some of the biggest breakthroughs can come through building on
what’s already worked well in the past
Critical thinking You approach problems and arguments by breaking them down systematically and evaluating them
objectively
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Discuss your interpretation of data, problems and situations with others and reflect on how effectively you are able to both
interpret and communicate the findings of your analysis
Read online articles about how to take a solutions-focused, problem-solving approach rather than a problem-focused
perspective to maintain a positive, constructive approach
Educate others to use analysis and thinking tools (SWOT, Impact-Effort Grid, Decision Tree, BCG Box, etc.) which will give you
an opportunity to refresh and build out your knowledge and skills of these critical decision tools
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments. This may be perceived as negative or over-
critical by others
If you continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments…
Spend more time listening and using your strength to ask open-ended and probing questions to uncover both benefits and
risks associated with others’ ideas and arguments
If your Critical thinking may be perceived as negative and over-critical by others…
Take time to signal to others in meetings and interactions that you are a strong critical thinker and will at times take a ‘devil’s
advocate’ role to analyze information, ideas and proposals
If colleagues who used to seek your opinion no longer do…
Explain how their strengths complement yours and call on them to balance your thinking style with other strengths, including
Creativity, Optimism and Common sense
Decisiveness You make quick, confident, and clear decisions, even when faced with limited information
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Apply a range of decision-making tools (e.g. Force Field Analysis, Cost Benefit Analysis, Effort-Impact Analysis) to ensure high
quality decision-making
Practise presenting the rationale behind your decisions and recommendations so that others can follow your judgement,
particularly to those who are less decisive than yourself
Identify how colleagues, stakeholders, friends and acquaintances can support you to identify new opportunities where you can
use your decisiveness strength
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You are overhasty or rash in your decision-making, spending little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes
If you are overhasty or rash in your decision-making…
Practise stepping back and reflecting on decisions, as well as gaining others’ views
If you spend little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes…
Use a model such as De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats to ensure you have considered alternatives
If you are perceived by colleagues as bossy, or even a bully…
Take time to consider how you communicate your decisions and consult others first
Persuasiveness You are able to win agreement and support for a position or desired outcome
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Take the initiative in volunteering for assignments where you are required to persuade others to agree to adopt a product,
position or idea
Coach or mentor colleagues who could benefit from developing their ability to persuade others
Use both 'advocacy' and 'inquiry' behaviours when trying to influence – push and pull, tell and sell. This will balance the use of
rational persuasive argument with questioning and facilitation skills
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You try to influence most outcomes in your favour, irrespective of the importance of the issue. You may also indulge in debate for
debate‘s sake, rather than focusing on relevant outcomes
If you try to persuade others habitually, without considering the importance of the issue…
Remember to identify those issues which relate most closely to your own or your team’s goals and focus your energies on these
debates rather than on more frivolous issues
If you focus on the debate, rather than the outcome…
Regularly remind yourself and those you are in discussion with of the purpose of the debate and the intended end goal
If you find yourself using emotional tactics to win an argument…
Make sure that you check in with others as to whether they are in genuine agreement with you; if not, continue to explore their
views and modify your position accordingly
Relationship building You take steps to build networks of contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Identify ways to share your knowledge and experience to enable others to also develop their Relationship building, e.g.
blogging, running workshops, coaching or mentoring
Learn about stakeholder mapping and stakeholder management so that you can focus the development of your network on the
most important relationships
Help your team to develop improved knowledge and understanding of each other’s strengths and skills by running some
meetings where this information is shared
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
Your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts may become an end in itself and take up a disproportionate amount of
your energies
If your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts is becoming an end in itself…
Remember to focus on building contacts and networks with people who are likely to have the greatest influence over your
team’s success
If your network is becoming too much of a drain on your time…
Ensure that you limit the amount of time that you are spending responding to requests from people in your network and that
you are gaining value from others too
If you find that your network is built on shallow relationships…
Focus your network on the most productive relationships, strengthening these by spending more time with only those you have
identified
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths
Courage: You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Emotional control: You are aware of your emotional
‘triggers’ and how to control these to
ensure you remain calm and productive
Enthusiasm: You demonstrate passion and energy
when communicating goals, beliefs,
interests or ideas you feel strongly about
Optimism: You remain positive and upbeat about
the future and your ability to influence it
to your advantage
Resilience: You deal effectively with setbacks and
enjoy overcoming difficult challenges
Self-confidence: You have a strong belief in yourself and
your abilities to accomplish tasks and
goals
Collaboration: You work cooperatively with others to
overcome conflict and build towards a
common goal
Compassion: You demonstrate a deep and genuine
concern for the well-being and welfare of
others
Developing others: You promote other people’s learning and
development to help them achieve their
goals and fulfil their potential
Empathy: You readily identify with other people’s
situations and can see things clearly from
their perspective
Leading: You take responsibility for influencing
and motivating others to contribute to
the goals and success of their team and
organization
Persuasiveness: You are able to win agreement and
support for a position or desired
outcome
Relationship building: You take steps to build networks of
contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between
people that you know
Decisiveness: You make quick, confident, and clear
decisions, even when faced with limited
information
Efficiency: You take a well-ordered and methodical
approach to tasks to achieve planned
outcomes
Flexibility: You remain adaptable and flexible in the
face of unfamiliar or changing situations
Initiative: You take independent action to make
things happen and achieve goals
Results focus: You maintain a strong sense of focus on
results, driving tasks and projects to
completion
Self-improvement: You draw on a wide range of people and
resources in the pursuit of self-
development and learning
Common sense: You make pragmatic judgments based
on practical thinking and previous
experience
Creativity: You generate new ideas and original
solutions to move things forward
Critical thinking: You approach problems and arguments
by breaking them down systematically
and evaluating them objectively
Detail orientation: You pay attention to detail in order to
produce high quality output, no matter
what the pressures
Strategic mindedness: You focus on the future and take a
strategic perspective on issues and
challenges
®
Emotional Relational Execution Thinking
Tools to optimize your performance
Want to find out more about your performance at work? Why not take:
Strengthscope360
Strengthscope360™ is a quick and simple multi-rater assessment which builds on the initial Strengthscope® self-report,
plugging in other people’s feedback (e.g. co-workers)
StrengthscopeLeader
This report allows leaders to discover what it is that makes them truly unique, and provides valuable feedback on how to bring
their authentic style into their leadership role
StrengthscopeTeam
The StrengthscopeTeam™ report consolidates individual Strengthscope® reports at team level, as well as assessing current
team behaviour, enabling teams to take their performance to the next level
StrengthscopeEngage
StrengthscopeEngage™ is split into two reports: StrengthscopeEngage™ Baseline and StrengthscopeEngage™ Progress and
together they measure changes in staff engagement and productive use of strengths following on from development initiatives.
For additional resources to optimize your strengths and reduce performance risks, visit
www.strengthscope.com
Strengthscope is a registered trademark of Strengthscope Limited. While utmost care and attention have been
taken in the creation of Strengthscope , the authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any decisions
arising from the use of the data, or any specific interpretations or inferences arising from the report.
Please note that the content of this report remains proprietary to Strengthscope Limited, and that any distribution or
copying of the report or any of its content is prohibited unless prior agreement is given by Strengthscope Limited in
writing.
™
™
™
™
®
®
WEI CUI. 2024 October 21
© Strengthscope Ltd. All Rights Reserved
2
Confidential
© S
tr en
g th
sc o
p e
20 24
WEI CUI
21 October 2024
Contents Page N
1. Introduction 2
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths 3
3. Your strengths profile 4
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance 5
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths 12
o
®
1. Introduction
The following Strengthscope report is based on your
responses to the questionnaire completed on 21/10/2024.
Strengthscope allows you to bring your best to work, and to
life, every single day through the discovery and development
of your strengths.
We define strengths as the underlying qualities that energize
you and that you are great at (or have the potential to become
great at).
Your Strengthscope report will help you to enhance your
performance and energy at work by improving your
understanding of:
Your unique combination of strengths and how to develop
these to achieve exceptional results
Positive ways of working that will improve your confidence,
motivation and success in any situation
Why focus on your strengths?
Our strengths are the qualities that energize us and enable
us to perform at our best.
By getting the balance right between developing your
strengths and reducing performance risks, you will achieve
higher levels of:
Resilience
Confidence
Engagement
Success
®
®
®
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths
Based on your responses to the questionnaire, your Significant 7 strengths, and the productive behaviours related to
each strength, are listed in alphabetical order. These are the most energizing qualities for you. By focusing on
developing these strengths you will be able to achieve your best results and career success.
Your Significant 7 strengths When performing at your best you:
Common sense
You make pragmatic judgments based on
practical thinking and previous experience
Make good judgments based on careful observation of what works in different
situations
Enjoy learning from experience
Rely a lot on obvious and pragmatic answers that have worked well in the past
Courage
You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Are able to stand up for what you believe in, even when challenging authority
or the status quo
Are able to withstand personal risk, pressure and difficult circumstances
Take tough stands based on your convictions, even if they are unpopular
Creativity
You generate new ideas and original solutions to
move things forward
Encourage others to explore new and creative perspectives when problem
solving
Enjoy coming up with new ideas and original solutions
Have the ability to ‘think outside the box’ to find an original solution to a tough
problem
Critical thinking
You approach problems and arguments by
breaking them down systematically and
evaluating them objectively
Easily spot flaws in arguments and problems based on logical analysis
Enjoy bringing objectivity and clarity to complex situations
Spend time defining and simplifying problems, understanding underlying
assumptions, facts and evidence, before seeking solutions
Decisiveness
You make quick, confident, and clear decisions,
even when faced with limited information
Are willing to make decisions in high pressure situations when time is critical
Are able to make effective and timely decisions even when the data is limited
or decisions produce unpleasant consequences
Quickly perceive the impact and implications of decisions
Persuasiveness
You are able to win agreement and support for a
position or desired outcome
Are able to persuade others to your way of thinking based on the merits of your
position
Enjoy negotiation and debate as they provide opportunity for you to state your
case and win people over
Find that there are times when you will stop at nothing to persuade and
convince others
Relationship building
You take steps to build networks of contacts and
act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Have a wide network of colleagues and contacts
Enjoy meeting new people and getting to know them
Are the sort of person who knows everybody and often introduces people in
your network to one another
3. Your strengths profile
The wheel below shows all of the 24 strengths with your scores
rated on a standardized scale from 1-10. Your scores are
compared to a relevant comparison group, with higher scores
showing areas that energize you the most. It is more important
to focus on the overall distribution of your strengths and
which clusters they fall in rather than your individual score for
each strength.
Your Significant 7 strengths are displayed as purple bars
while the other strengths are shown as blue bars. Higher
bars represent those strengths that are more natural and
energizing for you. The lowest bars represent non-strength
areas that provide you with less energy and enjoyment in
your work.
In the centre of your wheel, you can see percentage scores for each of the four cluster areas. The baseline is 25% for each cluster, so the further
away your scores are from 25%, the greater preference you show towards, or away from, that cluster. Consider this when thinking about your work
and what energizes you more, and less.
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance
While awareness of your strengths is crucial, it is important to translate this awareness into action in order to achieve
peak performance.
This section will help you to develop your strengths and strengthen your performance by providing guidance on ways
to stretch beyond your comfort zone, plus identify and minimize potential risk areas to performance.
Top Tip: create your own strengths habit tracker
To get the most from your strengths, we recommend creating your own strengths habit tracker to help you
build new habits over the coming weeks and months.
Following the suggestions on the following pages, pick out the best development ideas for you and turn them
into new habits to build for the next 30-60 days. Let us know how you get on, we would love to hear from you.
Adopt a ‘less is more’ approach and identify a few priority areas to focus on at any one time to maximize your success.
Your ‘Significant 7’ strengths are listed below.
Common sense You make pragmatic judgments based on practical thinking and previous experience
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Spend time with your organization’s customers to get hands-on knowledge of their experiences with your products and
organization, including their feedback on what works and what doesn't. Use this knowledge to make practical
recommendations to improve your organization and products
Volunteer to test or 'pilot' ideas for their practical relevance and present your findings to the team and/or organization
Study for a project planning qualification that can use your Common sense to deliver successful outcomes
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren’t practical or don’t fit with conventional logic. You may tend to
stifle creative and inspirational ideas
If you have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren't practical or don't fit with conventional logic…
Practise being curious and open-minded to discover new ways of approaching problems and tasks
If you tend to stifle creative and inspirational ideas…
Listen to your creative colleagues and ask lots of probing questions to understand how these ideas could be applied in practice
If you rely too heavily, and expect others to rely too heavily, on processes and past experiences…
Conduct better practice research using your network and online resources to understand how other organizations (within and
outside your sector) approach things
Courage You take on challenges and face risks by standing up for what you believe
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Research effective influencing skills and practise these skills to ensure you can easily stand up for what you believe in ways that
foster healthy working relationships
Seek out hot topic debates and innovation projects that you can contribute to that will help co-workers/stakeholders to look
at problems and issues in a different way
Go outside of your comfort zone by seeking to take on a project that you really believe in that not only stretches your current
skillset, but confidence levels and levels of self-belief
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You readily take on risky positions and challenges that have a high probability of failure. You may be perceived as reckless or
extreme in defending your beliefs
If you find that you are being seen as reckless or extreme in defending your beliefs…
Ensure that you develop a range of influencing skills so that you can gain support for your position without always having to
‘fight’ for the cause. And remember to choose time and prepare for your battles wisely
If you find that you have taken on too many ‘causes’ and that this is starting to exhaust you…
Prioritize those challenges/changes that will contribute greatest value to your team and organization and focus on gaining a
positive outcome in these areas only
If you find that you have become isolated in defending your beliefs…
Take time to listen to, and understand, others’ points of view so that you can modify your approach or bring in others’
perspectives
Creativity You generate new ideas and original solutions to move things forward
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Ask your manager for an opportunity to run short 'creative burst' or brainstorming sessions to improve work processes and
practices or to deal with specific challenges
Identify the three top problems or challenges facing your team or organization currently and use your Creativity strength to
address these
Observe and reflect how you use your intuition – gut feelings and hunches – and learn how to listen to these more consciously
in order to generate ideas and original solutions that move things forward
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context. You may
overlook the more obvious, tried and tested solution
If you generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context…
Partner with colleagues who have more pragmatic, common-sense thinking styles to ensure you understand what is likely to
work taking account of the organization’s history, context and stakeholders
If you tend to overlook more obvious, tried and tested solutions…
Balance your creativity with proven solutions from colleagues and other, similar organizations; avoid re-inventing the wheel
If you feel bored and disengage when your ideas are not considered…
Be open to different thinking styles and remember that some of the biggest breakthroughs can come through building on
what’s already worked well in the past
Critical thinking You approach problems and arguments by breaking them down systematically and evaluating them
objectively
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Discuss your interpretation of data, problems and situations with others and reflect on how effectively you are able to both
interpret and communicate the findings of your analysis
Read online articles about how to take a solutions-focused, problem-solving approach rather than a problem-focused
perspective to maintain a positive, constructive approach
Educate others to use analysis and thinking tools (SWOT, Impact-Effort Grid, Decision Tree, BCG Box, etc.) which will give you
an opportunity to refresh and build out your knowledge and skills of these critical decision tools
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments. This may be perceived as negative or over-
critical by others
If you continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments…
Spend more time listening and using your strength to ask open-ended and probing questions to uncover both benefits and
risks associated with others’ ideas and arguments
If your Critical thinking may be perceived as negative and over-critical by others…
Take time to signal to others in meetings and interactions that you are a strong critical thinker and will at times take a ‘devil’s
advocate’ role to analyze information, ideas and proposals
If colleagues who used to seek your opinion no longer do…
Explain how their strengths complement yours and call on them to balance your thinking style with other strengths, including
Creativity, Optimism and Common sense
Decisiveness You make quick, confident, and clear decisions, even when faced with limited information
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Apply a range of decision-making tools (e.g. Force Field Analysis, Cost Benefit Analysis, Effort-Impact Analysis) to ensure high
quality decision-making
Practise presenting the rationale behind your decisions and recommendations so that others can follow your judgement,
particularly to those who are less decisive than yourself
Identify how colleagues, stakeholders, friends and acquaintances can support you to identify new opportunities where you can
use your decisiveness strength
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You are overhasty or rash in your decision-making, spending little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes
If you are overhasty or rash in your decision-making…
Practise stepping back and reflecting on decisions, as well as gaining others’ views
If you spend little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes…
Use a model such as De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats to ensure you have considered alternatives
If you are perceived by colleagues as bossy, or even a bully…
Take time to consider how you communicate your decisions and consult others first
Persuasiveness You are able to win agreement and support for a position or desired outcome
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Take the initiative in volunteering for assignments where you are required to persuade others to agree to adopt a product,
position or idea
Coach or mentor colleagues who could benefit from developing their ability to persuade others
Use both 'advocacy' and 'inquiry' behaviours when trying to influence – push and pull, tell and sell. This will balance the use of
rational persuasive argument with questioning and facilitation skills
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You try to influence most outcomes in your favour, irrespective of the importance of the issue. You may also indulge in debate for
debate‘s sake, rather than focusing on relevant outcomes
If you try to persuade others habitually, without considering the importance of the issue…
Remember to identify those issues which relate most closely to your own or your team’s goals and focus your energies on these
debates rather than on more frivolous issues
If you focus on the debate, rather than the outcome…
Regularly remind yourself and those you are in discussion with of the purpose of the debate and the intended end goal
If you find yourself using emotional tactics to win an argument…
Make sure that you check in with others as to whether they are in genuine agreement with you; if not, continue to explore their
views and modify your position accordingly
Relationship building You take steps to build networks of contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Identify ways to share your knowledge and experience to enable others to also develop their Relationship building, e.g.
blogging, running workshops, coaching or mentoring
Learn about stakeholder mapping and stakeholder management so that you can focus the development of your network on the
most important relationships
Help your team to develop improved knowledge and understanding of each other’s strengths and skills by running some
meetings where this information is shared
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
Your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts may become an end in itself and take up a disproportionate amount of
your energies
If your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts is becoming an end in itself…
Remember to focus on building contacts and networks with people who are likely to have the greatest influence over your
team’s success
If your network is becoming too much of a drain on your time…
Ensure that you limit the amount of time that you are spending responding to requests from people in your network and that
you are gaining value from others too
If you find that your network is built on shallow relationships…
Focus your network on the most productive relationships, strengthening these by spending more time with only those you have
identified
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths
Courage: You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Emotional control: You are aware of your emotional
‘triggers’ and how to control these to
ensure you remain calm and productive
Enthusiasm: You demonstrate passion and energy
when communicating goals, beliefs,
interests or ideas you feel strongly about
Optimism: You remain positive and upbeat about
the future and your ability to influence it
to your advantage
Resilience: You deal effectively with setbacks and
enjoy overcoming difficult challenges
Self-confidence: You have a strong belief in yourself and
your abilities to accomplish tasks and
goals
Collaboration: You work cooperatively with others to
overcome conflict and build towards a
common goal
Compassion: You demonstrate a deep and genuine
concern for the well-being and welfare of
others
Developing others: You promote other people’s learning and
development to help them achieve their
goals and fulfil their potential
Empathy: You readily identify with other people’s
situations and can see things clearly from
their perspective
Leading: You take responsibility for influencing
and motivating others to contribute to
the goals and success of their team and
organization
Persuasiveness: You are able to win agreement and
support for a position or desired
outcome
Relationship building: You take steps to build networks of
contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between
people that you know
Decisiveness: You make quick, confident, and clear
decisions, even when faced with limited
information
Efficiency: You take a well-ordered and methodical
approach to tasks to achieve planned
outcomes
Flexibility: You remain adaptable and flexible in the
face of unfamiliar or changing situations
Initiative: You take independent action to make
things happen and achieve goals
Results focus: You maintain a strong sense of focus on
results, driving tasks and projects to
completion
Self-improvement: You draw on a wide range of people and
resources in the pursuit of self-
development and learning
Common sense: You make pragmatic judgments based
on practical thinking and previous
experience
Creativity: You generate new ideas and original
solutions to move things forward
Critical thinking: You approach problems and arguments
by breaking them down systematically
and evaluating them objectively
Detail orientation: You pay attention to detail in order to
produce high quality output, no matter
what the pressures
Strategic mindedness: You focus on the future and take a
strategic perspective on issues and
challenges
®
Emotional Relational Execution Thinking
Tools to optimize your performance
Want to find out more about your performance at work? Why not take:
Strengthscope360
Strengthscope360™ is a quick and simple multi-rater assessment which builds on the initial Strengthscope® self-report,
plugging in other people’s feedback (e.g. co-workers)
StrengthscopeLeader
This report allows leaders to discover what it is that makes them truly unique, and provides valuable feedback on how to bring
their authentic style into their leadership role
StrengthscopeTeam
The StrengthscopeTeam™ report consolidates individual Strengthscope® reports at team level, as well as assessing current
team behaviour, enabling teams to take their performance to the next level
StrengthscopeEngage
StrengthscopeEngage™ is split into two reports: StrengthscopeEngage™ Baseline and StrengthscopeEngage™ Progress and
together they measure changes in staff engagement and productive use of strengths following on from development initiatives.
For additional resources to optimize your strengths and reduce performance risks, visit
www.strengthscope.com
Strengthscope is a registered trademark of Strengthscope Limited. While utmost care and attention have been
taken in the creation of Strengthscope , the authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any decisions
arising from the use of the data, or any specific interpretations or inferences arising from the report.
Please note that the content of this report remains proprietary to Strengthscope Limited, and that any distribution or
copying of the report or any of its content is prohibited unless prior agreement is given by Strengthscope Limited in
writing.
™
™
™
™
®
®
WEI CUI. 2024 October 21
© Strengthscope Ltd. All Rights Reserved
3
Confidential
© S
tr en
g th
sc o
p e
20 24
WEI CUI
21 October 2024
Contents Page N
1. Introduction 2
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths 3
3. Your strengths profile 4
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance 5
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths 12
o
®
1. Introduction
The following Strengthscope report is based on your
responses to the questionnaire completed on 21/10/2024.
Strengthscope allows you to bring your best to work, and to
life, every single day through the discovery and development
of your strengths.
We define strengths as the underlying qualities that energize
you and that you are great at (or have the potential to become
great at).
Your Strengthscope report will help you to enhance your
performance and energy at work by improving your
understanding of:
Your unique combination of strengths and how to develop
these to achieve exceptional results
Positive ways of working that will improve your confidence,
motivation and success in any situation
Why focus on your strengths?
Our strengths are the qualities that energize us and enable
us to perform at our best.
By getting the balance right between developing your
strengths and reducing performance risks, you will achieve
higher levels of:
Resilience
Confidence
Engagement
Success
®
®
®
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths
Based on your responses to the questionnaire, your Significant 7 strengths, and the productive behaviours related to
each strength, are listed in alphabetical order. These are the most energizing qualities for you. By focusing on
developing these strengths you will be able to achieve your best results and career success.
Your Significant 7 strengths When performing at your best you:
Common sense
You make pragmatic judgments based on
practical thinking and previous experience
Make good judgments based on careful observation of what works in different
situations
Enjoy learning from experience
Rely a lot on obvious and pragmatic answers that have worked well in the past
Courage
You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Are able to stand up for what you believe in, even when challenging authority
or the status quo
Are able to withstand personal risk, pressure and difficult circumstances
Take tough stands based on your convictions, even if they are unpopular
Creativity
You generate new ideas and original solutions to
move things forward
Encourage others to explore new and creative perspectives when problem
solving
Enjoy coming up with new ideas and original solutions
Have the ability to ‘think outside the box’ to find an original solution to a tough
problem
Critical thinking
You approach problems and arguments by
breaking them down systematically and
evaluating them objectively
Easily spot flaws in arguments and problems based on logical analysis
Enjoy bringing objectivity and clarity to complex situations
Spend time defining and simplifying problems, understanding underlying
assumptions, facts and evidence, before seeking solutions
Decisiveness
You make quick, confident, and clear decisions,
even when faced with limited information
Are willing to make decisions in high pressure situations when time is critical
Are able to make effective and timely decisions even when the data is limited
or decisions produce unpleasant consequences
Quickly perceive the impact and implications of decisions
Persuasiveness
You are able to win agreement and support for a
position or desired outcome
Are able to persuade others to your way of thinking based on the merits of your
position
Enjoy negotiation and debate as they provide opportunity for you to state your
case and win people over
Find that there are times when you will stop at nothing to persuade and
convince others
Relationship building
You take steps to build networks of contacts and
act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Have a wide network of colleagues and contacts
Enjoy meeting new people and getting to know them
Are the sort of person who knows everybody and often introduces people in
your network to one another
3. Your strengths profile
The wheel below shows all of the 24 strengths with your scores
rated on a standardized scale from 1-10. Your scores are
compared to a relevant comparison group, with higher scores
showing areas that energize you the most. It is more important
to focus on the overall distribution of your strengths and
which clusters they fall in rather than your individual score for
each strength.
Your Significant 7 strengths are displayed as purple bars
while the other strengths are shown as blue bars. Higher
bars represent those strengths that are more natural and
energizing for you. The lowest bars represent non-strength
areas that provide you with less energy and enjoyment in
your work.
In the centre of your wheel, you can see percentage scores for each of the four cluster areas. The baseline is 25% for each cluster, so the further
away your scores are from 25%, the greater preference you show towards, or away from, that cluster. Consider this when thinking about your work
and what energizes you more, and less.
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance
While awareness of your strengths is crucial, it is important to translate this awareness into action in order to achieve
peak performance.
This section will help you to develop your strengths and strengthen your performance by providing guidance on ways
to stretch beyond your comfort zone, plus identify and minimize potential risk areas to performance.
Top Tip: create your own strengths habit tracker
To get the most from your strengths, we recommend creating your own strengths habit tracker to help you
build new habits over the coming weeks and months.
Following the suggestions on the following pages, pick out the best development ideas for you and turn them
into new habits to build for the next 30-60 days. Let us know how you get on, we would love to hear from you.
Adopt a ‘less is more’ approach and identify a few priority areas to focus on at any one time to maximize your success.
Your ‘Significant 7’ strengths are listed below.
Common sense You make pragmatic judgments based on practical thinking and previous experience
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Spend time with your organization’s customers to get hands-on knowledge of their experiences with your products and
organization, including their feedback on what works and what doesn't. Use this knowledge to make practical
recommendations to improve your organization and products
Volunteer to test or 'pilot' ideas for their practical relevance and present your findings to the team and/or organization
Study for a project planning qualification that can use your Common sense to deliver successful outcomes
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren’t practical or don’t fit with conventional logic. You may tend to
stifle creative and inspirational ideas
If you have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren't practical or don't fit with conventional logic…
Practise being curious and open-minded to discover new ways of approaching problems and tasks
If you tend to stifle creative and inspirational ideas…
Listen to your creative colleagues and ask lots of probing questions to understand how these ideas could be applied in practice
If you rely too heavily, and expect others to rely too heavily, on processes and past experiences…
Conduct better practice research using your network and online resources to understand how other organizations (within and
outside your sector) approach things
Courage You take on challenges and face risks by standing up for what you believe
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Research effective influencing skills and practise these skills to ensure you can easily stand up for what you believe in ways that
foster healthy working relationships
Seek out hot topic debates and innovation projects that you can contribute to that will help co-workers/stakeholders to look
at problems and issues in a different way
Go outside of your comfort zone by seeking to take on a project that you really believe in that not only stretches your current
skillset, but confidence levels and levels of self-belief
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You readily take on risky positions and challenges that have a high probability of failure. You may be perceived as reckless or
extreme in defending your beliefs
If you find that you are being seen as reckless or extreme in defending your beliefs…
Ensure that you develop a range of influencing skills so that you can gain support for your position without always having to
‘fight’ for the cause. And remember to choose time and prepare for your battles wisely
If you find that you have taken on too many ‘causes’ and that this is starting to exhaust you…
Prioritize those challenges/changes that will contribute greatest value to your team and organization and focus on gaining a
positive outcome in these areas only
If you find that you have become isolated in defending your beliefs…
Take time to listen to, and understand, others’ points of view so that you can modify your approach or bring in others’
perspectives
Creativity You generate new ideas and original solutions to move things forward
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Ask your manager for an opportunity to run short 'creative burst' or brainstorming sessions to improve work processes and
practices or to deal with specific challenges
Identify the three top problems or challenges facing your team or organization currently and use your Creativity strength to
address these
Observe and reflect how you use your intuition – gut feelings and hunches – and learn how to listen to these more consciously
in order to generate ideas and original solutions that move things forward
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context. You may
overlook the more obvious, tried and tested solution
If you generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context…
Partner with colleagues who have more pragmatic, common-sense thinking styles to ensure you understand what is likely to
work taking account of the organization’s history, context and stakeholders
If you tend to overlook more obvious, tried and tested solutions…
Balance your creativity with proven solutions from colleagues and other, similar organizations; avoid re-inventing the wheel
If you feel bored and disengage when your ideas are not considered…
Be open to different thinking styles and remember that some of the biggest breakthroughs can come through building on
what’s already worked well in the past
Critical thinking You approach problems and arguments by breaking them down systematically and evaluating them
objectively
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Discuss your interpretation of data, problems and situations with others and reflect on how effectively you are able to both
interpret and communicate the findings of your analysis
Read online articles about how to take a solutions-focused, problem-solving approach rather than a problem-focused
perspective to maintain a positive, constructive approach
Educate others to use analysis and thinking tools (SWOT, Impact-Effort Grid, Decision Tree, BCG Box, etc.) which will give you
an opportunity to refresh and build out your knowledge and skills of these critical decision tools
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments. This may be perceived as negative or over-
critical by others
If you continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments…
Spend more time listening and using your strength to ask open-ended and probing questions to uncover both benefits and
risks associated with others’ ideas and arguments
If your Critical thinking may be perceived as negative and over-critical by others…
Take time to signal to others in meetings and interactions that you are a strong critical thinker and will at times take a ‘devil’s
advocate’ role to analyze information, ideas and proposals
If colleagues who used to seek your opinion no longer do…
Explain how their strengths complement yours and call on them to balance your thinking style with other strengths, including
Creativity, Optimism and Common sense
Decisiveness You make quick, confident, and clear decisions, even when faced with limited information
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Apply a range of decision-making tools (e.g. Force Field Analysis, Cost Benefit Analysis, Effort-Impact Analysis) to ensure high
quality decision-making
Practise presenting the rationale behind your decisions and recommendations so that others can follow your judgement,
particularly to those who are less decisive than yourself
Identify how colleagues, stakeholders, friends and acquaintances can support you to identify new opportunities where you can
use your decisiveness strength
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You are overhasty or rash in your decision-making, spending little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes
If you are overhasty or rash in your decision-making…
Practise stepping back and reflecting on decisions, as well as gaining others’ views
If you spend little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes…
Use a model such as De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats to ensure you have considered alternatives
If you are perceived by colleagues as bossy, or even a bully…
Take time to consider how you communicate your decisions and consult others first
Persuasiveness You are able to win agreement and support for a position or desired outcome
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Take the initiative in volunteering for assignments where you are required to persuade others to agree to adopt a product,
position or idea
Coach or mentor colleagues who could benefit from developing their ability to persuade others
Use both 'advocacy' and 'inquiry' behaviours when trying to influence – push and pull, tell and sell. This will balance the use of
rational persuasive argument with questioning and facilitation skills
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You try to influence most outcomes in your favour, irrespective of the importance of the issue. You may also indulge in debate for
debate‘s sake, rather than focusing on relevant outcomes
If you try to persuade others habitually, without considering the importance of the issue…
Remember to identify those issues which relate most closely to your own or your team’s goals and focus your energies on these
debates rather than on more frivolous issues
If you focus on the debate, rather than the outcome…
Regularly remind yourself and those you are in discussion with of the purpose of the debate and the intended end goal
If you find yourself using emotional tactics to win an argument…
Make sure that you check in with others as to whether they are in genuine agreement with you; if not, continue to explore their
views and modify your position accordingly
Relationship building You take steps to build networks of contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Identify ways to share your knowledge and experience to enable others to also develop their Relationship building, e.g.
blogging, running workshops, coaching or mentoring
Learn about stakeholder mapping and stakeholder management so that you can focus the development of your network on the
most important relationships
Help your team to develop improved knowledge and understanding of each other’s strengths and skills by running some
meetings where this information is shared
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
Your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts may become an end in itself and take up a disproportionate amount of
your energies
If your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts is becoming an end in itself…
Remember to focus on building contacts and networks with people who are likely to have the greatest influence over your
team’s success
If your network is becoming too much of a drain on your time…
Ensure that you limit the amount of time that you are spending responding to requests from people in your network and that
you are gaining value from others too
If you find that your network is built on shallow relationships…
Focus your network on the most productive relationships, strengthening these by spending more time with only those you have
identified
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths
Courage: You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Emotional control: You are aware of your emotional
‘triggers’ and how to control these to
ensure you remain calm and productive
Enthusiasm: You demonstrate passion and energy
when communicating goals, beliefs,
interests or ideas you feel strongly about
Optimism: You remain positive and upbeat about
the future and your ability to influence it
to your advantage
Resilience: You deal effectively with setbacks and
enjoy overcoming difficult challenges
Self-confidence: You have a strong belief in yourself and
your abilities to accomplish tasks and
goals
Collaboration: You work cooperatively with others to
overcome conflict and build towards a
common goal
Compassion: You demonstrate a deep and genuine
concern for the well-being and welfare of
others
Developing others: You promote other people’s learning and
development to help them achieve their
goals and fulfil their potential
Empathy: You readily identify with other people’s
situations and can see things clearly from
their perspective
Leading: You take responsibility for influencing
and motivating others to contribute to
the goals and success of their team and
organization
Persuasiveness: You are able to win agreement and
support for a position or desired
outcome
Relationship building: You take steps to build networks of
contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between
people that you know
Decisiveness: You make quick, confident, and clear
decisions, even when faced with limited
information
Efficiency: You take a well-ordered and methodical
approach to tasks to achieve planned
outcomes
Flexibility: You remain adaptable and flexible in the
face of unfamiliar or changing situations
Initiative: You take independent action to make
things happen and achieve goals
Results focus: You maintain a strong sense of focus on
results, driving tasks and projects to
completion
Self-improvement: You draw on a wide range of people and
resources in the pursuit of self-
development and learning
Common sense: You make pragmatic judgments based
on practical thinking and previous
experience
Creativity: You generate new ideas and original
solutions to move things forward
Critical thinking: You approach problems and arguments
by breaking them down systematically
and evaluating them objectively
Detail orientation: You pay attention to detail in order to
produce high quality output, no matter
what the pressures
Strategic mindedness: You focus on the future and take a
strategic perspective on issues and
challenges
®
Emotional Relational Execution Thinking
Tools to optimize your performance
Want to find out more about your performance at work? Why not take:
Strengthscope360
Strengthscope360™ is a quick and simple multi-rater assessment which builds on the initial Strengthscope® self-report,
plugging in other people’s feedback (e.g. co-workers)
StrengthscopeLeader
This report allows leaders to discover what it is that makes them truly unique, and provides valuable feedback on how to bring
their authentic style into their leadership role
StrengthscopeTeam
The StrengthscopeTeam™ report consolidates individual Strengthscope® reports at team level, as well as assessing current
team behaviour, enabling teams to take their performance to the next level
StrengthscopeEngage
StrengthscopeEngage™ is split into two reports: StrengthscopeEngage™ Baseline and StrengthscopeEngage™ Progress and
together they measure changes in staff engagement and productive use of strengths following on from development initiatives.
For additional resources to optimize your strengths and reduce performance risks, visit
www.strengthscope.com
Strengthscope is a registered trademark of Strengthscope Limited. While utmost care and attention have been
taken in the creation of Strengthscope , the authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any decisions
arising from the use of the data, or any specific interpretations or inferences arising from the report.
Please note that the content of this report remains proprietary to Strengthscope Limited, and that any distribution or
copying of the report or any of its content is prohibited unless prior agreement is given by Strengthscope Limited in
writing.
™
™
™
™
®
®
WEI CUI. 2024 October 21
© Strengthscope Ltd. All Rights Reserved
4
Confidential
© S
tr en
g th
sc o
p e
20 24
WEI CUI
21 October 2024
Contents Page N
1. Introduction 2
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths 3
3. Your strengths profile 4
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance 5
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths 12
o
®
1. Introduction
The following Strengthscope report is based on your
responses to the questionnaire completed on 21/10/2024.
Strengthscope allows you to bring your best to work, and to
life, every single day through the discovery and development
of your strengths.
We define strengths as the underlying qualities that energize
you and that you are great at (or have the potential to become
great at).
Your Strengthscope report will help you to enhance your
performance and energy at work by improving your
understanding of:
Your unique combination of strengths and how to develop
these to achieve exceptional results
Positive ways of working that will improve your confidence,
motivation and success in any situation
Why focus on your strengths?
Our strengths are the qualities that energize us and enable
us to perform at our best.
By getting the balance right between developing your
strengths and reducing performance risks, you will achieve
higher levels of:
Resilience
Confidence
Engagement
Success
®
®
®
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths
Based on your responses to the questionnaire, your Significant 7 strengths, and the productive behaviours related to
each strength, are listed in alphabetical order. These are the most energizing qualities for you. By focusing on
developing these strengths you will be able to achieve your best results and career success.
Your Significant 7 strengths When performing at your best you:
Common sense
You make pragmatic judgments based on
practical thinking and previous experience
Make good judgments based on careful observation of what works in different
situations
Enjoy learning from experience
Rely a lot on obvious and pragmatic answers that have worked well in the past
Courage
You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Are able to stand up for what you believe in, even when challenging authority
or the status quo
Are able to withstand personal risk, pressure and difficult circumstances
Take tough stands based on your convictions, even if they are unpopular
Creativity
You generate new ideas and original solutions to
move things forward
Encourage others to explore new and creative perspectives when problem
solving
Enjoy coming up with new ideas and original solutions
Have the ability to ‘think outside the box’ to find an original solution to a tough
problem
Critical thinking
You approach problems and arguments by
breaking them down systematically and
evaluating them objectively
Easily spot flaws in arguments and problems based on logical analysis
Enjoy bringing objectivity and clarity to complex situations
Spend time defining and simplifying problems, understanding underlying
assumptions, facts and evidence, before seeking solutions
Decisiveness
You make quick, confident, and clear decisions,
even when faced with limited information
Are willing to make decisions in high pressure situations when time is critical
Are able to make effective and timely decisions even when the data is limited
or decisions produce unpleasant consequences
Quickly perceive the impact and implications of decisions
Persuasiveness
You are able to win agreement and support for a
position or desired outcome
Are able to persuade others to your way of thinking based on the merits of your
position
Enjoy negotiation and debate as they provide opportunity for you to state your
case and win people over
Find that there are times when you will stop at nothing to persuade and
convince others
Relationship building
You take steps to build networks of contacts and
act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Have a wide network of colleagues and contacts
Enjoy meeting new people and getting to know them
Are the sort of person who knows everybody and often introduces people in
your network to one another
3. Your strengths profile
The wheel below shows all of the 24 strengths with your scores
rated on a standardized scale from 1-10. Your scores are
compared to a relevant comparison group, with higher scores
showing areas that energize you the most. It is more important
to focus on the overall distribution of your strengths and
which clusters they fall in rather than your individual score for
each strength.
Your Significant 7 strengths are displayed as purple bars
while the other strengths are shown as blue bars. Higher
bars represent those strengths that are more natural and
energizing for you. The lowest bars represent non-strength
areas that provide you with less energy and enjoyment in
your work.
In the centre of your wheel, you can see percentage scores for each of the four cluster areas. The baseline is 25% for each cluster, so the further
away your scores are from 25%, the greater preference you show towards, or away from, that cluster. Consider this when thinking about your work
and what energizes you more, and less.
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance
While awareness of your strengths is crucial, it is important to translate this awareness into action in order to achieve
peak performance.
This section will help you to develop your strengths and strengthen your performance by providing guidance on ways
to stretch beyond your comfort zone, plus identify and minimize potential risk areas to performance.
Top Tip: create your own strengths habit tracker
To get the most from your strengths, we recommend creating your own strengths habit tracker to help you
build new habits over the coming weeks and months.
Following the suggestions on the following pages, pick out the best development ideas for you and turn them
into new habits to build for the next 30-60 days. Let us know how you get on, we would love to hear from you.
Adopt a ‘less is more’ approach and identify a few priority areas to focus on at any one time to maximize your success.
Your ‘Significant 7’ strengths are listed below.
Common sense You make pragmatic judgments based on practical thinking and previous experience
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Spend time with your organization’s customers to get hands-on knowledge of their experiences with your products and
organization, including their feedback on what works and what doesn't. Use this knowledge to make practical
recommendations to improve your organization and products
Volunteer to test or 'pilot' ideas for their practical relevance and present your findings to the team and/or organization
Study for a project planning qualification that can use your Common sense to deliver successful outcomes
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren’t practical or don’t fit with conventional logic. You may tend to
stifle creative and inspirational ideas
If you have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren't practical or don't fit with conventional logic…
Practise being curious and open-minded to discover new ways of approaching problems and tasks
If you tend to stifle creative and inspirational ideas…
Listen to your creative colleagues and ask lots of probing questions to understand how these ideas could be applied in practice
If you rely too heavily, and expect others to rely too heavily, on processes and past experiences…
Conduct better practice research using your network and online resources to understand how other organizations (within and
outside your sector) approach things
Courage You take on challenges and face risks by standing up for what you believe
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Research effective influencing skills and practise these skills to ensure you can easily stand up for what you believe in ways that
foster healthy working relationships
Seek out hot topic debates and innovation projects that you can contribute to that will help co-workers/stakeholders to look
at problems and issues in a different way
Go outside of your comfort zone by seeking to take on a project that you really believe in that not only stretches your current
skillset, but confidence levels and levels of self-belief
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You readily take on risky positions and challenges that have a high probability of failure. You may be perceived as reckless or
extreme in defending your beliefs
If you find that you are being seen as reckless or extreme in defending your beliefs…
Ensure that you develop a range of influencing skills so that you can gain support for your position without always having to
‘fight’ for the cause. And remember to choose time and prepare for your battles wisely
If you find that you have taken on too many ‘causes’ and that this is starting to exhaust you…
Prioritize those challenges/changes that will contribute greatest value to your team and organization and focus on gaining a
positive outcome in these areas only
If you find that you have become isolated in defending your beliefs…
Take time to listen to, and understand, others’ points of view so that you can modify your approach or bring in others’
perspectives
Creativity You generate new ideas and original solutions to move things forward
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Ask your manager for an opportunity to run short 'creative burst' or brainstorming sessions to improve work processes and
practices or to deal with specific challenges
Identify the three top problems or challenges facing your team or organization currently and use your Creativity strength to
address these
Observe and reflect how you use your intuition – gut feelings and hunches – and learn how to listen to these more consciously
in order to generate ideas and original solutions that move things forward
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context. You may
overlook the more obvious, tried and tested solution
If you generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context…
Partner with colleagues who have more pragmatic, common-sense thinking styles to ensure you understand what is likely to
work taking account of the organization’s history, context and stakeholders
If you tend to overlook more obvious, tried and tested solutions…
Balance your creativity with proven solutions from colleagues and other, similar organizations; avoid re-inventing the wheel
If you feel bored and disengage when your ideas are not considered…
Be open to different thinking styles and remember that some of the biggest breakthroughs can come through building on
what’s already worked well in the past
Critical thinking You approach problems and arguments by breaking them down systematically and evaluating them
objectively
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Discuss your interpretation of data, problems and situations with others and reflect on how effectively you are able to both
interpret and communicate the findings of your analysis
Read online articles about how to take a solutions-focused, problem-solving approach rather than a problem-focused
perspective to maintain a positive, constructive approach
Educate others to use analysis and thinking tools (SWOT, Impact-Effort Grid, Decision Tree, BCG Box, etc.) which will give you
an opportunity to refresh and build out your knowledge and skills of these critical decision tools
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments. This may be perceived as negative or over-
critical by others
If you continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments…
Spend more time listening and using your strength to ask open-ended and probing questions to uncover both benefits and
risks associated with others’ ideas and arguments
If your Critical thinking may be perceived as negative and over-critical by others…
Take time to signal to others in meetings and interactions that you are a strong critical thinker and will at times take a ‘devil’s
advocate’ role to analyze information, ideas and proposals
If colleagues who used to seek your opinion no longer do…
Explain how their strengths complement yours and call on them to balance your thinking style with other strengths, including
Creativity, Optimism and Common sense
Decisiveness You make quick, confident, and clear decisions, even when faced with limited information
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Apply a range of decision-making tools (e.g. Force Field Analysis, Cost Benefit Analysis, Effort-Impact Analysis) to ensure high
quality decision-making
Practise presenting the rationale behind your decisions and recommendations so that others can follow your judgement,
particularly to those who are less decisive than yourself
Identify how colleagues, stakeholders, friends and acquaintances can support you to identify new opportunities where you can
use your decisiveness strength
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You are overhasty or rash in your decision-making, spending little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes
If you are overhasty or rash in your decision-making…
Practise stepping back and reflecting on decisions, as well as gaining others’ views
If you spend little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes…
Use a model such as De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats to ensure you have considered alternatives
If you are perceived by colleagues as bossy, or even a bully…
Take time to consider how you communicate your decisions and consult others first
Persuasiveness You are able to win agreement and support for a position or desired outcome
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Take the initiative in volunteering for assignments where you are required to persuade others to agree to adopt a product,
position or idea
Coach or mentor colleagues who could benefit from developing their ability to persuade others
Use both 'advocacy' and 'inquiry' behaviours when trying to influence – push and pull, tell and sell. This will balance the use of
rational persuasive argument with questioning and facilitation skills
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You try to influence most outcomes in your favour, irrespective of the importance of the issue. You may also indulge in debate for
debate‘s sake, rather than focusing on relevant outcomes
If you try to persuade others habitually, without considering the importance of the issue…
Remember to identify those issues which relate most closely to your own or your team’s goals and focus your energies on these
debates rather than on more frivolous issues
If you focus on the debate, rather than the outcome…
Regularly remind yourself and those you are in discussion with of the purpose of the debate and the intended end goal
If you find yourself using emotional tactics to win an argument…
Make sure that you check in with others as to whether they are in genuine agreement with you; if not, continue to explore their
views and modify your position accordingly
Relationship building You take steps to build networks of contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Identify ways to share your knowledge and experience to enable others to also develop their Relationship building, e.g.
blogging, running workshops, coaching or mentoring
Learn about stakeholder mapping and stakeholder management so that you can focus the development of your network on the
most important relationships
Help your team to develop improved knowledge and understanding of each other’s strengths and skills by running some
meetings where this information is shared
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
Your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts may become an end in itself and take up a disproportionate amount of
your energies
If your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts is becoming an end in itself…
Remember to focus on building contacts and networks with people who are likely to have the greatest influence over your
team’s success
If your network is becoming too much of a drain on your time…
Ensure that you limit the amount of time that you are spending responding to requests from people in your network and that
you are gaining value from others too
If you find that your network is built on shallow relationships…
Focus your network on the most productive relationships, strengthening these by spending more time with only those you have
identified
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths
Courage: You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Emotional control: You are aware of your emotional
‘triggers’ and how to control these to
ensure you remain calm and productive
Enthusiasm: You demonstrate passion and energy
when communicating goals, beliefs,
interests or ideas you feel strongly about
Optimism: You remain positive and upbeat about
the future and your ability to influence it
to your advantage
Resilience: You deal effectively with setbacks and
enjoy overcoming difficult challenges
Self-confidence: You have a strong belief in yourself and
your abilities to accomplish tasks and
goals
Collaboration: You work cooperatively with others to
overcome conflict and build towards a
common goal
Compassion: You demonstrate a deep and genuine
concern for the well-being and welfare of
others
Developing others: You promote other people’s learning and
development to help them achieve their
goals and fulfil their potential
Empathy: You readily identify with other people’s
situations and can see things clearly from
their perspective
Leading: You take responsibility for influencing
and motivating others to contribute to
the goals and success of their team and
organization
Persuasiveness: You are able to win agreement and
support for a position or desired
outcome
Relationship building: You take steps to build networks of
contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between
people that you know
Decisiveness: You make quick, confident, and clear
decisions, even when faced with limited
information
Efficiency: You take a well-ordered and methodical
approach to tasks to achieve planned
outcomes
Flexibility: You remain adaptable and flexible in the
face of unfamiliar or changing situations
Initiative: You take independent action to make
things happen and achieve goals
Results focus: You maintain a strong sense of focus on
results, driving tasks and projects to
completion
Self-improvement: You draw on a wide range of people and
resources in the pursuit of self-
development and learning
Common sense: You make pragmatic judgments based
on practical thinking and previous
experience
Creativity: You generate new ideas and original
solutions to move things forward
Critical thinking: You approach problems and arguments
by breaking them down systematically
and evaluating them objectively
Detail orientation: You pay attention to detail in order to
produce high quality output, no matter
what the pressures
Strategic mindedness: You focus on the future and take a
strategic perspective on issues and
challenges
®
Emotional Relational Execution Thinking
Tools to optimize your performance
Want to find out more about your performance at work? Why not take:
Strengthscope360
Strengthscope360™ is a quick and simple multi-rater assessment which builds on the initial Strengthscope® self-report,
plugging in other people’s feedback (e.g. co-workers)
StrengthscopeLeader
This report allows leaders to discover what it is that makes them truly unique, and provides valuable feedback on how to bring
their authentic style into their leadership role
StrengthscopeTeam
The StrengthscopeTeam™ report consolidates individual Strengthscope® reports at team level, as well as assessing current
team behaviour, enabling teams to take their performance to the next level
StrengthscopeEngage
StrengthscopeEngage™ is split into two reports: StrengthscopeEngage™ Baseline and StrengthscopeEngage™ Progress and
together they measure changes in staff engagement and productive use of strengths following on from development initiatives.
For additional resources to optimize your strengths and reduce performance risks, visit
www.strengthscope.com
Strengthscope is a registered trademark of Strengthscope Limited. While utmost care and attention have been
taken in the creation of Strengthscope , the authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any decisions
arising from the use of the data, or any specific interpretations or inferences arising from the report.
Please note that the content of this report remains proprietary to Strengthscope Limited, and that any distribution or
copying of the report or any of its content is prohibited unless prior agreement is given by Strengthscope Limited in
writing.
™
™
™
™
®
®
WEI CUI. 2024 October 21
© Strengthscope Ltd. All Rights Reserved
5
Confidential
© S
tr en
g th
sc o
p e
20 24
WEI CUI
21 October 2024
Contents Page N
1. Introduction 2
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths 3
3. Your strengths profile 4
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance 5
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths 12
o
®
1. Introduction
The following Strengthscope report is based on your
responses to the questionnaire completed on 21/10/2024.
Strengthscope allows you to bring your best to work, and to
life, every single day through the discovery and development
of your strengths.
We define strengths as the underlying qualities that energize
you and that you are great at (or have the potential to become
great at).
Your Strengthscope report will help you to enhance your
performance and energy at work by improving your
understanding of:
Your unique combination of strengths and how to develop
these to achieve exceptional results
Positive ways of working that will improve your confidence,
motivation and success in any situation
Why focus on your strengths?
Our strengths are the qualities that energize us and enable
us to perform at our best.
By getting the balance right between developing your
strengths and reducing performance risks, you will achieve
higher levels of:
Resilience
Confidence
Engagement
Success
®
®
®
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths
Based on your responses to the questionnaire, your Significant 7 strengths, and the productive behaviours related to
each strength, are listed in alphabetical order. These are the most energizing qualities for you. By focusing on
developing these strengths you will be able to achieve your best results and career success.
Your Significant 7 strengths When performing at your best you:
Common sense
You make pragmatic judgments based on
practical thinking and previous experience
Make good judgments based on careful observation of what works in different
situations
Enjoy learning from experience
Rely a lot on obvious and pragmatic answers that have worked well in the past
Courage
You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Are able to stand up for what you believe in, even when challenging authority
or the status quo
Are able to withstand personal risk, pressure and difficult circumstances
Take tough stands based on your convictions, even if they are unpopular
Creativity
You generate new ideas and original solutions to
move things forward
Encourage others to explore new and creative perspectives when problem
solving
Enjoy coming up with new ideas and original solutions
Have the ability to ‘think outside the box’ to find an original solution to a tough
problem
Critical thinking
You approach problems and arguments by
breaking them down systematically and
evaluating them objectively
Easily spot flaws in arguments and problems based on logical analysis
Enjoy bringing objectivity and clarity to complex situations
Spend time defining and simplifying problems, understanding underlying
assumptions, facts and evidence, before seeking solutions
Decisiveness
You make quick, confident, and clear decisions,
even when faced with limited information
Are willing to make decisions in high pressure situations when time is critical
Are able to make effective and timely decisions even when the data is limited
or decisions produce unpleasant consequences
Quickly perceive the impact and implications of decisions
Persuasiveness
You are able to win agreement and support for a
position or desired outcome
Are able to persuade others to your way of thinking based on the merits of your
position
Enjoy negotiation and debate as they provide opportunity for you to state your
case and win people over
Find that there are times when you will stop at nothing to persuade and
convince others
Relationship building
You take steps to build networks of contacts and
act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Have a wide network of colleagues and contacts
Enjoy meeting new people and getting to know them
Are the sort of person who knows everybody and often introduces people in
your network to one another
3. Your strengths profile
The wheel below shows all of the 24 strengths with your scores
rated on a standardized scale from 1-10. Your scores are
compared to a relevant comparison group, with higher scores
showing areas that energize you the most. It is more important
to focus on the overall distribution of your strengths and
which clusters they fall in rather than your individual score for
each strength.
Your Significant 7 strengths are displayed as purple bars
while the other strengths are shown as blue bars. Higher
bars represent those strengths that are more natural and
energizing for you. The lowest bars represent non-strength
areas that provide you with less energy and enjoyment in
your work.
In the centre of your wheel, you can see percentage scores for each of the four cluster areas. The baseline is 25% for each cluster, so the further
away your scores are from 25%, the greater preference you show towards, or away from, that cluster. Consider this when thinking about your work
and what energizes you more, and less.
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance
While awareness of your strengths is crucial, it is important to translate this awareness into action in order to achieve
peak performance.
This section will help you to develop your strengths and strengthen your performance by providing guidance on ways
to stretch beyond your comfort zone, plus identify and minimize potential risk areas to performance.
Top Tip: create your own strengths habit tracker
To get the most from your strengths, we recommend creating your own strengths habit tracker to help you
build new habits over the coming weeks and months.
Following the suggestions on the following pages, pick out the best development ideas for you and turn them
into new habits to build for the next 30-60 days. Let us know how you get on, we would love to hear from you.
Adopt a ‘less is more’ approach and identify a few priority areas to focus on at any one time to maximize your success.
Your ‘Significant 7’ strengths are listed below.
Common sense You make pragmatic judgments based on practical thinking and previous experience
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Spend time with your organization’s customers to get hands-on knowledge of their experiences with your products and
organization, including their feedback on what works and what doesn't. Use this knowledge to make practical
recommendations to improve your organization and products
Volunteer to test or 'pilot' ideas for their practical relevance and present your findings to the team and/or organization
Study for a project planning qualification that can use your Common sense to deliver successful outcomes
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren’t practical or don’t fit with conventional logic. You may tend to
stifle creative and inspirational ideas
If you have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren't practical or don't fit with conventional logic…
Practise being curious and open-minded to discover new ways of approaching problems and tasks
If you tend to stifle creative and inspirational ideas…
Listen to your creative colleagues and ask lots of probing questions to understand how these ideas could be applied in practice
If you rely too heavily, and expect others to rely too heavily, on processes and past experiences…
Conduct better practice research using your network and online resources to understand how other organizations (within and
outside your sector) approach things
Courage You take on challenges and face risks by standing up for what you believe
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Research effective influencing skills and practise these skills to ensure you can easily stand up for what you believe in ways that
foster healthy working relationships
Seek out hot topic debates and innovation projects that you can contribute to that will help co-workers/stakeholders to look
at problems and issues in a different way
Go outside of your comfort zone by seeking to take on a project that you really believe in that not only stretches your current
skillset, but confidence levels and levels of self-belief
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You readily take on risky positions and challenges that have a high probability of failure. You may be perceived as reckless or
extreme in defending your beliefs
If you find that you are being seen as reckless or extreme in defending your beliefs…
Ensure that you develop a range of influencing skills so that you can gain support for your position without always having to
‘fight’ for the cause. And remember to choose time and prepare for your battles wisely
If you find that you have taken on too many ‘causes’ and that this is starting to exhaust you…
Prioritize those challenges/changes that will contribute greatest value to your team and organization and focus on gaining a
positive outcome in these areas only
If you find that you have become isolated in defending your beliefs…
Take time to listen to, and understand, others’ points of view so that you can modify your approach or bring in others’
perspectives
Creativity You generate new ideas and original solutions to move things forward
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Ask your manager for an opportunity to run short 'creative burst' or brainstorming sessions to improve work processes and
practices or to deal with specific challenges
Identify the three top problems or challenges facing your team or organization currently and use your Creativity strength to
address these
Observe and reflect how you use your intuition – gut feelings and hunches – and learn how to listen to these more consciously
in order to generate ideas and original solutions that move things forward
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context. You may
overlook the more obvious, tried and tested solution
If you generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context…
Partner with colleagues who have more pragmatic, common-sense thinking styles to ensure you understand what is likely to
work taking account of the organization’s history, context and stakeholders
If you tend to overlook more obvious, tried and tested solutions…
Balance your creativity with proven solutions from colleagues and other, similar organizations; avoid re-inventing the wheel
If you feel bored and disengage when your ideas are not considered…
Be open to different thinking styles and remember that some of the biggest breakthroughs can come through building on
what’s already worked well in the past
Critical thinking You approach problems and arguments by breaking them down systematically and evaluating them
objectively
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Discuss your interpretation of data, problems and situations with others and reflect on how effectively you are able to both
interpret and communicate the findings of your analysis
Read online articles about how to take a solutions-focused, problem-solving approach rather than a problem-focused
perspective to maintain a positive, constructive approach
Educate others to use analysis and thinking tools (SWOT, Impact-Effort Grid, Decision Tree, BCG Box, etc.) which will give you
an opportunity to refresh and build out your knowledge and skills of these critical decision tools
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments. This may be perceived as negative or over-
critical by others
If you continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments…
Spend more time listening and using your strength to ask open-ended and probing questions to uncover both benefits and
risks associated with others’ ideas and arguments
If your Critical thinking may be perceived as negative and over-critical by others…
Take time to signal to others in meetings and interactions that you are a strong critical thinker and will at times take a ‘devil’s
advocate’ role to analyze information, ideas and proposals
If colleagues who used to seek your opinion no longer do…
Explain how their strengths complement yours and call on them to balance your thinking style with other strengths, including
Creativity, Optimism and Common sense
Decisiveness You make quick, confident, and clear decisions, even when faced with limited information
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Apply a range of decision-making tools (e.g. Force Field Analysis, Cost Benefit Analysis, Effort-Impact Analysis) to ensure high
quality decision-making
Practise presenting the rationale behind your decisions and recommendations so that others can follow your judgement,
particularly to those who are less decisive than yourself
Identify how colleagues, stakeholders, friends and acquaintances can support you to identify new opportunities where you can
use your decisiveness strength
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You are overhasty or rash in your decision-making, spending little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes
If you are overhasty or rash in your decision-making…
Practise stepping back and reflecting on decisions, as well as gaining others’ views
If you spend little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes…
Use a model such as De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats to ensure you have considered alternatives
If you are perceived by colleagues as bossy, or even a bully…
Take time to consider how you communicate your decisions and consult others first
Persuasiveness You are able to win agreement and support for a position or desired outcome
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Take the initiative in volunteering for assignments where you are required to persuade others to agree to adopt a product,
position or idea
Coach or mentor colleagues who could benefit from developing their ability to persuade others
Use both 'advocacy' and 'inquiry' behaviours when trying to influence – push and pull, tell and sell. This will balance the use of
rational persuasive argument with questioning and facilitation skills
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You try to influence most outcomes in your favour, irrespective of the importance of the issue. You may also indulge in debate for
debate‘s sake, rather than focusing on relevant outcomes
If you try to persuade others habitually, without considering the importance of the issue…
Remember to identify those issues which relate most closely to your own or your team’s goals and focus your energies on these
debates rather than on more frivolous issues
If you focus on the debate, rather than the outcome…
Regularly remind yourself and those you are in discussion with of the purpose of the debate and the intended end goal
If you find yourself using emotional tactics to win an argument…
Make sure that you check in with others as to whether they are in genuine agreement with you; if not, continue to explore their
views and modify your position accordingly
Relationship building You take steps to build networks of contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Identify ways to share your knowledge and experience to enable others to also develop their Relationship building, e.g.
blogging, running workshops, coaching or mentoring
Learn about stakeholder mapping and stakeholder management so that you can focus the development of your network on the
most important relationships
Help your team to develop improved knowledge and understanding of each other’s strengths and skills by running some
meetings where this information is shared
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
Your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts may become an end in itself and take up a disproportionate amount of
your energies
If your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts is becoming an end in itself…
Remember to focus on building contacts and networks with people who are likely to have the greatest influence over your
team’s success
If your network is becoming too much of a drain on your time…
Ensure that you limit the amount of time that you are spending responding to requests from people in your network and that
you are gaining value from others too
If you find that your network is built on shallow relationships…
Focus your network on the most productive relationships, strengthening these by spending more time with only those you have
identified
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths
Courage: You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Emotional control: You are aware of your emotional
‘triggers’ and how to control these to
ensure you remain calm and productive
Enthusiasm: You demonstrate passion and energy
when communicating goals, beliefs,
interests or ideas you feel strongly about
Optimism: You remain positive and upbeat about
the future and your ability to influence it
to your advantage
Resilience: You deal effectively with setbacks and
enjoy overcoming difficult challenges
Self-confidence: You have a strong belief in yourself and
your abilities to accomplish tasks and
goals
Collaboration: You work cooperatively with others to
overcome conflict and build towards a
common goal
Compassion: You demonstrate a deep and genuine
concern for the well-being and welfare of
others
Developing others: You promote other people’s learning and
development to help them achieve their
goals and fulfil their potential
Empathy: You readily identify with other people’s
situations and can see things clearly from
their perspective
Leading: You take responsibility for influencing
and motivating others to contribute to
the goals and success of their team and
organization
Persuasiveness: You are able to win agreement and
support for a position or desired
outcome
Relationship building: You take steps to build networks of
contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between
people that you know
Decisiveness: You make quick, confident, and clear
decisions, even when faced with limited
information
Efficiency: You take a well-ordered and methodical
approach to tasks to achieve planned
outcomes
Flexibility: You remain adaptable and flexible in the
face of unfamiliar or changing situations
Initiative: You take independent action to make
things happen and achieve goals
Results focus: You maintain a strong sense of focus on
results, driving tasks and projects to
completion
Self-improvement: You draw on a wide range of people and
resources in the pursuit of self-
development and learning
Common sense: You make pragmatic judgments based
on practical thinking and previous
experience
Creativity: You generate new ideas and original
solutions to move things forward
Critical thinking: You approach problems and arguments
by breaking them down systematically
and evaluating them objectively
Detail orientation: You pay attention to detail in order to
produce high quality output, no matter
what the pressures
Strategic mindedness: You focus on the future and take a
strategic perspective on issues and
challenges
®
Emotional Relational Execution Thinking
Tools to optimize your performance
Want to find out more about your performance at work? Why not take:
Strengthscope360
Strengthscope360™ is a quick and simple multi-rater assessment which builds on the initial Strengthscope® self-report,
plugging in other people’s feedback (e.g. co-workers)
StrengthscopeLeader
This report allows leaders to discover what it is that makes them truly unique, and provides valuable feedback on how to bring
their authentic style into their leadership role
StrengthscopeTeam
The StrengthscopeTeam™ report consolidates individual Strengthscope® reports at team level, as well as assessing current
team behaviour, enabling teams to take their performance to the next level
StrengthscopeEngage
StrengthscopeEngage™ is split into two reports: StrengthscopeEngage™ Baseline and StrengthscopeEngage™ Progress and
together they measure changes in staff engagement and productive use of strengths following on from development initiatives.
For additional resources to optimize your strengths and reduce performance risks, visit
www.strengthscope.com
Strengthscope is a registered trademark of Strengthscope Limited. While utmost care and attention have been
taken in the creation of Strengthscope , the authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any decisions
arising from the use of the data, or any specific interpretations or inferences arising from the report.
Please note that the content of this report remains proprietary to Strengthscope Limited, and that any distribution or
copying of the report or any of its content is prohibited unless prior agreement is given by Strengthscope Limited in
writing.
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WEI CUI. 2024 October 21
© Strengthscope Ltd. All Rights Reserved
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Confidential
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WEI CUI
21 October 2024
Contents Page N
1. Introduction 2
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths 3
3. Your strengths profile 4
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance 5
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths 12
o
®
1. Introduction
The following Strengthscope report is based on your
responses to the questionnaire completed on 21/10/2024.
Strengthscope allows you to bring your best to work, and to
life, every single day through the discovery and development
of your strengths.
We define strengths as the underlying qualities that energize
you and that you are great at (or have the potential to become
great at).
Your Strengthscope report will help you to enhance your
performance and energy at work by improving your
understanding of:
Your unique combination of strengths and how to develop
these to achieve exceptional results
Positive ways of working that will improve your confidence,
motivation and success in any situation
Why focus on your strengths?
Our strengths are the qualities that energize us and enable
us to perform at our best.
By getting the balance right between developing your
strengths and reducing performance risks, you will achieve
higher levels of:
Resilience
Confidence
Engagement
Success
®
®
®
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths
Based on your responses to the questionnaire, your Significant 7 strengths, and the productive behaviours related to
each strength, are listed in alphabetical order. These are the most energizing qualities for you. By focusing on
developing these strengths you will be able to achieve your best results and career success.
Your Significant 7 strengths When performing at your best you:
Common sense
You make pragmatic judgments based on
practical thinking and previous experience
Make good judgments based on careful observation of what works in different
situations
Enjoy learning from experience
Rely a lot on obvious and pragmatic answers that have worked well in the past
Courage
You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Are able to stand up for what you believe in, even when challenging authority
or the status quo
Are able to withstand personal risk, pressure and difficult circumstances
Take tough stands based on your convictions, even if they are unpopular
Creativity
You generate new ideas and original solutions to
move things forward
Encourage others to explore new and creative perspectives when problem
solving
Enjoy coming up with new ideas and original solutions
Have the ability to ‘think outside the box’ to find an original solution to a tough
problem
Critical thinking
You approach problems and arguments by
breaking them down systematically and
evaluating them objectively
Easily spot flaws in arguments and problems based on logical analysis
Enjoy bringing objectivity and clarity to complex situations
Spend time defining and simplifying problems, understanding underlying
assumptions, facts and evidence, before seeking solutions
Decisiveness
You make quick, confident, and clear decisions,
even when faced with limited information
Are willing to make decisions in high pressure situations when time is critical
Are able to make effective and timely decisions even when the data is limited
or decisions produce unpleasant consequences
Quickly perceive the impact and implications of decisions
Persuasiveness
You are able to win agreement and support for a
position or desired outcome
Are able to persuade others to your way of thinking based on the merits of your
position
Enjoy negotiation and debate as they provide opportunity for you to state your
case and win people over
Find that there are times when you will stop at nothing to persuade and
convince others
Relationship building
You take steps to build networks of contacts and
act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Have a wide network of colleagues and contacts
Enjoy meeting new people and getting to know them
Are the sort of person who knows everybody and often introduces people in
your network to one another
3. Your strengths profile
The wheel below shows all of the 24 strengths with your scores
rated on a standardized scale from 1-10. Your scores are
compared to a relevant comparison group, with higher scores
showing areas that energize you the most. It is more important
to focus on the overall distribution of your strengths and
which clusters they fall in rather than your individual score for
each strength.
Your Significant 7 strengths are displayed as purple bars
while the other strengths are shown as blue bars. Higher
bars represent those strengths that are more natural and
energizing for you. The lowest bars represent non-strength
areas that provide you with less energy and enjoyment in
your work.
In the centre of your wheel, you can see percentage scores for each of the four cluster areas. The baseline is 25% for each cluster, so the further
away your scores are from 25%, the greater preference you show towards, or away from, that cluster. Consider this when thinking about your work
and what energizes you more, and less.
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance
While awareness of your strengths is crucial, it is important to translate this awareness into action in order to achieve
peak performance.
This section will help you to develop your strengths and strengthen your performance by providing guidance on ways
to stretch beyond your comfort zone, plus identify and minimize potential risk areas to performance.
Top Tip: create your own strengths habit tracker
To get the most from your strengths, we recommend creating your own strengths habit tracker to help you
build new habits over the coming weeks and months.
Following the suggestions on the following pages, pick out the best development ideas for you and turn them
into new habits to build for the next 30-60 days. Let us know how you get on, we would love to hear from you.
Adopt a ‘less is more’ approach and identify a few priority areas to focus on at any one time to maximize your success.
Your ‘Significant 7’ strengths are listed below.
Common sense You make pragmatic judgments based on practical thinking and previous experience
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Spend time with your organization’s customers to get hands-on knowledge of their experiences with your products and
organization, including their feedback on what works and what doesn't. Use this knowledge to make practical
recommendations to improve your organization and products
Volunteer to test or 'pilot' ideas for their practical relevance and present your findings to the team and/or organization
Study for a project planning qualification that can use your Common sense to deliver successful outcomes
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren’t practical or don’t fit with conventional logic. You may tend to
stifle creative and inspirational ideas
If you have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren't practical or don't fit with conventional logic…
Practise being curious and open-minded to discover new ways of approaching problems and tasks
If you tend to stifle creative and inspirational ideas…
Listen to your creative colleagues and ask lots of probing questions to understand how these ideas could be applied in practice
If you rely too heavily, and expect others to rely too heavily, on processes and past experiences…
Conduct better practice research using your network and online resources to understand how other organizations (within and
outside your sector) approach things
Courage You take on challenges and face risks by standing up for what you believe
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Research effective influencing skills and practise these skills to ensure you can easily stand up for what you believe in ways that
foster healthy working relationships
Seek out hot topic debates and innovation projects that you can contribute to that will help co-workers/stakeholders to look
at problems and issues in a different way
Go outside of your comfort zone by seeking to take on a project that you really believe in that not only stretches your current
skillset, but confidence levels and levels of self-belief
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You readily take on risky positions and challenges that have a high probability of failure. You may be perceived as reckless or
extreme in defending your beliefs
If you find that you are being seen as reckless or extreme in defending your beliefs…
Ensure that you develop a range of influencing skills so that you can gain support for your position without always having to
‘fight’ for the cause. And remember to choose time and prepare for your battles wisely
If you find that you have taken on too many ‘causes’ and that this is starting to exhaust you…
Prioritize those challenges/changes that will contribute greatest value to your team and organization and focus on gaining a
positive outcome in these areas only
If you find that you have become isolated in defending your beliefs…
Take time to listen to, and understand, others’ points of view so that you can modify your approach or bring in others’
perspectives
Creativity You generate new ideas and original solutions to move things forward
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Ask your manager for an opportunity to run short 'creative burst' or brainstorming sessions to improve work processes and
practices or to deal with specific challenges
Identify the three top problems or challenges facing your team or organization currently and use your Creativity strength to
address these
Observe and reflect how you use your intuition – gut feelings and hunches – and learn how to listen to these more consciously
in order to generate ideas and original solutions that move things forward
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context. You may
overlook the more obvious, tried and tested solution
If you generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context…
Partner with colleagues who have more pragmatic, common-sense thinking styles to ensure you understand what is likely to
work taking account of the organization’s history, context and stakeholders
If you tend to overlook more obvious, tried and tested solutions…
Balance your creativity with proven solutions from colleagues and other, similar organizations; avoid re-inventing the wheel
If you feel bored and disengage when your ideas are not considered…
Be open to different thinking styles and remember that some of the biggest breakthroughs can come through building on
what’s already worked well in the past
Critical thinking You approach problems and arguments by breaking them down systematically and evaluating them
objectively
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Discuss your interpretation of data, problems and situations with others and reflect on how effectively you are able to both
interpret and communicate the findings of your analysis
Read online articles about how to take a solutions-focused, problem-solving approach rather than a problem-focused
perspective to maintain a positive, constructive approach
Educate others to use analysis and thinking tools (SWOT, Impact-Effort Grid, Decision Tree, BCG Box, etc.) which will give you
an opportunity to refresh and build out your knowledge and skills of these critical decision tools
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments. This may be perceived as negative or over-
critical by others
If you continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments…
Spend more time listening and using your strength to ask open-ended and probing questions to uncover both benefits and
risks associated with others’ ideas and arguments
If your Critical thinking may be perceived as negative and over-critical by others…
Take time to signal to others in meetings and interactions that you are a strong critical thinker and will at times take a ‘devil’s
advocate’ role to analyze information, ideas and proposals
If colleagues who used to seek your opinion no longer do…
Explain how their strengths complement yours and call on them to balance your thinking style with other strengths, including
Creativity, Optimism and Common sense
Decisiveness You make quick, confident, and clear decisions, even when faced with limited information
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Apply a range of decision-making tools (e.g. Force Field Analysis, Cost Benefit Analysis, Effort-Impact Analysis) to ensure high
quality decision-making
Practise presenting the rationale behind your decisions and recommendations so that others can follow your judgement,
particularly to those who are less decisive than yourself
Identify how colleagues, stakeholders, friends and acquaintances can support you to identify new opportunities where you can
use your decisiveness strength
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You are overhasty or rash in your decision-making, spending little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes
If you are overhasty or rash in your decision-making…
Practise stepping back and reflecting on decisions, as well as gaining others’ views
If you spend little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes…
Use a model such as De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats to ensure you have considered alternatives
If you are perceived by colleagues as bossy, or even a bully…
Take time to consider how you communicate your decisions and consult others first
Persuasiveness You are able to win agreement and support for a position or desired outcome
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Take the initiative in volunteering for assignments where you are required to persuade others to agree to adopt a product,
position or idea
Coach or mentor colleagues who could benefit from developing their ability to persuade others
Use both 'advocacy' and 'inquiry' behaviours when trying to influence – push and pull, tell and sell. This will balance the use of
rational persuasive argument with questioning and facilitation skills
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You try to influence most outcomes in your favour, irrespective of the importance of the issue. You may also indulge in debate for
debate‘s sake, rather than focusing on relevant outcomes
If you try to persuade others habitually, without considering the importance of the issue…
Remember to identify those issues which relate most closely to your own or your team’s goals and focus your energies on these
debates rather than on more frivolous issues
If you focus on the debate, rather than the outcome…
Regularly remind yourself and those you are in discussion with of the purpose of the debate and the intended end goal
If you find yourself using emotional tactics to win an argument…
Make sure that you check in with others as to whether they are in genuine agreement with you; if not, continue to explore their
views and modify your position accordingly
Relationship building You take steps to build networks of contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Identify ways to share your knowledge and experience to enable others to also develop their Relationship building, e.g.
blogging, running workshops, coaching or mentoring
Learn about stakeholder mapping and stakeholder management so that you can focus the development of your network on the
most important relationships
Help your team to develop improved knowledge and understanding of each other’s strengths and skills by running some
meetings where this information is shared
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
Your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts may become an end in itself and take up a disproportionate amount of
your energies
If your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts is becoming an end in itself…
Remember to focus on building contacts and networks with people who are likely to have the greatest influence over your
team’s success
If your network is becoming too much of a drain on your time…
Ensure that you limit the amount of time that you are spending responding to requests from people in your network and that
you are gaining value from others too
If you find that your network is built on shallow relationships…
Focus your network on the most productive relationships, strengthening these by spending more time with only those you have
identified
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths
Courage: You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Emotional control: You are aware of your emotional
‘triggers’ and how to control these to
ensure you remain calm and productive
Enthusiasm: You demonstrate passion and energy
when communicating goals, beliefs,
interests or ideas you feel strongly about
Optimism: You remain positive and upbeat about
the future and your ability to influence it
to your advantage
Resilience: You deal effectively with setbacks and
enjoy overcoming difficult challenges
Self-confidence: You have a strong belief in yourself and
your abilities to accomplish tasks and
goals
Collaboration: You work cooperatively with others to
overcome conflict and build towards a
common goal
Compassion: You demonstrate a deep and genuine
concern for the well-being and welfare of
others
Developing others: You promote other people’s learning and
development to help them achieve their
goals and fulfil their potential
Empathy: You readily identify with other people’s
situations and can see things clearly from
their perspective
Leading: You take responsibility for influencing
and motivating others to contribute to
the goals and success of their team and
organization
Persuasiveness: You are able to win agreement and
support for a position or desired
outcome
Relationship building: You take steps to build networks of
contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between
people that you know
Decisiveness: You make quick, confident, and clear
decisions, even when faced with limited
information
Efficiency: You take a well-ordered and methodical
approach to tasks to achieve planned
outcomes
Flexibility: You remain adaptable and flexible in the
face of unfamiliar or changing situations
Initiative: You take independent action to make
things happen and achieve goals
Results focus: You maintain a strong sense of focus on
results, driving tasks and projects to
completion
Self-improvement: You draw on a wide range of people and
resources in the pursuit of self-
development and learning
Common sense: You make pragmatic judgments based
on practical thinking and previous
experience
Creativity: You generate new ideas and original
solutions to move things forward
Critical thinking: You approach problems and arguments
by breaking them down systematically
and evaluating them objectively
Detail orientation: You pay attention to detail in order to
produce high quality output, no matter
what the pressures
Strategic mindedness: You focus on the future and take a
strategic perspective on issues and
challenges
®
Emotional Relational Execution Thinking
Tools to optimize your performance
Want to find out more about your performance at work? Why not take:
Strengthscope360
Strengthscope360™ is a quick and simple multi-rater assessment which builds on the initial Strengthscope® self-report,
plugging in other people’s feedback (e.g. co-workers)
StrengthscopeLeader
This report allows leaders to discover what it is that makes them truly unique, and provides valuable feedback on how to bring
their authentic style into their leadership role
StrengthscopeTeam
The StrengthscopeTeam™ report consolidates individual Strengthscope® reports at team level, as well as assessing current
team behaviour, enabling teams to take their performance to the next level
StrengthscopeEngage
StrengthscopeEngage™ is split into two reports: StrengthscopeEngage™ Baseline and StrengthscopeEngage™ Progress and
together they measure changes in staff engagement and productive use of strengths following on from development initiatives.
For additional resources to optimize your strengths and reduce performance risks, visit
www.strengthscope.com
Strengthscope is a registered trademark of Strengthscope Limited. While utmost care and attention have been
taken in the creation of Strengthscope , the authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any decisions
arising from the use of the data, or any specific interpretations or inferences arising from the report.
Please note that the content of this report remains proprietary to Strengthscope Limited, and that any distribution or
copying of the report or any of its content is prohibited unless prior agreement is given by Strengthscope Limited in
writing.
™
™
™
™
®
®
WEI CUI. 2024 October 21
© Strengthscope Ltd. All Rights Reserved
7
Confidential
© S
tr en
g th
sc o
p e
20 24
WEI CUI
21 October 2024
Contents Page N
1. Introduction 2
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths 3
3. Your strengths profile 4
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance 5
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths 12
o
®
1. Introduction
The following Strengthscope report is based on your
responses to the questionnaire completed on 21/10/2024.
Strengthscope allows you to bring your best to work, and to
life, every single day through the discovery and development
of your strengths.
We define strengths as the underlying qualities that energize
you and that you are great at (or have the potential to become
great at).
Your Strengthscope report will help you to enhance your
performance and energy at work by improving your
understanding of:
Your unique combination of strengths and how to develop
these to achieve exceptional results
Positive ways of working that will improve your confidence,
motivation and success in any situation
Why focus on your strengths?
Our strengths are the qualities that energize us and enable
us to perform at our best.
By getting the balance right between developing your
strengths and reducing performance risks, you will achieve
higher levels of:
Resilience
Confidence
Engagement
Success
®
®
®
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths
Based on your responses to the questionnaire, your Significant 7 strengths, and the productive behaviours related to
each strength, are listed in alphabetical order. These are the most energizing qualities for you. By focusing on
developing these strengths you will be able to achieve your best results and career success.
Your Significant 7 strengths When performing at your best you:
Common sense
You make pragmatic judgments based on
practical thinking and previous experience
Make good judgments based on careful observation of what works in different
situations
Enjoy learning from experience
Rely a lot on obvious and pragmatic answers that have worked well in the past
Courage
You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Are able to stand up for what you believe in, even when challenging authority
or the status quo
Are able to withstand personal risk, pressure and difficult circumstances
Take tough stands based on your convictions, even if they are unpopular
Creativity
You generate new ideas and original solutions to
move things forward
Encourage others to explore new and creative perspectives when problem
solving
Enjoy coming up with new ideas and original solutions
Have the ability to ‘think outside the box’ to find an original solution to a tough
problem
Critical thinking
You approach problems and arguments by
breaking them down systematically and
evaluating them objectively
Easily spot flaws in arguments and problems based on logical analysis
Enjoy bringing objectivity and clarity to complex situations
Spend time defining and simplifying problems, understanding underlying
assumptions, facts and evidence, before seeking solutions
Decisiveness
You make quick, confident, and clear decisions,
even when faced with limited information
Are willing to make decisions in high pressure situations when time is critical
Are able to make effective and timely decisions even when the data is limited
or decisions produce unpleasant consequences
Quickly perceive the impact and implications of decisions
Persuasiveness
You are able to win agreement and support for a
position or desired outcome
Are able to persuade others to your way of thinking based on the merits of your
position
Enjoy negotiation and debate as they provide opportunity for you to state your
case and win people over
Find that there are times when you will stop at nothing to persuade and
convince others
Relationship building
You take steps to build networks of contacts and
act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Have a wide network of colleagues and contacts
Enjoy meeting new people and getting to know them
Are the sort of person who knows everybody and often introduces people in
your network to one another
3. Your strengths profile
The wheel below shows all of the 24 strengths with your scores
rated on a standardized scale from 1-10. Your scores are
compared to a relevant comparison group, with higher scores
showing areas that energize you the most. It is more important
to focus on the overall distribution of your strengths and
which clusters they fall in rather than your individual score for
each strength.
Your Significant 7 strengths are displayed as purple bars
while the other strengths are shown as blue bars. Higher
bars represent those strengths that are more natural and
energizing for you. The lowest bars represent non-strength
areas that provide you with less energy and enjoyment in
your work.
In the centre of your wheel, you can see percentage scores for each of the four cluster areas. The baseline is 25% for each cluster, so the further
away your scores are from 25%, the greater preference you show towards, or away from, that cluster. Consider this when thinking about your work
and what energizes you more, and less.
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance
While awareness of your strengths is crucial, it is important to translate this awareness into action in order to achieve
peak performance.
This section will help you to develop your strengths and strengthen your performance by providing guidance on ways
to stretch beyond your comfort zone, plus identify and minimize potential risk areas to performance.
Top Tip: create your own strengths habit tracker
To get the most from your strengths, we recommend creating your own strengths habit tracker to help you
build new habits over the coming weeks and months.
Following the suggestions on the following pages, pick out the best development ideas for you and turn them
into new habits to build for the next 30-60 days. Let us know how you get on, we would love to hear from you.
Adopt a ‘less is more’ approach and identify a few priority areas to focus on at any one time to maximize your success.
Your ‘Significant 7’ strengths are listed below.
Common sense You make pragmatic judgments based on practical thinking and previous experience
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Spend time with your organization’s customers to get hands-on knowledge of their experiences with your products and
organization, including their feedback on what works and what doesn't. Use this knowledge to make practical
recommendations to improve your organization and products
Volunteer to test or 'pilot' ideas for their practical relevance and present your findings to the team and/or organization
Study for a project planning qualification that can use your Common sense to deliver successful outcomes
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren’t practical or don’t fit with conventional logic. You may tend to
stifle creative and inspirational ideas
If you have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren't practical or don't fit with conventional logic…
Practise being curious and open-minded to discover new ways of approaching problems and tasks
If you tend to stifle creative and inspirational ideas…
Listen to your creative colleagues and ask lots of probing questions to understand how these ideas could be applied in practice
If you rely too heavily, and expect others to rely too heavily, on processes and past experiences…
Conduct better practice research using your network and online resources to understand how other organizations (within and
outside your sector) approach things
Courage You take on challenges and face risks by standing up for what you believe
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Research effective influencing skills and practise these skills to ensure you can easily stand up for what you believe in ways that
foster healthy working relationships
Seek out hot topic debates and innovation projects that you can contribute to that will help co-workers/stakeholders to look
at problems and issues in a different way
Go outside of your comfort zone by seeking to take on a project that you really believe in that not only stretches your current
skillset, but confidence levels and levels of self-belief
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You readily take on risky positions and challenges that have a high probability of failure. You may be perceived as reckless or
extreme in defending your beliefs
If you find that you are being seen as reckless or extreme in defending your beliefs…
Ensure that you develop a range of influencing skills so that you can gain support for your position without always having to
‘fight’ for the cause. And remember to choose time and prepare for your battles wisely
If you find that you have taken on too many ‘causes’ and that this is starting to exhaust you…
Prioritize those challenges/changes that will contribute greatest value to your team and organization and focus on gaining a
positive outcome in these areas only
If you find that you have become isolated in defending your beliefs…
Take time to listen to, and understand, others’ points of view so that you can modify your approach or bring in others’
perspectives
Creativity You generate new ideas and original solutions to move things forward
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Ask your manager for an opportunity to run short 'creative burst' or brainstorming sessions to improve work processes and
practices or to deal with specific challenges
Identify the three top problems or challenges facing your team or organization currently and use your Creativity strength to
address these
Observe and reflect how you use your intuition – gut feelings and hunches – and learn how to listen to these more consciously
in order to generate ideas and original solutions that move things forward
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context. You may
overlook the more obvious, tried and tested solution
If you generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context…
Partner with colleagues who have more pragmatic, common-sense thinking styles to ensure you understand what is likely to
work taking account of the organization’s history, context and stakeholders
If you tend to overlook more obvious, tried and tested solutions…
Balance your creativity with proven solutions from colleagues and other, similar organizations; avoid re-inventing the wheel
If you feel bored and disengage when your ideas are not considered…
Be open to different thinking styles and remember that some of the biggest breakthroughs can come through building on
what’s already worked well in the past
Critical thinking You approach problems and arguments by breaking them down systematically and evaluating them
objectively
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Discuss your interpretation of data, problems and situations with others and reflect on how effectively you are able to both
interpret and communicate the findings of your analysis
Read online articles about how to take a solutions-focused, problem-solving approach rather than a problem-focused
perspective to maintain a positive, constructive approach
Educate others to use analysis and thinking tools (SWOT, Impact-Effort Grid, Decision Tree, BCG Box, etc.) which will give you
an opportunity to refresh and build out your knowledge and skills of these critical decision tools
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments. This may be perceived as negative or over-
critical by others
If you continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments…
Spend more time listening and using your strength to ask open-ended and probing questions to uncover both benefits and
risks associated with others’ ideas and arguments
If your Critical thinking may be perceived as negative and over-critical by others…
Take time to signal to others in meetings and interactions that you are a strong critical thinker and will at times take a ‘devil’s
advocate’ role to analyze information, ideas and proposals
If colleagues who used to seek your opinion no longer do…
Explain how their strengths complement yours and call on them to balance your thinking style with other strengths, including
Creativity, Optimism and Common sense
Decisiveness You make quick, confident, and clear decisions, even when faced with limited information
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Apply a range of decision-making tools (e.g. Force Field Analysis, Cost Benefit Analysis, Effort-Impact Analysis) to ensure high
quality decision-making
Practise presenting the rationale behind your decisions and recommendations so that others can follow your judgement,
particularly to those who are less decisive than yourself
Identify how colleagues, stakeholders, friends and acquaintances can support you to identify new opportunities where you can
use your decisiveness strength
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You are overhasty or rash in your decision-making, spending little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes
If you are overhasty or rash in your decision-making…
Practise stepping back and reflecting on decisions, as well as gaining others’ views
If you spend little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes…
Use a model such as De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats to ensure you have considered alternatives
If you are perceived by colleagues as bossy, or even a bully…
Take time to consider how you communicate your decisions and consult others first
Persuasiveness You are able to win agreement and support for a position or desired outcome
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Take the initiative in volunteering for assignments where you are required to persuade others to agree to adopt a product,
position or idea
Coach or mentor colleagues who could benefit from developing their ability to persuade others
Use both 'advocacy' and 'inquiry' behaviours when trying to influence – push and pull, tell and sell. This will balance the use of
rational persuasive argument with questioning and facilitation skills
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You try to influence most outcomes in your favour, irrespective of the importance of the issue. You may also indulge in debate for
debate‘s sake, rather than focusing on relevant outcomes
If you try to persuade others habitually, without considering the importance of the issue…
Remember to identify those issues which relate most closely to your own or your team’s goals and focus your energies on these
debates rather than on more frivolous issues
If you focus on the debate, rather than the outcome…
Regularly remind yourself and those you are in discussion with of the purpose of the debate and the intended end goal
If you find yourself using emotional tactics to win an argument…
Make sure that you check in with others as to whether they are in genuine agreement with you; if not, continue to explore their
views and modify your position accordingly
Relationship building You take steps to build networks of contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Identify ways to share your knowledge and experience to enable others to also develop their Relationship building, e.g.
blogging, running workshops, coaching or mentoring
Learn about stakeholder mapping and stakeholder management so that you can focus the development of your network on the
most important relationships
Help your team to develop improved knowledge and understanding of each other’s strengths and skills by running some
meetings where this information is shared
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
Your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts may become an end in itself and take up a disproportionate amount of
your energies
If your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts is becoming an end in itself…
Remember to focus on building contacts and networks with people who are likely to have the greatest influence over your
team’s success
If your network is becoming too much of a drain on your time…
Ensure that you limit the amount of time that you are spending responding to requests from people in your network and that
you are gaining value from others too
If you find that your network is built on shallow relationships…
Focus your network on the most productive relationships, strengthening these by spending more time with only those you have
identified
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths
Courage: You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Emotional control: You are aware of your emotional
‘triggers’ and how to control these to
ensure you remain calm and productive
Enthusiasm: You demonstrate passion and energy
when communicating goals, beliefs,
interests or ideas you feel strongly about
Optimism: You remain positive and upbeat about
the future and your ability to influence it
to your advantage
Resilience: You deal effectively with setbacks and
enjoy overcoming difficult challenges
Self-confidence: You have a strong belief in yourself and
your abilities to accomplish tasks and
goals
Collaboration: You work cooperatively with others to
overcome conflict and build towards a
common goal
Compassion: You demonstrate a deep and genuine
concern for the well-being and welfare of
others
Developing others: You promote other people’s learning and
development to help them achieve their
goals and fulfil their potential
Empathy: You readily identify with other people’s
situations and can see things clearly from
their perspective
Leading: You take responsibility for influencing
and motivating others to contribute to
the goals and success of their team and
organization
Persuasiveness: You are able to win agreement and
support for a position or desired
outcome
Relationship building: You take steps to build networks of
contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between
people that you know
Decisiveness: You make quick, confident, and clear
decisions, even when faced with limited
information
Efficiency: You take a well-ordered and methodical
approach to tasks to achieve planned
outcomes
Flexibility: You remain adaptable and flexible in the
face of unfamiliar or changing situations
Initiative: You take independent action to make
things happen and achieve goals
Results focus: You maintain a strong sense of focus on
results, driving tasks and projects to
completion
Self-improvement: You draw on a wide range of people and
resources in the pursuit of self-
development and learning
Common sense: You make pragmatic judgments based
on practical thinking and previous
experience
Creativity: You generate new ideas and original
solutions to move things forward
Critical thinking: You approach problems and arguments
by breaking them down systematically
and evaluating them objectively
Detail orientation: You pay attention to detail in order to
produce high quality output, no matter
what the pressures
Strategic mindedness: You focus on the future and take a
strategic perspective on issues and
challenges
®
Emotional Relational Execution Thinking
Tools to optimize your performance
Want to find out more about your performance at work? Why not take:
Strengthscope360
Strengthscope360™ is a quick and simple multi-rater assessment which builds on the initial Strengthscope® self-report,
plugging in other people’s feedback (e.g. co-workers)
StrengthscopeLeader
This report allows leaders to discover what it is that makes them truly unique, and provides valuable feedback on how to bring
their authentic style into their leadership role
StrengthscopeTeam
The StrengthscopeTeam™ report consolidates individual Strengthscope® reports at team level, as well as assessing current
team behaviour, enabling teams to take their performance to the next level
StrengthscopeEngage
StrengthscopeEngage™ is split into two reports: StrengthscopeEngage™ Baseline and StrengthscopeEngage™ Progress and
together they measure changes in staff engagement and productive use of strengths following on from development initiatives.
For additional resources to optimize your strengths and reduce performance risks, visit
www.strengthscope.com
Strengthscope is a registered trademark of Strengthscope Limited. While utmost care and attention have been
taken in the creation of Strengthscope , the authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any decisions
arising from the use of the data, or any specific interpretations or inferences arising from the report.
Please note that the content of this report remains proprietary to Strengthscope Limited, and that any distribution or
copying of the report or any of its content is prohibited unless prior agreement is given by Strengthscope Limited in
writing.
™
™
™
™
®
®
WEI CUI. 2024 October 21
© Strengthscope Ltd. All Rights Reserved
8
Confidential
© S
tr en
g th
sc o
p e
20 24
WEI CUI
21 October 2024
Contents Page N
1. Introduction 2
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths 3
3. Your strengths profile 4
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance 5
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths 12
o
®
1. Introduction
The following Strengthscope report is based on your
responses to the questionnaire completed on 21/10/2024.
Strengthscope allows you to bring your best to work, and to
life, every single day through the discovery and development
of your strengths.
We define strengths as the underlying qualities that energize
you and that you are great at (or have the potential to become
great at).
Your Strengthscope report will help you to enhance your
performance and energy at work by improving your
understanding of:
Your unique combination of strengths and how to develop
these to achieve exceptional results
Positive ways of working that will improve your confidence,
motivation and success in any situation
Why focus on your strengths?
Our strengths are the qualities that energize us and enable
us to perform at our best.
By getting the balance right between developing your
strengths and reducing performance risks, you will achieve
higher levels of:
Resilience
Confidence
Engagement
Success
®
®
®
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths
Based on your responses to the questionnaire, your Significant 7 strengths, and the productive behaviours related to
each strength, are listed in alphabetical order. These are the most energizing qualities for you. By focusing on
developing these strengths you will be able to achieve your best results and career success.
Your Significant 7 strengths When performing at your best you:
Common sense
You make pragmatic judgments based on
practical thinking and previous experience
Make good judgments based on careful observation of what works in different
situations
Enjoy learning from experience
Rely a lot on obvious and pragmatic answers that have worked well in the past
Courage
You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Are able to stand up for what you believe in, even when challenging authority
or the status quo
Are able to withstand personal risk, pressure and difficult circumstances
Take tough stands based on your convictions, even if they are unpopular
Creativity
You generate new ideas and original solutions to
move things forward
Encourage others to explore new and creative perspectives when problem
solving
Enjoy coming up with new ideas and original solutions
Have the ability to ‘think outside the box’ to find an original solution to a tough
problem
Critical thinking
You approach problems and arguments by
breaking them down systematically and
evaluating them objectively
Easily spot flaws in arguments and problems based on logical analysis
Enjoy bringing objectivity and clarity to complex situations
Spend time defining and simplifying problems, understanding underlying
assumptions, facts and evidence, before seeking solutions
Decisiveness
You make quick, confident, and clear decisions,
even when faced with limited information
Are willing to make decisions in high pressure situations when time is critical
Are able to make effective and timely decisions even when the data is limited
or decisions produce unpleasant consequences
Quickly perceive the impact and implications of decisions
Persuasiveness
You are able to win agreement and support for a
position or desired outcome
Are able to persuade others to your way of thinking based on the merits of your
position
Enjoy negotiation and debate as they provide opportunity for you to state your
case and win people over
Find that there are times when you will stop at nothing to persuade and
convince others
Relationship building
You take steps to build networks of contacts and
act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Have a wide network of colleagues and contacts
Enjoy meeting new people and getting to know them
Are the sort of person who knows everybody and often introduces people in
your network to one another
3. Your strengths profile
The wheel below shows all of the 24 strengths with your scores
rated on a standardized scale from 1-10. Your scores are
compared to a relevant comparison group, with higher scores
showing areas that energize you the most. It is more important
to focus on the overall distribution of your strengths and
which clusters they fall in rather than your individual score for
each strength.
Your Significant 7 strengths are displayed as purple bars
while the other strengths are shown as blue bars. Higher
bars represent those strengths that are more natural and
energizing for you. The lowest bars represent non-strength
areas that provide you with less energy and enjoyment in
your work.
In the centre of your wheel, you can see percentage scores for each of the four cluster areas. The baseline is 25% for each cluster, so the further
away your scores are from 25%, the greater preference you show towards, or away from, that cluster. Consider this when thinking about your work
and what energizes you more, and less.
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance
While awareness of your strengths is crucial, it is important to translate this awareness into action in order to achieve
peak performance.
This section will help you to develop your strengths and strengthen your performance by providing guidance on ways
to stretch beyond your comfort zone, plus identify and minimize potential risk areas to performance.
Top Tip: create your own strengths habit tracker
To get the most from your strengths, we recommend creating your own strengths habit tracker to help you
build new habits over the coming weeks and months.
Following the suggestions on the following pages, pick out the best development ideas for you and turn them
into new habits to build for the next 30-60 days. Let us know how you get on, we would love to hear from you.
Adopt a ‘less is more’ approach and identify a few priority areas to focus on at any one time to maximize your success.
Your ‘Significant 7’ strengths are listed below.
Common sense You make pragmatic judgments based on practical thinking and previous experience
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Spend time with your organization’s customers to get hands-on knowledge of their experiences with your products and
organization, including their feedback on what works and what doesn't. Use this knowledge to make practical
recommendations to improve your organization and products
Volunteer to test or 'pilot' ideas for their practical relevance and present your findings to the team and/or organization
Study for a project planning qualification that can use your Common sense to deliver successful outcomes
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren’t practical or don’t fit with conventional logic. You may tend to
stifle creative and inspirational ideas
If you have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren't practical or don't fit with conventional logic…
Practise being curious and open-minded to discover new ways of approaching problems and tasks
If you tend to stifle creative and inspirational ideas…
Listen to your creative colleagues and ask lots of probing questions to understand how these ideas could be applied in practice
If you rely too heavily, and expect others to rely too heavily, on processes and past experiences…
Conduct better practice research using your network and online resources to understand how other organizations (within and
outside your sector) approach things
Courage You take on challenges and face risks by standing up for what you believe
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Research effective influencing skills and practise these skills to ensure you can easily stand up for what you believe in ways that
foster healthy working relationships
Seek out hot topic debates and innovation projects that you can contribute to that will help co-workers/stakeholders to look
at problems and issues in a different way
Go outside of your comfort zone by seeking to take on a project that you really believe in that not only stretches your current
skillset, but confidence levels and levels of self-belief
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You readily take on risky positions and challenges that have a high probability of failure. You may be perceived as reckless or
extreme in defending your beliefs
If you find that you are being seen as reckless or extreme in defending your beliefs…
Ensure that you develop a range of influencing skills so that you can gain support for your position without always having to
‘fight’ for the cause. And remember to choose time and prepare for your battles wisely
If you find that you have taken on too many ‘causes’ and that this is starting to exhaust you…
Prioritize those challenges/changes that will contribute greatest value to your team and organization and focus on gaining a
positive outcome in these areas only
If you find that you have become isolated in defending your beliefs…
Take time to listen to, and understand, others’ points of view so that you can modify your approach or bring in others’
perspectives
Creativity You generate new ideas and original solutions to move things forward
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Ask your manager for an opportunity to run short 'creative burst' or brainstorming sessions to improve work processes and
practices or to deal with specific challenges
Identify the three top problems or challenges facing your team or organization currently and use your Creativity strength to
address these
Observe and reflect how you use your intuition – gut feelings and hunches – and learn how to listen to these more consciously
in order to generate ideas and original solutions that move things forward
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context. You may
overlook the more obvious, tried and tested solution
If you generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context…
Partner with colleagues who have more pragmatic, common-sense thinking styles to ensure you understand what is likely to
work taking account of the organization’s history, context and stakeholders
If you tend to overlook more obvious, tried and tested solutions…
Balance your creativity with proven solutions from colleagues and other, similar organizations; avoid re-inventing the wheel
If you feel bored and disengage when your ideas are not considered…
Be open to different thinking styles and remember that some of the biggest breakthroughs can come through building on
what’s already worked well in the past
Critical thinking You approach problems and arguments by breaking them down systematically and evaluating them
objectively
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Discuss your interpretation of data, problems and situations with others and reflect on how effectively you are able to both
interpret and communicate the findings of your analysis
Read online articles about how to take a solutions-focused, problem-solving approach rather than a problem-focused
perspective to maintain a positive, constructive approach
Educate others to use analysis and thinking tools (SWOT, Impact-Effort Grid, Decision Tree, BCG Box, etc.) which will give you
an opportunity to refresh and build out your knowledge and skills of these critical decision tools
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments. This may be perceived as negative or over-
critical by others
If you continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments…
Spend more time listening and using your strength to ask open-ended and probing questions to uncover both benefits and
risks associated with others’ ideas and arguments
If your Critical thinking may be perceived as negative and over-critical by others…
Take time to signal to others in meetings and interactions that you are a strong critical thinker and will at times take a ‘devil’s
advocate’ role to analyze information, ideas and proposals
If colleagues who used to seek your opinion no longer do…
Explain how their strengths complement yours and call on them to balance your thinking style with other strengths, including
Creativity, Optimism and Common sense
Decisiveness You make quick, confident, and clear decisions, even when faced with limited information
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Apply a range of decision-making tools (e.g. Force Field Analysis, Cost Benefit Analysis, Effort-Impact Analysis) to ensure high
quality decision-making
Practise presenting the rationale behind your decisions and recommendations so that others can follow your judgement,
particularly to those who are less decisive than yourself
Identify how colleagues, stakeholders, friends and acquaintances can support you to identify new opportunities where you can
use your decisiveness strength
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You are overhasty or rash in your decision-making, spending little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes
If you are overhasty or rash in your decision-making…
Practise stepping back and reflecting on decisions, as well as gaining others’ views
If you spend little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes…
Use a model such as De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats to ensure you have considered alternatives
If you are perceived by colleagues as bossy, or even a bully…
Take time to consider how you communicate your decisions and consult others first
Persuasiveness You are able to win agreement and support for a position or desired outcome
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Take the initiative in volunteering for assignments where you are required to persuade others to agree to adopt a product,
position or idea
Coach or mentor colleagues who could benefit from developing their ability to persuade others
Use both 'advocacy' and 'inquiry' behaviours when trying to influence – push and pull, tell and sell. This will balance the use of
rational persuasive argument with questioning and facilitation skills
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You try to influence most outcomes in your favour, irrespective of the importance of the issue. You may also indulge in debate for
debate‘s sake, rather than focusing on relevant outcomes
If you try to persuade others habitually, without considering the importance of the issue…
Remember to identify those issues which relate most closely to your own or your team’s goals and focus your energies on these
debates rather than on more frivolous issues
If you focus on the debate, rather than the outcome…
Regularly remind yourself and those you are in discussion with of the purpose of the debate and the intended end goal
If you find yourself using emotional tactics to win an argument…
Make sure that you check in with others as to whether they are in genuine agreement with you; if not, continue to explore their
views and modify your position accordingly
Relationship building You take steps to build networks of contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Identify ways to share your knowledge and experience to enable others to also develop their Relationship building, e.g.
blogging, running workshops, coaching or mentoring
Learn about stakeholder mapping and stakeholder management so that you can focus the development of your network on the
most important relationships
Help your team to develop improved knowledge and understanding of each other’s strengths and skills by running some
meetings where this information is shared
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
Your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts may become an end in itself and take up a disproportionate amount of
your energies
If your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts is becoming an end in itself…
Remember to focus on building contacts and networks with people who are likely to have the greatest influence over your
team’s success
If your network is becoming too much of a drain on your time…
Ensure that you limit the amount of time that you are spending responding to requests from people in your network and that
you are gaining value from others too
If you find that your network is built on shallow relationships…
Focus your network on the most productive relationships, strengthening these by spending more time with only those you have
identified
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths
Courage: You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Emotional control: You are aware of your emotional
‘triggers’ and how to control these to
ensure you remain calm and productive
Enthusiasm: You demonstrate passion and energy
when communicating goals, beliefs,
interests or ideas you feel strongly about
Optimism: You remain positive and upbeat about
the future and your ability to influence it
to your advantage
Resilience: You deal effectively with setbacks and
enjoy overcoming difficult challenges
Self-confidence: You have a strong belief in yourself and
your abilities to accomplish tasks and
goals
Collaboration: You work cooperatively with others to
overcome conflict and build towards a
common goal
Compassion: You demonstrate a deep and genuine
concern for the well-being and welfare of
others
Developing others: You promote other people’s learning and
development to help them achieve their
goals and fulfil their potential
Empathy: You readily identify with other people’s
situations and can see things clearly from
their perspective
Leading: You take responsibility for influencing
and motivating others to contribute to
the goals and success of their team and
organization
Persuasiveness: You are able to win agreement and
support for a position or desired
outcome
Relationship building: You take steps to build networks of
contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between
people that you know
Decisiveness: You make quick, confident, and clear
decisions, even when faced with limited
information
Efficiency: You take a well-ordered and methodical
approach to tasks to achieve planned
outcomes
Flexibility: You remain adaptable and flexible in the
face of unfamiliar or changing situations
Initiative: You take independent action to make
things happen and achieve goals
Results focus: You maintain a strong sense of focus on
results, driving tasks and projects to
completion
Self-improvement: You draw on a wide range of people and
resources in the pursuit of self-
development and learning
Common sense: You make pragmatic judgments based
on practical thinking and previous
experience
Creativity: You generate new ideas and original
solutions to move things forward
Critical thinking: You approach problems and arguments
by breaking them down systematically
and evaluating them objectively
Detail orientation: You pay attention to detail in order to
produce high quality output, no matter
what the pressures
Strategic mindedness: You focus on the future and take a
strategic perspective on issues and
challenges
®
Emotional Relational Execution Thinking
Tools to optimize your performance
Want to find out more about your performance at work? Why not take:
Strengthscope360
Strengthscope360™ is a quick and simple multi-rater assessment which builds on the initial Strengthscope® self-report,
plugging in other people’s feedback (e.g. co-workers)
StrengthscopeLeader
This report allows leaders to discover what it is that makes them truly unique, and provides valuable feedback on how to bring
their authentic style into their leadership role
StrengthscopeTeam
The StrengthscopeTeam™ report consolidates individual Strengthscope® reports at team level, as well as assessing current
team behaviour, enabling teams to take their performance to the next level
StrengthscopeEngage
StrengthscopeEngage™ is split into two reports: StrengthscopeEngage™ Baseline and StrengthscopeEngage™ Progress and
together they measure changes in staff engagement and productive use of strengths following on from development initiatives.
For additional resources to optimize your strengths and reduce performance risks, visit
www.strengthscope.com
Strengthscope is a registered trademark of Strengthscope Limited. While utmost care and attention have been
taken in the creation of Strengthscope , the authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any decisions
arising from the use of the data, or any specific interpretations or inferences arising from the report.
Please note that the content of this report remains proprietary to Strengthscope Limited, and that any distribution or
copying of the report or any of its content is prohibited unless prior agreement is given by Strengthscope Limited in
writing.
™
™
™
™
®
®
WEI CUI. 2024 October 21
© Strengthscope Ltd. All Rights Reserved
9
Confidential
© S
tr en
g th
sc o
p e
20 24
WEI CUI
21 October 2024
Contents Page N
1. Introduction 2
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths 3
3. Your strengths profile 4
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance 5
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths 12
o
®
1. Introduction
The following Strengthscope report is based on your
responses to the questionnaire completed on 21/10/2024.
Strengthscope allows you to bring your best to work, and to
life, every single day through the discovery and development
of your strengths.
We define strengths as the underlying qualities that energize
you and that you are great at (or have the potential to become
great at).
Your Strengthscope report will help you to enhance your
performance and energy at work by improving your
understanding of:
Your unique combination of strengths and how to develop
these to achieve exceptional results
Positive ways of working that will improve your confidence,
motivation and success in any situation
Why focus on your strengths?
Our strengths are the qualities that energize us and enable
us to perform at our best.
By getting the balance right between developing your
strengths and reducing performance risks, you will achieve
higher levels of:
Resilience
Confidence
Engagement
Success
®
®
®
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths
Based on your responses to the questionnaire, your Significant 7 strengths, and the productive behaviours related to
each strength, are listed in alphabetical order. These are the most energizing qualities for you. By focusing on
developing these strengths you will be able to achieve your best results and career success.
Your Significant 7 strengths When performing at your best you:
Common sense
You make pragmatic judgments based on
practical thinking and previous experience
Make good judgments based on careful observation of what works in different
situations
Enjoy learning from experience
Rely a lot on obvious and pragmatic answers that have worked well in the past
Courage
You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Are able to stand up for what you believe in, even when challenging authority
or the status quo
Are able to withstand personal risk, pressure and difficult circumstances
Take tough stands based on your convictions, even if they are unpopular
Creativity
You generate new ideas and original solutions to
move things forward
Encourage others to explore new and creative perspectives when problem
solving
Enjoy coming up with new ideas and original solutions
Have the ability to ‘think outside the box’ to find an original solution to a tough
problem
Critical thinking
You approach problems and arguments by
breaking them down systematically and
evaluating them objectively
Easily spot flaws in arguments and problems based on logical analysis
Enjoy bringing objectivity and clarity to complex situations
Spend time defining and simplifying problems, understanding underlying
assumptions, facts and evidence, before seeking solutions
Decisiveness
You make quick, confident, and clear decisions,
even when faced with limited information
Are willing to make decisions in high pressure situations when time is critical
Are able to make effective and timely decisions even when the data is limited
or decisions produce unpleasant consequences
Quickly perceive the impact and implications of decisions
Persuasiveness
You are able to win agreement and support for a
position or desired outcome
Are able to persuade others to your way of thinking based on the merits of your
position
Enjoy negotiation and debate as they provide opportunity for you to state your
case and win people over
Find that there are times when you will stop at nothing to persuade and
convince others
Relationship building
You take steps to build networks of contacts and
act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Have a wide network of colleagues and contacts
Enjoy meeting new people and getting to know them
Are the sort of person who knows everybody and often introduces people in
your network to one another
3. Your strengths profile
The wheel below shows all of the 24 strengths with your scores
rated on a standardized scale from 1-10. Your scores are
compared to a relevant comparison group, with higher scores
showing areas that energize you the most. It is more important
to focus on the overall distribution of your strengths and
which clusters they fall in rather than your individual score for
each strength.
Your Significant 7 strengths are displayed as purple bars
while the other strengths are shown as blue bars. Higher
bars represent those strengths that are more natural and
energizing for you. The lowest bars represent non-strength
areas that provide you with less energy and enjoyment in
your work.
In the centre of your wheel, you can see percentage scores for each of the four cluster areas. The baseline is 25% for each cluster, so the further
away your scores are from 25%, the greater preference you show towards, or away from, that cluster. Consider this when thinking about your work
and what energizes you more, and less.
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance
While awareness of your strengths is crucial, it is important to translate this awareness into action in order to achieve
peak performance.
This section will help you to develop your strengths and strengthen your performance by providing guidance on ways
to stretch beyond your comfort zone, plus identify and minimize potential risk areas to performance.
Top Tip: create your own strengths habit tracker
To get the most from your strengths, we recommend creating your own strengths habit tracker to help you
build new habits over the coming weeks and months.
Following the suggestions on the following pages, pick out the best development ideas for you and turn them
into new habits to build for the next 30-60 days. Let us know how you get on, we would love to hear from you.
Adopt a ‘less is more’ approach and identify a few priority areas to focus on at any one time to maximize your success.
Your ‘Significant 7’ strengths are listed below.
Common sense You make pragmatic judgments based on practical thinking and previous experience
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Spend time with your organization’s customers to get hands-on knowledge of their experiences with your products and
organization, including their feedback on what works and what doesn't. Use this knowledge to make practical
recommendations to improve your organization and products
Volunteer to test or 'pilot' ideas for their practical relevance and present your findings to the team and/or organization
Study for a project planning qualification that can use your Common sense to deliver successful outcomes
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren’t practical or don’t fit with conventional logic. You may tend to
stifle creative and inspirational ideas
If you have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren't practical or don't fit with conventional logic…
Practise being curious and open-minded to discover new ways of approaching problems and tasks
If you tend to stifle creative and inspirational ideas…
Listen to your creative colleagues and ask lots of probing questions to understand how these ideas could be applied in practice
If you rely too heavily, and expect others to rely too heavily, on processes and past experiences…
Conduct better practice research using your network and online resources to understand how other organizations (within and
outside your sector) approach things
Courage You take on challenges and face risks by standing up for what you believe
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Research effective influencing skills and practise these skills to ensure you can easily stand up for what you believe in ways that
foster healthy working relationships
Seek out hot topic debates and innovation projects that you can contribute to that will help co-workers/stakeholders to look
at problems and issues in a different way
Go outside of your comfort zone by seeking to take on a project that you really believe in that not only stretches your current
skillset, but confidence levels and levels of self-belief
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You readily take on risky positions and challenges that have a high probability of failure. You may be perceived as reckless or
extreme in defending your beliefs
If you find that you are being seen as reckless or extreme in defending your beliefs…
Ensure that you develop a range of influencing skills so that you can gain support for your position without always having to
‘fight’ for the cause. And remember to choose time and prepare for your battles wisely
If you find that you have taken on too many ‘causes’ and that this is starting to exhaust you…
Prioritize those challenges/changes that will contribute greatest value to your team and organization and focus on gaining a
positive outcome in these areas only
If you find that you have become isolated in defending your beliefs…
Take time to listen to, and understand, others’ points of view so that you can modify your approach or bring in others’
perspectives
Creativity You generate new ideas and original solutions to move things forward
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Ask your manager for an opportunity to run short 'creative burst' or brainstorming sessions to improve work processes and
practices or to deal with specific challenges
Identify the three top problems or challenges facing your team or organization currently and use your Creativity strength to
address these
Observe and reflect how you use your intuition – gut feelings and hunches – and learn how to listen to these more consciously
in order to generate ideas and original solutions that move things forward
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context. You may
overlook the more obvious, tried and tested solution
If you generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context…
Partner with colleagues who have more pragmatic, common-sense thinking styles to ensure you understand what is likely to
work taking account of the organization’s history, context and stakeholders
If you tend to overlook more obvious, tried and tested solutions…
Balance your creativity with proven solutions from colleagues and other, similar organizations; avoid re-inventing the wheel
If you feel bored and disengage when your ideas are not considered…
Be open to different thinking styles and remember that some of the biggest breakthroughs can come through building on
what’s already worked well in the past
Critical thinking You approach problems and arguments by breaking them down systematically and evaluating them
objectively
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Discuss your interpretation of data, problems and situations with others and reflect on how effectively you are able to both
interpret and communicate the findings of your analysis
Read online articles about how to take a solutions-focused, problem-solving approach rather than a problem-focused
perspective to maintain a positive, constructive approach
Educate others to use analysis and thinking tools (SWOT, Impact-Effort Grid, Decision Tree, BCG Box, etc.) which will give you
an opportunity to refresh and build out your knowledge and skills of these critical decision tools
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments. This may be perceived as negative or over-
critical by others
If you continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments…
Spend more time listening and using your strength to ask open-ended and probing questions to uncover both benefits and
risks associated with others’ ideas and arguments
If your Critical thinking may be perceived as negative and over-critical by others…
Take time to signal to others in meetings and interactions that you are a strong critical thinker and will at times take a ‘devil’s
advocate’ role to analyze information, ideas and proposals
If colleagues who used to seek your opinion no longer do…
Explain how their strengths complement yours and call on them to balance your thinking style with other strengths, including
Creativity, Optimism and Common sense
Decisiveness You make quick, confident, and clear decisions, even when faced with limited information
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Apply a range of decision-making tools (e.g. Force Field Analysis, Cost Benefit Analysis, Effort-Impact Analysis) to ensure high
quality decision-making
Practise presenting the rationale behind your decisions and recommendations so that others can follow your judgement,
particularly to those who are less decisive than yourself
Identify how colleagues, stakeholders, friends and acquaintances can support you to identify new opportunities where you can
use your decisiveness strength
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You are overhasty or rash in your decision-making, spending little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes
If you are overhasty or rash in your decision-making…
Practise stepping back and reflecting on decisions, as well as gaining others’ views
If you spend little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes…
Use a model such as De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats to ensure you have considered alternatives
If you are perceived by colleagues as bossy, or even a bully…
Take time to consider how you communicate your decisions and consult others first
Persuasiveness You are able to win agreement and support for a position or desired outcome
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Take the initiative in volunteering for assignments where you are required to persuade others to agree to adopt a product,
position or idea
Coach or mentor colleagues who could benefit from developing their ability to persuade others
Use both 'advocacy' and 'inquiry' behaviours when trying to influence – push and pull, tell and sell. This will balance the use of
rational persuasive argument with questioning and facilitation skills
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You try to influence most outcomes in your favour, irrespective of the importance of the issue. You may also indulge in debate for
debate‘s sake, rather than focusing on relevant outcomes
If you try to persuade others habitually, without considering the importance of the issue…
Remember to identify those issues which relate most closely to your own or your team’s goals and focus your energies on these
debates rather than on more frivolous issues
If you focus on the debate, rather than the outcome…
Regularly remind yourself and those you are in discussion with of the purpose of the debate and the intended end goal
If you find yourself using emotional tactics to win an argument…
Make sure that you check in with others as to whether they are in genuine agreement with you; if not, continue to explore their
views and modify your position accordingly
Relationship building You take steps to build networks of contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Identify ways to share your knowledge and experience to enable others to also develop their Relationship building, e.g.
blogging, running workshops, coaching or mentoring
Learn about stakeholder mapping and stakeholder management so that you can focus the development of your network on the
most important relationships
Help your team to develop improved knowledge and understanding of each other’s strengths and skills by running some
meetings where this information is shared
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
Your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts may become an end in itself and take up a disproportionate amount of
your energies
If your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts is becoming an end in itself…
Remember to focus on building contacts and networks with people who are likely to have the greatest influence over your
team’s success
If your network is becoming too much of a drain on your time…
Ensure that you limit the amount of time that you are spending responding to requests from people in your network and that
you are gaining value from others too
If you find that your network is built on shallow relationships…
Focus your network on the most productive relationships, strengthening these by spending more time with only those you have
identified
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths
Courage: You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Emotional control: You are aware of your emotional
‘triggers’ and how to control these to
ensure you remain calm and productive
Enthusiasm: You demonstrate passion and energy
when communicating goals, beliefs,
interests or ideas you feel strongly about
Optimism: You remain positive and upbeat about
the future and your ability to influence it
to your advantage
Resilience: You deal effectively with setbacks and
enjoy overcoming difficult challenges
Self-confidence: You have a strong belief in yourself and
your abilities to accomplish tasks and
goals
Collaboration: You work cooperatively with others to
overcome conflict and build towards a
common goal
Compassion: You demonstrate a deep and genuine
concern for the well-being and welfare of
others
Developing others: You promote other people’s learning and
development to help them achieve their
goals and fulfil their potential
Empathy: You readily identify with other people’s
situations and can see things clearly from
their perspective
Leading: You take responsibility for influencing
and motivating others to contribute to
the goals and success of their team and
organization
Persuasiveness: You are able to win agreement and
support for a position or desired
outcome
Relationship building: You take steps to build networks of
contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between
people that you know
Decisiveness: You make quick, confident, and clear
decisions, even when faced with limited
information
Efficiency: You take a well-ordered and methodical
approach to tasks to achieve planned
outcomes
Flexibility: You remain adaptable and flexible in the
face of unfamiliar or changing situations
Initiative: You take independent action to make
things happen and achieve goals
Results focus: You maintain a strong sense of focus on
results, driving tasks and projects to
completion
Self-improvement: You draw on a wide range of people and
resources in the pursuit of self-
development and learning
Common sense: You make pragmatic judgments based
on practical thinking and previous
experience
Creativity: You generate new ideas and original
solutions to move things forward
Critical thinking: You approach problems and arguments
by breaking them down systematically
and evaluating them objectively
Detail orientation: You pay attention to detail in order to
produce high quality output, no matter
what the pressures
Strategic mindedness: You focus on the future and take a
strategic perspective on issues and
challenges
®
Emotional Relational Execution Thinking
Tools to optimize your performance
Want to find out more about your performance at work? Why not take:
Strengthscope360
Strengthscope360™ is a quick and simple multi-rater assessment which builds on the initial Strengthscope® self-report,
plugging in other people’s feedback (e.g. co-workers)
StrengthscopeLeader
This report allows leaders to discover what it is that makes them truly unique, and provides valuable feedback on how to bring
their authentic style into their leadership role
StrengthscopeTeam
The StrengthscopeTeam™ report consolidates individual Strengthscope® reports at team level, as well as assessing current
team behaviour, enabling teams to take their performance to the next level
StrengthscopeEngage
StrengthscopeEngage™ is split into two reports: StrengthscopeEngage™ Baseline and StrengthscopeEngage™ Progress and
together they measure changes in staff engagement and productive use of strengths following on from development initiatives.
For additional resources to optimize your strengths and reduce performance risks, visit
www.strengthscope.com
Strengthscope is a registered trademark of Strengthscope Limited. While utmost care and attention have been
taken in the creation of Strengthscope , the authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any decisions
arising from the use of the data, or any specific interpretations or inferences arising from the report.
Please note that the content of this report remains proprietary to Strengthscope Limited, and that any distribution or
copying of the report or any of its content is prohibited unless prior agreement is given by Strengthscope Limited in
writing.
™
™
™
™
®
®
WEI CUI. 2024 October 21
© Strengthscope Ltd. All Rights Reserved
10
Confidential
© S
tr en
g th
sc o
p e
20 24
WEI CUI
21 October 2024
Contents Page N
1. Introduction 2
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths 3
3. Your strengths profile 4
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance 5
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths 12
o
®
1. Introduction
The following Strengthscope report is based on your
responses to the questionnaire completed on 21/10/2024.
Strengthscope allows you to bring your best to work, and to
life, every single day through the discovery and development
of your strengths.
We define strengths as the underlying qualities that energize
you and that you are great at (or have the potential to become
great at).
Your Strengthscope report will help you to enhance your
performance and energy at work by improving your
understanding of:
Your unique combination of strengths and how to develop
these to achieve exceptional results
Positive ways of working that will improve your confidence,
motivation and success in any situation
Why focus on your strengths?
Our strengths are the qualities that energize us and enable
us to perform at our best.
By getting the balance right between developing your
strengths and reducing performance risks, you will achieve
higher levels of:
Resilience
Confidence
Engagement
Success
®
®
®
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths
Based on your responses to the questionnaire, your Significant 7 strengths, and the productive behaviours related to
each strength, are listed in alphabetical order. These are the most energizing qualities for you. By focusing on
developing these strengths you will be able to achieve your best results and career success.
Your Significant 7 strengths When performing at your best you:
Common sense
You make pragmatic judgments based on
practical thinking and previous experience
Make good judgments based on careful observation of what works in different
situations
Enjoy learning from experience
Rely a lot on obvious and pragmatic answers that have worked well in the past
Courage
You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Are able to stand up for what you believe in, even when challenging authority
or the status quo
Are able to withstand personal risk, pressure and difficult circumstances
Take tough stands based on your convictions, even if they are unpopular
Creativity
You generate new ideas and original solutions to
move things forward
Encourage others to explore new and creative perspectives when problem
solving
Enjoy coming up with new ideas and original solutions
Have the ability to ‘think outside the box’ to find an original solution to a tough
problem
Critical thinking
You approach problems and arguments by
breaking them down systematically and
evaluating them objectively
Easily spot flaws in arguments and problems based on logical analysis
Enjoy bringing objectivity and clarity to complex situations
Spend time defining and simplifying problems, understanding underlying
assumptions, facts and evidence, before seeking solutions
Decisiveness
You make quick, confident, and clear decisions,
even when faced with limited information
Are willing to make decisions in high pressure situations when time is critical
Are able to make effective and timely decisions even when the data is limited
or decisions produce unpleasant consequences
Quickly perceive the impact and implications of decisions
Persuasiveness
You are able to win agreement and support for a
position or desired outcome
Are able to persuade others to your way of thinking based on the merits of your
position
Enjoy negotiation and debate as they provide opportunity for you to state your
case and win people over
Find that there are times when you will stop at nothing to persuade and
convince others
Relationship building
You take steps to build networks of contacts and
act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Have a wide network of colleagues and contacts
Enjoy meeting new people and getting to know them
Are the sort of person who knows everybody and often introduces people in
your network to one another
3. Your strengths profile
The wheel below shows all of the 24 strengths with your scores
rated on a standardized scale from 1-10. Your scores are
compared to a relevant comparison group, with higher scores
showing areas that energize you the most. It is more important
to focus on the overall distribution of your strengths and
which clusters they fall in rather than your individual score for
each strength.
Your Significant 7 strengths are displayed as purple bars
while the other strengths are shown as blue bars. Higher
bars represent those strengths that are more natural and
energizing for you. The lowest bars represent non-strength
areas that provide you with less energy and enjoyment in
your work.
In the centre of your wheel, you can see percentage scores for each of the four cluster areas. The baseline is 25% for each cluster, so the further
away your scores are from 25%, the greater preference you show towards, or away from, that cluster. Consider this when thinking about your work
and what energizes you more, and less.
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance
While awareness of your strengths is crucial, it is important to translate this awareness into action in order to achieve
peak performance.
This section will help you to develop your strengths and strengthen your performance by providing guidance on ways
to stretch beyond your comfort zone, plus identify and minimize potential risk areas to performance.
Top Tip: create your own strengths habit tracker
To get the most from your strengths, we recommend creating your own strengths habit tracker to help you
build new habits over the coming weeks and months.
Following the suggestions on the following pages, pick out the best development ideas for you and turn them
into new habits to build for the next 30-60 days. Let us know how you get on, we would love to hear from you.
Adopt a ‘less is more’ approach and identify a few priority areas to focus on at any one time to maximize your success.
Your ‘Significant 7’ strengths are listed below.
Common sense You make pragmatic judgments based on practical thinking and previous experience
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Spend time with your organization’s customers to get hands-on knowledge of their experiences with your products and
organization, including their feedback on what works and what doesn't. Use this knowledge to make practical
recommendations to improve your organization and products
Volunteer to test or 'pilot' ideas for their practical relevance and present your findings to the team and/or organization
Study for a project planning qualification that can use your Common sense to deliver successful outcomes
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren’t practical or don’t fit with conventional logic. You may tend to
stifle creative and inspirational ideas
If you have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren't practical or don't fit with conventional logic…
Practise being curious and open-minded to discover new ways of approaching problems and tasks
If you tend to stifle creative and inspirational ideas…
Listen to your creative colleagues and ask lots of probing questions to understand how these ideas could be applied in practice
If you rely too heavily, and expect others to rely too heavily, on processes and past experiences…
Conduct better practice research using your network and online resources to understand how other organizations (within and
outside your sector) approach things
Courage You take on challenges and face risks by standing up for what you believe
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Research effective influencing skills and practise these skills to ensure you can easily stand up for what you believe in ways that
foster healthy working relationships
Seek out hot topic debates and innovation projects that you can contribute to that will help co-workers/stakeholders to look
at problems and issues in a different way
Go outside of your comfort zone by seeking to take on a project that you really believe in that not only stretches your current
skillset, but confidence levels and levels of self-belief
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You readily take on risky positions and challenges that have a high probability of failure. You may be perceived as reckless or
extreme in defending your beliefs
If you find that you are being seen as reckless or extreme in defending your beliefs…
Ensure that you develop a range of influencing skills so that you can gain support for your position without always having to
‘fight’ for the cause. And remember to choose time and prepare for your battles wisely
If you find that you have taken on too many ‘causes’ and that this is starting to exhaust you…
Prioritize those challenges/changes that will contribute greatest value to your team and organization and focus on gaining a
positive outcome in these areas only
If you find that you have become isolated in defending your beliefs…
Take time to listen to, and understand, others’ points of view so that you can modify your approach or bring in others’
perspectives
Creativity You generate new ideas and original solutions to move things forward
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Ask your manager for an opportunity to run short 'creative burst' or brainstorming sessions to improve work processes and
practices or to deal with specific challenges
Identify the three top problems or challenges facing your team or organization currently and use your Creativity strength to
address these
Observe and reflect how you use your intuition – gut feelings and hunches – and learn how to listen to these more consciously
in order to generate ideas and original solutions that move things forward
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context. You may
overlook the more obvious, tried and tested solution
If you generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context…
Partner with colleagues who have more pragmatic, common-sense thinking styles to ensure you understand what is likely to
work taking account of the organization’s history, context and stakeholders
If you tend to overlook more obvious, tried and tested solutions…
Balance your creativity with proven solutions from colleagues and other, similar organizations; avoid re-inventing the wheel
If you feel bored and disengage when your ideas are not considered…
Be open to different thinking styles and remember that some of the biggest breakthroughs can come through building on
what’s already worked well in the past
Critical thinking You approach problems and arguments by breaking them down systematically and evaluating them
objectively
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Discuss your interpretation of data, problems and situations with others and reflect on how effectively you are able to both
interpret and communicate the findings of your analysis
Read online articles about how to take a solutions-focused, problem-solving approach rather than a problem-focused
perspective to maintain a positive, constructive approach
Educate others to use analysis and thinking tools (SWOT, Impact-Effort Grid, Decision Tree, BCG Box, etc.) which will give you
an opportunity to refresh and build out your knowledge and skills of these critical decision tools
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments. This may be perceived as negative or over-
critical by others
If you continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments…
Spend more time listening and using your strength to ask open-ended and probing questions to uncover both benefits and
risks associated with others’ ideas and arguments
If your Critical thinking may be perceived as negative and over-critical by others…
Take time to signal to others in meetings and interactions that you are a strong critical thinker and will at times take a ‘devil’s
advocate’ role to analyze information, ideas and proposals
If colleagues who used to seek your opinion no longer do…
Explain how their strengths complement yours and call on them to balance your thinking style with other strengths, including
Creativity, Optimism and Common sense
Decisiveness You make quick, confident, and clear decisions, even when faced with limited information
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Apply a range of decision-making tools (e.g. Force Field Analysis, Cost Benefit Analysis, Effort-Impact Analysis) to ensure high
quality decision-making
Practise presenting the rationale behind your decisions and recommendations so that others can follow your judgement,
particularly to those who are less decisive than yourself
Identify how colleagues, stakeholders, friends and acquaintances can support you to identify new opportunities where you can
use your decisiveness strength
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You are overhasty or rash in your decision-making, spending little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes
If you are overhasty or rash in your decision-making…
Practise stepping back and reflecting on decisions, as well as gaining others’ views
If you spend little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes…
Use a model such as De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats to ensure you have considered alternatives
If you are perceived by colleagues as bossy, or even a bully…
Take time to consider how you communicate your decisions and consult others first
Persuasiveness You are able to win agreement and support for a position or desired outcome
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Take the initiative in volunteering for assignments where you are required to persuade others to agree to adopt a product,
position or idea
Coach or mentor colleagues who could benefit from developing their ability to persuade others
Use both 'advocacy' and 'inquiry' behaviours when trying to influence – push and pull, tell and sell. This will balance the use of
rational persuasive argument with questioning and facilitation skills
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You try to influence most outcomes in your favour, irrespective of the importance of the issue. You may also indulge in debate for
debate‘s sake, rather than focusing on relevant outcomes
If you try to persuade others habitually, without considering the importance of the issue…
Remember to identify those issues which relate most closely to your own or your team’s goals and focus your energies on these
debates rather than on more frivolous issues
If you focus on the debate, rather than the outcome…
Regularly remind yourself and those you are in discussion with of the purpose of the debate and the intended end goal
If you find yourself using emotional tactics to win an argument…
Make sure that you check in with others as to whether they are in genuine agreement with you; if not, continue to explore their
views and modify your position accordingly
Relationship building You take steps to build networks of contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Identify ways to share your knowledge and experience to enable others to also develop their Relationship building, e.g.
blogging, running workshops, coaching or mentoring
Learn about stakeholder mapping and stakeholder management so that you can focus the development of your network on the
most important relationships
Help your team to develop improved knowledge and understanding of each other’s strengths and skills by running some
meetings where this information is shared
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
Your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts may become an end in itself and take up a disproportionate amount of
your energies
If your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts is becoming an end in itself…
Remember to focus on building contacts and networks with people who are likely to have the greatest influence over your
team’s success
If your network is becoming too much of a drain on your time…
Ensure that you limit the amount of time that you are spending responding to requests from people in your network and that
you are gaining value from others too
If you find that your network is built on shallow relationships…
Focus your network on the most productive relationships, strengthening these by spending more time with only those you have
identified
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths
Courage: You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Emotional control: You are aware of your emotional
‘triggers’ and how to control these to
ensure you remain calm and productive
Enthusiasm: You demonstrate passion and energy
when communicating goals, beliefs,
interests or ideas you feel strongly about
Optimism: You remain positive and upbeat about
the future and your ability to influence it
to your advantage
Resilience: You deal effectively with setbacks and
enjoy overcoming difficult challenges
Self-confidence: You have a strong belief in yourself and
your abilities to accomplish tasks and
goals
Collaboration: You work cooperatively with others to
overcome conflict and build towards a
common goal
Compassion: You demonstrate a deep and genuine
concern for the well-being and welfare of
others
Developing others: You promote other people’s learning and
development to help them achieve their
goals and fulfil their potential
Empathy: You readily identify with other people’s
situations and can see things clearly from
their perspective
Leading: You take responsibility for influencing
and motivating others to contribute to
the goals and success of their team and
organization
Persuasiveness: You are able to win agreement and
support for a position or desired
outcome
Relationship building: You take steps to build networks of
contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between
people that you know
Decisiveness: You make quick, confident, and clear
decisions, even when faced with limited
information
Efficiency: You take a well-ordered and methodical
approach to tasks to achieve planned
outcomes
Flexibility: You remain adaptable and flexible in the
face of unfamiliar or changing situations
Initiative: You take independent action to make
things happen and achieve goals
Results focus: You maintain a strong sense of focus on
results, driving tasks and projects to
completion
Self-improvement: You draw on a wide range of people and
resources in the pursuit of self-
development and learning
Common sense: You make pragmatic judgments based
on practical thinking and previous
experience
Creativity: You generate new ideas and original
solutions to move things forward
Critical thinking: You approach problems and arguments
by breaking them down systematically
and evaluating them objectively
Detail orientation: You pay attention to detail in order to
produce high quality output, no matter
what the pressures
Strategic mindedness: You focus on the future and take a
strategic perspective on issues and
challenges
®
Emotional Relational Execution Thinking
Tools to optimize your performance
Want to find out more about your performance at work? Why not take:
Strengthscope360
Strengthscope360™ is a quick and simple multi-rater assessment which builds on the initial Strengthscope® self-report,
plugging in other people’s feedback (e.g. co-workers)
StrengthscopeLeader
This report allows leaders to discover what it is that makes them truly unique, and provides valuable feedback on how to bring
their authentic style into their leadership role
StrengthscopeTeam
The StrengthscopeTeam™ report consolidates individual Strengthscope® reports at team level, as well as assessing current
team behaviour, enabling teams to take their performance to the next level
StrengthscopeEngage
StrengthscopeEngage™ is split into two reports: StrengthscopeEngage™ Baseline and StrengthscopeEngage™ Progress and
together they measure changes in staff engagement and productive use of strengths following on from development initiatives.
For additional resources to optimize your strengths and reduce performance risks, visit
www.strengthscope.com
Strengthscope is a registered trademark of Strengthscope Limited. While utmost care and attention have been
taken in the creation of Strengthscope , the authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any decisions
arising from the use of the data, or any specific interpretations or inferences arising from the report.
Please note that the content of this report remains proprietary to Strengthscope Limited, and that any distribution or
copying of the report or any of its content is prohibited unless prior agreement is given by Strengthscope Limited in
writing.
™
™
™
™
®
®
WEI CUI. 2024 October 21
© Strengthscope Ltd. All Rights Reserved
11
Confidential
© S
tr en
g th
sc o
p e
20 24
WEI CUI
21 October 2024
Contents Page N
1. Introduction 2
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths 3
3. Your strengths profile 4
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance 5
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths 12
o
®
1. Introduction
The following Strengthscope report is based on your
responses to the questionnaire completed on 21/10/2024.
Strengthscope allows you to bring your best to work, and to
life, every single day through the discovery and development
of your strengths.
We define strengths as the underlying qualities that energize
you and that you are great at (or have the potential to become
great at).
Your Strengthscope report will help you to enhance your
performance and energy at work by improving your
understanding of:
Your unique combination of strengths and how to develop
these to achieve exceptional results
Positive ways of working that will improve your confidence,
motivation and success in any situation
Why focus on your strengths?
Our strengths are the qualities that energize us and enable
us to perform at our best.
By getting the balance right between developing your
strengths and reducing performance risks, you will achieve
higher levels of:
Resilience
Confidence
Engagement
Success
®
®
®
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths
Based on your responses to the questionnaire, your Significant 7 strengths, and the productive behaviours related to
each strength, are listed in alphabetical order. These are the most energizing qualities for you. By focusing on
developing these strengths you will be able to achieve your best results and career success.
Your Significant 7 strengths When performing at your best you:
Common sense
You make pragmatic judgments based on
practical thinking and previous experience
Make good judgments based on careful observation of what works in different
situations
Enjoy learning from experience
Rely a lot on obvious and pragmatic answers that have worked well in the past
Courage
You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Are able to stand up for what you believe in, even when challenging authority
or the status quo
Are able to withstand personal risk, pressure and difficult circumstances
Take tough stands based on your convictions, even if they are unpopular
Creativity
You generate new ideas and original solutions to
move things forward
Encourage others to explore new and creative perspectives when problem
solving
Enjoy coming up with new ideas and original solutions
Have the ability to ‘think outside the box’ to find an original solution to a tough
problem
Critical thinking
You approach problems and arguments by
breaking them down systematically and
evaluating them objectively
Easily spot flaws in arguments and problems based on logical analysis
Enjoy bringing objectivity and clarity to complex situations
Spend time defining and simplifying problems, understanding underlying
assumptions, facts and evidence, before seeking solutions
Decisiveness
You make quick, confident, and clear decisions,
even when faced with limited information
Are willing to make decisions in high pressure situations when time is critical
Are able to make effective and timely decisions even when the data is limited
or decisions produce unpleasant consequences
Quickly perceive the impact and implications of decisions
Persuasiveness
You are able to win agreement and support for a
position or desired outcome
Are able to persuade others to your way of thinking based on the merits of your
position
Enjoy negotiation and debate as they provide opportunity for you to state your
case and win people over
Find that there are times when you will stop at nothing to persuade and
convince others
Relationship building
You take steps to build networks of contacts and
act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Have a wide network of colleagues and contacts
Enjoy meeting new people and getting to know them
Are the sort of person who knows everybody and often introduces people in
your network to one another
3. Your strengths profile
The wheel below shows all of the 24 strengths with your scores
rated on a standardized scale from 1-10. Your scores are
compared to a relevant comparison group, with higher scores
showing areas that energize you the most. It is more important
to focus on the overall distribution of your strengths and
which clusters they fall in rather than your individual score for
each strength.
Your Significant 7 strengths are displayed as purple bars
while the other strengths are shown as blue bars. Higher
bars represent those strengths that are more natural and
energizing for you. The lowest bars represent non-strength
areas that provide you with less energy and enjoyment in
your work.
In the centre of your wheel, you can see percentage scores for each of the four cluster areas. The baseline is 25% for each cluster, so the further
away your scores are from 25%, the greater preference you show towards, or away from, that cluster. Consider this when thinking about your work
and what energizes you more, and less.
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance
While awareness of your strengths is crucial, it is important to translate this awareness into action in order to achieve
peak performance.
This section will help you to develop your strengths and strengthen your performance by providing guidance on ways
to stretch beyond your comfort zone, plus identify and minimize potential risk areas to performance.
Top Tip: create your own strengths habit tracker
To get the most from your strengths, we recommend creating your own strengths habit tracker to help you
build new habits over the coming weeks and months.
Following the suggestions on the following pages, pick out the best development ideas for you and turn them
into new habits to build for the next 30-60 days. Let us know how you get on, we would love to hear from you.
Adopt a ‘less is more’ approach and identify a few priority areas to focus on at any one time to maximize your success.
Your ‘Significant 7’ strengths are listed below.
Common sense You make pragmatic judgments based on practical thinking and previous experience
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Spend time with your organization’s customers to get hands-on knowledge of their experiences with your products and
organization, including their feedback on what works and what doesn't. Use this knowledge to make practical
recommendations to improve your organization and products
Volunteer to test or 'pilot' ideas for their practical relevance and present your findings to the team and/or organization
Study for a project planning qualification that can use your Common sense to deliver successful outcomes
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren’t practical or don’t fit with conventional logic. You may tend to
stifle creative and inspirational ideas
If you have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren't practical or don't fit with conventional logic…
Practise being curious and open-minded to discover new ways of approaching problems and tasks
If you tend to stifle creative and inspirational ideas…
Listen to your creative colleagues and ask lots of probing questions to understand how these ideas could be applied in practice
If you rely too heavily, and expect others to rely too heavily, on processes and past experiences…
Conduct better practice research using your network and online resources to understand how other organizations (within and
outside your sector) approach things
Courage You take on challenges and face risks by standing up for what you believe
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Research effective influencing skills and practise these skills to ensure you can easily stand up for what you believe in ways that
foster healthy working relationships
Seek out hot topic debates and innovation projects that you can contribute to that will help co-workers/stakeholders to look
at problems and issues in a different way
Go outside of your comfort zone by seeking to take on a project that you really believe in that not only stretches your current
skillset, but confidence levels and levels of self-belief
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You readily take on risky positions and challenges that have a high probability of failure. You may be perceived as reckless or
extreme in defending your beliefs
If you find that you are being seen as reckless or extreme in defending your beliefs…
Ensure that you develop a range of influencing skills so that you can gain support for your position without always having to
‘fight’ for the cause. And remember to choose time and prepare for your battles wisely
If you find that you have taken on too many ‘causes’ and that this is starting to exhaust you…
Prioritize those challenges/changes that will contribute greatest value to your team and organization and focus on gaining a
positive outcome in these areas only
If you find that you have become isolated in defending your beliefs…
Take time to listen to, and understand, others’ points of view so that you can modify your approach or bring in others’
perspectives
Creativity You generate new ideas and original solutions to move things forward
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Ask your manager for an opportunity to run short 'creative burst' or brainstorming sessions to improve work processes and
practices or to deal with specific challenges
Identify the three top problems or challenges facing your team or organization currently and use your Creativity strength to
address these
Observe and reflect how you use your intuition – gut feelings and hunches – and learn how to listen to these more consciously
in order to generate ideas and original solutions that move things forward
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context. You may
overlook the more obvious, tried and tested solution
If you generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context…
Partner with colleagues who have more pragmatic, common-sense thinking styles to ensure you understand what is likely to
work taking account of the organization’s history, context and stakeholders
If you tend to overlook more obvious, tried and tested solutions…
Balance your creativity with proven solutions from colleagues and other, similar organizations; avoid re-inventing the wheel
If you feel bored and disengage when your ideas are not considered…
Be open to different thinking styles and remember that some of the biggest breakthroughs can come through building on
what’s already worked well in the past
Critical thinking You approach problems and arguments by breaking them down systematically and evaluating them
objectively
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Discuss your interpretation of data, problems and situations with others and reflect on how effectively you are able to both
interpret and communicate the findings of your analysis
Read online articles about how to take a solutions-focused, problem-solving approach rather than a problem-focused
perspective to maintain a positive, constructive approach
Educate others to use analysis and thinking tools (SWOT, Impact-Effort Grid, Decision Tree, BCG Box, etc.) which will give you
an opportunity to refresh and build out your knowledge and skills of these critical decision tools
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments. This may be perceived as negative or over-
critical by others
If you continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments…
Spend more time listening and using your strength to ask open-ended and probing questions to uncover both benefits and
risks associated with others’ ideas and arguments
If your Critical thinking may be perceived as negative and over-critical by others…
Take time to signal to others in meetings and interactions that you are a strong critical thinker and will at times take a ‘devil’s
advocate’ role to analyze information, ideas and proposals
If colleagues who used to seek your opinion no longer do…
Explain how their strengths complement yours and call on them to balance your thinking style with other strengths, including
Creativity, Optimism and Common sense
Decisiveness You make quick, confident, and clear decisions, even when faced with limited information
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Apply a range of decision-making tools (e.g. Force Field Analysis, Cost Benefit Analysis, Effort-Impact Analysis) to ensure high
quality decision-making
Practise presenting the rationale behind your decisions and recommendations so that others can follow your judgement,
particularly to those who are less decisive than yourself
Identify how colleagues, stakeholders, friends and acquaintances can support you to identify new opportunities where you can
use your decisiveness strength
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You are overhasty or rash in your decision-making, spending little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes
If you are overhasty or rash in your decision-making…
Practise stepping back and reflecting on decisions, as well as gaining others’ views
If you spend little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes…
Use a model such as De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats to ensure you have considered alternatives
If you are perceived by colleagues as bossy, or even a bully…
Take time to consider how you communicate your decisions and consult others first
Persuasiveness You are able to win agreement and support for a position or desired outcome
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Take the initiative in volunteering for assignments where you are required to persuade others to agree to adopt a product,
position or idea
Coach or mentor colleagues who could benefit from developing their ability to persuade others
Use both 'advocacy' and 'inquiry' behaviours when trying to influence – push and pull, tell and sell. This will balance the use of
rational persuasive argument with questioning and facilitation skills
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You try to influence most outcomes in your favour, irrespective of the importance of the issue. You may also indulge in debate for
debate‘s sake, rather than focusing on relevant outcomes
If you try to persuade others habitually, without considering the importance of the issue…
Remember to identify those issues which relate most closely to your own or your team’s goals and focus your energies on these
debates rather than on more frivolous issues
If you focus on the debate, rather than the outcome…
Regularly remind yourself and those you are in discussion with of the purpose of the debate and the intended end goal
If you find yourself using emotional tactics to win an argument…
Make sure that you check in with others as to whether they are in genuine agreement with you; if not, continue to explore their
views and modify your position accordingly
Relationship building You take steps to build networks of contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Identify ways to share your knowledge and experience to enable others to also develop their Relationship building, e.g.
blogging, running workshops, coaching or mentoring
Learn about stakeholder mapping and stakeholder management so that you can focus the development of your network on the
most important relationships
Help your team to develop improved knowledge and understanding of each other’s strengths and skills by running some
meetings where this information is shared
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
Your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts may become an end in itself and take up a disproportionate amount of
your energies
If your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts is becoming an end in itself…
Remember to focus on building contacts and networks with people who are likely to have the greatest influence over your
team’s success
If your network is becoming too much of a drain on your time…
Ensure that you limit the amount of time that you are spending responding to requests from people in your network and that
you are gaining value from others too
If you find that your network is built on shallow relationships…
Focus your network on the most productive relationships, strengthening these by spending more time with only those you have
identified
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths
Courage: You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Emotional control: You are aware of your emotional
‘triggers’ and how to control these to
ensure you remain calm and productive
Enthusiasm: You demonstrate passion and energy
when communicating goals, beliefs,
interests or ideas you feel strongly about
Optimism: You remain positive and upbeat about
the future and your ability to influence it
to your advantage
Resilience: You deal effectively with setbacks and
enjoy overcoming difficult challenges
Self-confidence: You have a strong belief in yourself and
your abilities to accomplish tasks and
goals
Collaboration: You work cooperatively with others to
overcome conflict and build towards a
common goal
Compassion: You demonstrate a deep and genuine
concern for the well-being and welfare of
others
Developing others: You promote other people’s learning and
development to help them achieve their
goals and fulfil their potential
Empathy: You readily identify with other people’s
situations and can see things clearly from
their perspective
Leading: You take responsibility for influencing
and motivating others to contribute to
the goals and success of their team and
organization
Persuasiveness: You are able to win agreement and
support for a position or desired
outcome
Relationship building: You take steps to build networks of
contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between
people that you know
Decisiveness: You make quick, confident, and clear
decisions, even when faced with limited
information
Efficiency: You take a well-ordered and methodical
approach to tasks to achieve planned
outcomes
Flexibility: You remain adaptable and flexible in the
face of unfamiliar or changing situations
Initiative: You take independent action to make
things happen and achieve goals
Results focus: You maintain a strong sense of focus on
results, driving tasks and projects to
completion
Self-improvement: You draw on a wide range of people and
resources in the pursuit of self-
development and learning
Common sense: You make pragmatic judgments based
on practical thinking and previous
experience
Creativity: You generate new ideas and original
solutions to move things forward
Critical thinking: You approach problems and arguments
by breaking them down systematically
and evaluating them objectively
Detail orientation: You pay attention to detail in order to
produce high quality output, no matter
what the pressures
Strategic mindedness: You focus on the future and take a
strategic perspective on issues and
challenges
®
Emotional Relational Execution Thinking
Tools to optimize your performance
Want to find out more about your performance at work? Why not take:
Strengthscope360
Strengthscope360™ is a quick and simple multi-rater assessment which builds on the initial Strengthscope® self-report,
plugging in other people’s feedback (e.g. co-workers)
StrengthscopeLeader
This report allows leaders to discover what it is that makes them truly unique, and provides valuable feedback on how to bring
their authentic style into their leadership role
StrengthscopeTeam
The StrengthscopeTeam™ report consolidates individual Strengthscope® reports at team level, as well as assessing current
team behaviour, enabling teams to take their performance to the next level
StrengthscopeEngage
StrengthscopeEngage™ is split into two reports: StrengthscopeEngage™ Baseline and StrengthscopeEngage™ Progress and
together they measure changes in staff engagement and productive use of strengths following on from development initiatives.
For additional resources to optimize your strengths and reduce performance risks, visit
www.strengthscope.com
Strengthscope is a registered trademark of Strengthscope Limited. While utmost care and attention have been
taken in the creation of Strengthscope , the authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any decisions
arising from the use of the data, or any specific interpretations or inferences arising from the report.
Please note that the content of this report remains proprietary to Strengthscope Limited, and that any distribution or
copying of the report or any of its content is prohibited unless prior agreement is given by Strengthscope Limited in
writing.
™
™
™
™
®
®
WEI CUI. 2024 October 21
© Strengthscope Ltd. All Rights Reserved
12
Confidential
© S
tr en
g th
sc o
p e
20 24
WEI CUI
21 October 2024
Contents Page N
1. Introduction 2
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths 3
3. Your strengths profile 4
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance 5
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths 12
o
®
1. Introduction
The following Strengthscope report is based on your
responses to the questionnaire completed on 21/10/2024.
Strengthscope allows you to bring your best to work, and to
life, every single day through the discovery and development
of your strengths.
We define strengths as the underlying qualities that energize
you and that you are great at (or have the potential to become
great at).
Your Strengthscope report will help you to enhance your
performance and energy at work by improving your
understanding of:
Your unique combination of strengths and how to develop
these to achieve exceptional results
Positive ways of working that will improve your confidence,
motivation and success in any situation
Why focus on your strengths?
Our strengths are the qualities that energize us and enable
us to perform at our best.
By getting the balance right between developing your
strengths and reducing performance risks, you will achieve
higher levels of:
Resilience
Confidence
Engagement
Success
®
®
®
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths
Based on your responses to the questionnaire, your Significant 7 strengths, and the productive behaviours related to
each strength, are listed in alphabetical order. These are the most energizing qualities for you. By focusing on
developing these strengths you will be able to achieve your best results and career success.
Your Significant 7 strengths When performing at your best you:
Common sense
You make pragmatic judgments based on
practical thinking and previous experience
Make good judgments based on careful observation of what works in different
situations
Enjoy learning from experience
Rely a lot on obvious and pragmatic answers that have worked well in the past
Courage
You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Are able to stand up for what you believe in, even when challenging authority
or the status quo
Are able to withstand personal risk, pressure and difficult circumstances
Take tough stands based on your convictions, even if they are unpopular
Creativity
You generate new ideas and original solutions to
move things forward
Encourage others to explore new and creative perspectives when problem
solving
Enjoy coming up with new ideas and original solutions
Have the ability to ‘think outside the box’ to find an original solution to a tough
problem
Critical thinking
You approach problems and arguments by
breaking them down systematically and
evaluating them objectively
Easily spot flaws in arguments and problems based on logical analysis
Enjoy bringing objectivity and clarity to complex situations
Spend time defining and simplifying problems, understanding underlying
assumptions, facts and evidence, before seeking solutions
Decisiveness
You make quick, confident, and clear decisions,
even when faced with limited information
Are willing to make decisions in high pressure situations when time is critical
Are able to make effective and timely decisions even when the data is limited
or decisions produce unpleasant consequences
Quickly perceive the impact and implications of decisions
Persuasiveness
You are able to win agreement and support for a
position or desired outcome
Are able to persuade others to your way of thinking based on the merits of your
position
Enjoy negotiation and debate as they provide opportunity for you to state your
case and win people over
Find that there are times when you will stop at nothing to persuade and
convince others
Relationship building
You take steps to build networks of contacts and
act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Have a wide network of colleagues and contacts
Enjoy meeting new people and getting to know them
Are the sort of person who knows everybody and often introduces people in
your network to one another
3. Your strengths profile
The wheel below shows all of the 24 strengths with your scores
rated on a standardized scale from 1-10. Your scores are
compared to a relevant comparison group, with higher scores
showing areas that energize you the most. It is more important
to focus on the overall distribution of your strengths and
which clusters they fall in rather than your individual score for
each strength.
Your Significant 7 strengths are displayed as purple bars
while the other strengths are shown as blue bars. Higher
bars represent those strengths that are more natural and
energizing for you. The lowest bars represent non-strength
areas that provide you with less energy and enjoyment in
your work.
In the centre of your wheel, you can see percentage scores for each of the four cluster areas. The baseline is 25% for each cluster, so the further
away your scores are from 25%, the greater preference you show towards, or away from, that cluster. Consider this when thinking about your work
and what energizes you more, and less.
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance
While awareness of your strengths is crucial, it is important to translate this awareness into action in order to achieve
peak performance.
This section will help you to develop your strengths and strengthen your performance by providing guidance on ways
to stretch beyond your comfort zone, plus identify and minimize potential risk areas to performance.
Top Tip: create your own strengths habit tracker
To get the most from your strengths, we recommend creating your own strengths habit tracker to help you
build new habits over the coming weeks and months.
Following the suggestions on the following pages, pick out the best development ideas for you and turn them
into new habits to build for the next 30-60 days. Let us know how you get on, we would love to hear from you.
Adopt a ‘less is more’ approach and identify a few priority areas to focus on at any one time to maximize your success.
Your ‘Significant 7’ strengths are listed below.
Common sense You make pragmatic judgments based on practical thinking and previous experience
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Spend time with your organization’s customers to get hands-on knowledge of their experiences with your products and
organization, including their feedback on what works and what doesn't. Use this knowledge to make practical
recommendations to improve your organization and products
Volunteer to test or 'pilot' ideas for their practical relevance and present your findings to the team and/or organization
Study for a project planning qualification that can use your Common sense to deliver successful outcomes
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren’t practical or don’t fit with conventional logic. You may tend to
stifle creative and inspirational ideas
If you have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren't practical or don't fit with conventional logic…
Practise being curious and open-minded to discover new ways of approaching problems and tasks
If you tend to stifle creative and inspirational ideas…
Listen to your creative colleagues and ask lots of probing questions to understand how these ideas could be applied in practice
If you rely too heavily, and expect others to rely too heavily, on processes and past experiences…
Conduct better practice research using your network and online resources to understand how other organizations (within and
outside your sector) approach things
Courage You take on challenges and face risks by standing up for what you believe
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Research effective influencing skills and practise these skills to ensure you can easily stand up for what you believe in ways that
foster healthy working relationships
Seek out hot topic debates and innovation projects that you can contribute to that will help co-workers/stakeholders to look
at problems and issues in a different way
Go outside of your comfort zone by seeking to take on a project that you really believe in that not only stretches your current
skillset, but confidence levels and levels of self-belief
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You readily take on risky positions and challenges that have a high probability of failure. You may be perceived as reckless or
extreme in defending your beliefs
If you find that you are being seen as reckless or extreme in defending your beliefs…
Ensure that you develop a range of influencing skills so that you can gain support for your position without always having to
‘fight’ for the cause. And remember to choose time and prepare for your battles wisely
If you find that you have taken on too many ‘causes’ and that this is starting to exhaust you…
Prioritize those challenges/changes that will contribute greatest value to your team and organization and focus on gaining a
positive outcome in these areas only
If you find that you have become isolated in defending your beliefs…
Take time to listen to, and understand, others’ points of view so that you can modify your approach or bring in others’
perspectives
Creativity You generate new ideas and original solutions to move things forward
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Ask your manager for an opportunity to run short 'creative burst' or brainstorming sessions to improve work processes and
practices or to deal with specific challenges
Identify the three top problems or challenges facing your team or organization currently and use your Creativity strength to
address these
Observe and reflect how you use your intuition – gut feelings and hunches – and learn how to listen to these more consciously
in order to generate ideas and original solutions that move things forward
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context. You may
overlook the more obvious, tried and tested solution
If you generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context…
Partner with colleagues who have more pragmatic, common-sense thinking styles to ensure you understand what is likely to
work taking account of the organization’s history, context and stakeholders
If you tend to overlook more obvious, tried and tested solutions…
Balance your creativity with proven solutions from colleagues and other, similar organizations; avoid re-inventing the wheel
If you feel bored and disengage when your ideas are not considered…
Be open to different thinking styles and remember that some of the biggest breakthroughs can come through building on
what’s already worked well in the past
Critical thinking You approach problems and arguments by breaking them down systematically and evaluating them
objectively
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Discuss your interpretation of data, problems and situations with others and reflect on how effectively you are able to both
interpret and communicate the findings of your analysis
Read online articles about how to take a solutions-focused, problem-solving approach rather than a problem-focused
perspective to maintain a positive, constructive approach
Educate others to use analysis and thinking tools (SWOT, Impact-Effort Grid, Decision Tree, BCG Box, etc.) which will give you
an opportunity to refresh and build out your knowledge and skills of these critical decision tools
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments. This may be perceived as negative or over-
critical by others
If you continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments…
Spend more time listening and using your strength to ask open-ended and probing questions to uncover both benefits and
risks associated with others’ ideas and arguments
If your Critical thinking may be perceived as negative and over-critical by others…
Take time to signal to others in meetings and interactions that you are a strong critical thinker and will at times take a ‘devil’s
advocate’ role to analyze information, ideas and proposals
If colleagues who used to seek your opinion no longer do…
Explain how their strengths complement yours and call on them to balance your thinking style with other strengths, including
Creativity, Optimism and Common sense
Decisiveness You make quick, confident, and clear decisions, even when faced with limited information
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Apply a range of decision-making tools (e.g. Force Field Analysis, Cost Benefit Analysis, Effort-Impact Analysis) to ensure high
quality decision-making
Practise presenting the rationale behind your decisions and recommendations so that others can follow your judgement,
particularly to those who are less decisive than yourself
Identify how colleagues, stakeholders, friends and acquaintances can support you to identify new opportunities where you can
use your decisiveness strength
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You are overhasty or rash in your decision-making, spending little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes
If you are overhasty or rash in your decision-making…
Practise stepping back and reflecting on decisions, as well as gaining others’ views
If you spend little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes…
Use a model such as De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats to ensure you have considered alternatives
If you are perceived by colleagues as bossy, or even a bully…
Take time to consider how you communicate your decisions and consult others first
Persuasiveness You are able to win agreement and support for a position or desired outcome
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Take the initiative in volunteering for assignments where you are required to persuade others to agree to adopt a product,
position or idea
Coach or mentor colleagues who could benefit from developing their ability to persuade others
Use both 'advocacy' and 'inquiry' behaviours when trying to influence – push and pull, tell and sell. This will balance the use of
rational persuasive argument with questioning and facilitation skills
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You try to influence most outcomes in your favour, irrespective of the importance of the issue. You may also indulge in debate for
debate‘s sake, rather than focusing on relevant outcomes
If you try to persuade others habitually, without considering the importance of the issue…
Remember to identify those issues which relate most closely to your own or your team’s goals and focus your energies on these
debates rather than on more frivolous issues
If you focus on the debate, rather than the outcome…
Regularly remind yourself and those you are in discussion with of the purpose of the debate and the intended end goal
If you find yourself using emotional tactics to win an argument…
Make sure that you check in with others as to whether they are in genuine agreement with you; if not, continue to explore their
views and modify your position accordingly
Relationship building You take steps to build networks of contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Identify ways to share your knowledge and experience to enable others to also develop their Relationship building, e.g.
blogging, running workshops, coaching or mentoring
Learn about stakeholder mapping and stakeholder management so that you can focus the development of your network on the
most important relationships
Help your team to develop improved knowledge and understanding of each other’s strengths and skills by running some
meetings where this information is shared
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
Your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts may become an end in itself and take up a disproportionate amount of
your energies
If your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts is becoming an end in itself…
Remember to focus on building contacts and networks with people who are likely to have the greatest influence over your
team’s success
If your network is becoming too much of a drain on your time…
Ensure that you limit the amount of time that you are spending responding to requests from people in your network and that
you are gaining value from others too
If you find that your network is built on shallow relationships…
Focus your network on the most productive relationships, strengthening these by spending more time with only those you have
identified
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths
Courage: You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Emotional control: You are aware of your emotional
‘triggers’ and how to control these to
ensure you remain calm and productive
Enthusiasm: You demonstrate passion and energy
when communicating goals, beliefs,
interests or ideas you feel strongly about
Optimism: You remain positive and upbeat about
the future and your ability to influence it
to your advantage
Resilience: You deal effectively with setbacks and
enjoy overcoming difficult challenges
Self-confidence: You have a strong belief in yourself and
your abilities to accomplish tasks and
goals
Collaboration: You work cooperatively with others to
overcome conflict and build towards a
common goal
Compassion: You demonstrate a deep and genuine
concern for the well-being and welfare of
others
Developing others: You promote other people’s learning and
development to help them achieve their
goals and fulfil their potential
Empathy: You readily identify with other people’s
situations and can see things clearly from
their perspective
Leading: You take responsibility for influencing
and motivating others to contribute to
the goals and success of their team and
organization
Persuasiveness: You are able to win agreement and
support for a position or desired
outcome
Relationship building: You take steps to build networks of
contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between
people that you know
Decisiveness: You make quick, confident, and clear
decisions, even when faced with limited
information
Efficiency: You take a well-ordered and methodical
approach to tasks to achieve planned
outcomes
Flexibility: You remain adaptable and flexible in the
face of unfamiliar or changing situations
Initiative: You take independent action to make
things happen and achieve goals
Results focus: You maintain a strong sense of focus on
results, driving tasks and projects to
completion
Self-improvement: You draw on a wide range of people and
resources in the pursuit of self-
development and learning
Common sense: You make pragmatic judgments based
on practical thinking and previous
experience
Creativity: You generate new ideas and original
solutions to move things forward
Critical thinking: You approach problems and arguments
by breaking them down systematically
and evaluating them objectively
Detail orientation: You pay attention to detail in order to
produce high quality output, no matter
what the pressures
Strategic mindedness: You focus on the future and take a
strategic perspective on issues and
challenges
®
Emotional Relational Execution Thinking
Tools to optimize your performance
Want to find out more about your performance at work? Why not take:
Strengthscope360
Strengthscope360™ is a quick and simple multi-rater assessment which builds on the initial Strengthscope® self-report,
plugging in other people’s feedback (e.g. co-workers)
StrengthscopeLeader
This report allows leaders to discover what it is that makes them truly unique, and provides valuable feedback on how to bring
their authentic style into their leadership role
StrengthscopeTeam
The StrengthscopeTeam™ report consolidates individual Strengthscope® reports at team level, as well as assessing current
team behaviour, enabling teams to take their performance to the next level
StrengthscopeEngage
StrengthscopeEngage™ is split into two reports: StrengthscopeEngage™ Baseline and StrengthscopeEngage™ Progress and
together they measure changes in staff engagement and productive use of strengths following on from development initiatives.
For additional resources to optimize your strengths and reduce performance risks, visit
www.strengthscope.com
Strengthscope is a registered trademark of Strengthscope Limited. While utmost care and attention have been
taken in the creation of Strengthscope , the authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any decisions
arising from the use of the data, or any specific interpretations or inferences arising from the report.
Please note that the content of this report remains proprietary to Strengthscope Limited, and that any distribution or
copying of the report or any of its content is prohibited unless prior agreement is given by Strengthscope Limited in
writing.
™
™
™
™
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WEI CUI. 2024 October 21
© Strengthscope Ltd. All Rights Reserved
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Confidential
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WEI CUI
21 October 2024
Contents Page N
1. Introduction 2
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths 3
3. Your strengths profile 4
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance 5
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths 12
o
®
1. Introduction
The following Strengthscope report is based on your
responses to the questionnaire completed on 21/10/2024.
Strengthscope allows you to bring your best to work, and to
life, every single day through the discovery and development
of your strengths.
We define strengths as the underlying qualities that energize
you and that you are great at (or have the potential to become
great at).
Your Strengthscope report will help you to enhance your
performance and energy at work by improving your
understanding of:
Your unique combination of strengths and how to develop
these to achieve exceptional results
Positive ways of working that will improve your confidence,
motivation and success in any situation
Why focus on your strengths?
Our strengths are the qualities that energize us and enable
us to perform at our best.
By getting the balance right between developing your
strengths and reducing performance risks, you will achieve
higher levels of:
Resilience
Confidence
Engagement
Success
®
®
®
2. Your 'Significant 7' strengths
Based on your responses to the questionnaire, your Significant 7 strengths, and the productive behaviours related to
each strength, are listed in alphabetical order. These are the most energizing qualities for you. By focusing on
developing these strengths you will be able to achieve your best results and career success.
Your Significant 7 strengths When performing at your best you:
Common sense
You make pragmatic judgments based on
practical thinking and previous experience
Make good judgments based on careful observation of what works in different
situations
Enjoy learning from experience
Rely a lot on obvious and pragmatic answers that have worked well in the past
Courage
You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Are able to stand up for what you believe in, even when challenging authority
or the status quo
Are able to withstand personal risk, pressure and difficult circumstances
Take tough stands based on your convictions, even if they are unpopular
Creativity
You generate new ideas and original solutions to
move things forward
Encourage others to explore new and creative perspectives when problem
solving
Enjoy coming up with new ideas and original solutions
Have the ability to ‘think outside the box’ to find an original solution to a tough
problem
Critical thinking
You approach problems and arguments by
breaking them down systematically and
evaluating them objectively
Easily spot flaws in arguments and problems based on logical analysis
Enjoy bringing objectivity and clarity to complex situations
Spend time defining and simplifying problems, understanding underlying
assumptions, facts and evidence, before seeking solutions
Decisiveness
You make quick, confident, and clear decisions,
even when faced with limited information
Are willing to make decisions in high pressure situations when time is critical
Are able to make effective and timely decisions even when the data is limited
or decisions produce unpleasant consequences
Quickly perceive the impact and implications of decisions
Persuasiveness
You are able to win agreement and support for a
position or desired outcome
Are able to persuade others to your way of thinking based on the merits of your
position
Enjoy negotiation and debate as they provide opportunity for you to state your
case and win people over
Find that there are times when you will stop at nothing to persuade and
convince others
Relationship building
You take steps to build networks of contacts and
act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Have a wide network of colleagues and contacts
Enjoy meeting new people and getting to know them
Are the sort of person who knows everybody and often introduces people in
your network to one another
3. Your strengths profile
The wheel below shows all of the 24 strengths with your scores
rated on a standardized scale from 1-10. Your scores are
compared to a relevant comparison group, with higher scores
showing areas that energize you the most. It is more important
to focus on the overall distribution of your strengths and
which clusters they fall in rather than your individual score for
each strength.
Your Significant 7 strengths are displayed as purple bars
while the other strengths are shown as blue bars. Higher
bars represent those strengths that are more natural and
energizing for you. The lowest bars represent non-strength
areas that provide you with less energy and enjoyment in
your work.
In the centre of your wheel, you can see percentage scores for each of the four cluster areas. The baseline is 25% for each cluster, so the further
away your scores are from 25%, the greater preference you show towards, or away from, that cluster. Consider this when thinking about your work
and what energizes you more, and less.
4. Developing strengths to achieve peak performance
While awareness of your strengths is crucial, it is important to translate this awareness into action in order to achieve
peak performance.
This section will help you to develop your strengths and strengthen your performance by providing guidance on ways
to stretch beyond your comfort zone, plus identify and minimize potential risk areas to performance.
Top Tip: create your own strengths habit tracker
To get the most from your strengths, we recommend creating your own strengths habit tracker to help you
build new habits over the coming weeks and months.
Following the suggestions on the following pages, pick out the best development ideas for you and turn them
into new habits to build for the next 30-60 days. Let us know how you get on, we would love to hear from you.
Adopt a ‘less is more’ approach and identify a few priority areas to focus on at any one time to maximize your success.
Your ‘Significant 7’ strengths are listed below.
Common sense You make pragmatic judgments based on practical thinking and previous experience
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Spend time with your organization’s customers to get hands-on knowledge of their experiences with your products and
organization, including their feedback on what works and what doesn't. Use this knowledge to make practical
recommendations to improve your organization and products
Volunteer to test or 'pilot' ideas for their practical relevance and present your findings to the team and/or organization
Study for a project planning qualification that can use your Common sense to deliver successful outcomes
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren’t practical or don’t fit with conventional logic. You may tend to
stifle creative and inspirational ideas
If you have a tendency to dismiss new ideas or solutions that aren't practical or don't fit with conventional logic…
Practise being curious and open-minded to discover new ways of approaching problems and tasks
If you tend to stifle creative and inspirational ideas…
Listen to your creative colleagues and ask lots of probing questions to understand how these ideas could be applied in practice
If you rely too heavily, and expect others to rely too heavily, on processes and past experiences…
Conduct better practice research using your network and online resources to understand how other organizations (within and
outside your sector) approach things
Courage You take on challenges and face risks by standing up for what you believe
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Research effective influencing skills and practise these skills to ensure you can easily stand up for what you believe in ways that
foster healthy working relationships
Seek out hot topic debates and innovation projects that you can contribute to that will help co-workers/stakeholders to look
at problems and issues in a different way
Go outside of your comfort zone by seeking to take on a project that you really believe in that not only stretches your current
skillset, but confidence levels and levels of self-belief
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You readily take on risky positions and challenges that have a high probability of failure. You may be perceived as reckless or
extreme in defending your beliefs
If you find that you are being seen as reckless or extreme in defending your beliefs…
Ensure that you develop a range of influencing skills so that you can gain support for your position without always having to
‘fight’ for the cause. And remember to choose time and prepare for your battles wisely
If you find that you have taken on too many ‘causes’ and that this is starting to exhaust you…
Prioritize those challenges/changes that will contribute greatest value to your team and organization and focus on gaining a
positive outcome in these areas only
If you find that you have become isolated in defending your beliefs…
Take time to listen to, and understand, others’ points of view so that you can modify your approach or bring in others’
perspectives
Creativity You generate new ideas and original solutions to move things forward
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Ask your manager for an opportunity to run short 'creative burst' or brainstorming sessions to improve work processes and
practices or to deal with specific challenges
Identify the three top problems or challenges facing your team or organization currently and use your Creativity strength to
address these
Observe and reflect how you use your intuition – gut feelings and hunches – and learn how to listen to these more consciously
in order to generate ideas and original solutions that move things forward
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context. You may
overlook the more obvious, tried and tested solution
If you generate unworkable, eccentric ideas that take little account of the realities of the organization and its context…
Partner with colleagues who have more pragmatic, common-sense thinking styles to ensure you understand what is likely to
work taking account of the organization’s history, context and stakeholders
If you tend to overlook more obvious, tried and tested solutions…
Balance your creativity with proven solutions from colleagues and other, similar organizations; avoid re-inventing the wheel
If you feel bored and disengage when your ideas are not considered…
Be open to different thinking styles and remember that some of the biggest breakthroughs can come through building on
what’s already worked well in the past
Critical thinking You approach problems and arguments by breaking them down systematically and evaluating them
objectively
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Discuss your interpretation of data, problems and situations with others and reflect on how effectively you are able to both
interpret and communicate the findings of your analysis
Read online articles about how to take a solutions-focused, problem-solving approach rather than a problem-focused
perspective to maintain a positive, constructive approach
Educate others to use analysis and thinking tools (SWOT, Impact-Effort Grid, Decision Tree, BCG Box, etc.) which will give you
an opportunity to refresh and build out your knowledge and skills of these critical decision tools
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments. This may be perceived as negative or over-
critical by others
If you continuously question or look for flaws in proposed solutions and arguments…
Spend more time listening and using your strength to ask open-ended and probing questions to uncover both benefits and
risks associated with others’ ideas and arguments
If your Critical thinking may be perceived as negative and over-critical by others…
Take time to signal to others in meetings and interactions that you are a strong critical thinker and will at times take a ‘devil’s
advocate’ role to analyze information, ideas and proposals
If colleagues who used to seek your opinion no longer do…
Explain how their strengths complement yours and call on them to balance your thinking style with other strengths, including
Creativity, Optimism and Common sense
Decisiveness You make quick, confident, and clear decisions, even when faced with limited information
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Apply a range of decision-making tools (e.g. Force Field Analysis, Cost Benefit Analysis, Effort-Impact Analysis) to ensure high
quality decision-making
Practise presenting the rationale behind your decisions and recommendations so that others can follow your judgement,
particularly to those who are less decisive than yourself
Identify how colleagues, stakeholders, friends and acquaintances can support you to identify new opportunities where you can
use your decisiveness strength
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You are overhasty or rash in your decision-making, spending little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes
If you are overhasty or rash in your decision-making…
Practise stepping back and reflecting on decisions, as well as gaining others’ views
If you spend little time considering alternatives or possible outcomes…
Use a model such as De Bono’s Six Thinking Hats to ensure you have considered alternatives
If you are perceived by colleagues as bossy, or even a bully…
Take time to consider how you communicate your decisions and consult others first
Persuasiveness You are able to win agreement and support for a position or desired outcome
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Take the initiative in volunteering for assignments where you are required to persuade others to agree to adopt a product,
position or idea
Coach or mentor colleagues who could benefit from developing their ability to persuade others
Use both 'advocacy' and 'inquiry' behaviours when trying to influence – push and pull, tell and sell. This will balance the use of
rational persuasive argument with questioning and facilitation skills
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
You try to influence most outcomes in your favour, irrespective of the importance of the issue. You may also indulge in debate for
debate‘s sake, rather than focusing on relevant outcomes
If you try to persuade others habitually, without considering the importance of the issue…
Remember to identify those issues which relate most closely to your own or your team’s goals and focus your energies on these
debates rather than on more frivolous issues
If you focus on the debate, rather than the outcome…
Regularly remind yourself and those you are in discussion with of the purpose of the debate and the intended end goal
If you find yourself using emotional tactics to win an argument…
Make sure that you check in with others as to whether they are in genuine agreement with you; if not, continue to explore their
views and modify your position accordingly
Relationship building You take steps to build networks of contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between people that you know
Strengthening your performance
Stretching your strength to the next level
Identify ways to share your knowledge and experience to enable others to also develop their Relationship building, e.g.
blogging, running workshops, coaching or mentoring
Learn about stakeholder mapping and stakeholder management so that you can focus the development of your network on the
most important relationships
Help your team to develop improved knowledge and understanding of each other’s strengths and skills by running some
meetings where this information is shared
Overdrive risks and how to reduce them
Your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts may become an end in itself and take up a disproportionate amount of
your energies
If your focus on initiating new relationships and contacts is becoming an end in itself…
Remember to focus on building contacts and networks with people who are likely to have the greatest influence over your
team’s success
If your network is becoming too much of a drain on your time…
Ensure that you limit the amount of time that you are spending responding to requests from people in your network and that
you are gaining value from others too
If you find that your network is built on shallow relationships…
Focus your network on the most productive relationships, strengthening these by spending more time with only those you have
identified
5. The 24 Strengthscope strengths
Courage: You take on challenges and face risks by
standing up for what you believe
Emotional control: You are aware of your emotional
‘triggers’ and how to control these to
ensure you remain calm and productive
Enthusiasm: You demonstrate passion and energy
when communicating goals, beliefs,
interests or ideas you feel strongly about
Optimism: You remain positive and upbeat about
the future and your ability to influence it
to your advantage
Resilience: You deal effectively with setbacks and
enjoy overcoming difficult challenges
Self-confidence: You have a strong belief in yourself and
your abilities to accomplish tasks and
goals
Collaboration: You work cooperatively with others to
overcome conflict and build towards a
common goal
Compassion: You demonstrate a deep and genuine
concern for the well-being and welfare of
others
Developing others: You promote other people’s learning and
development to help them achieve their
goals and fulfil their potential
Empathy: You readily identify with other people’s
situations and can see things clearly from
their perspective
Leading: You take responsibility for influencing
and motivating others to contribute to
the goals and success of their team and
organization
Persuasiveness: You are able to win agreement and
support for a position or desired
outcome
Relationship building: You take steps to build networks of
contacts and act as a ‘hub’ between
people that you know
Decisiveness: You make quick, confident, and clear
decisions, even when faced with limited
information
Efficiency: You take a well-ordered and methodical
approach to tasks to achieve planned
outcomes
Flexibility: You remain adaptable and flexible in the
face of unfamiliar or changing situations
Initiative: You take independent action to make
things happen and achieve goals
Results focus: You maintain a strong sense of focus on
results, driving tasks and projects to
completion
Self-improvement: You draw on a wide range of people and
resources in the pursuit of self-
development and learning
Common sense: You make pragmatic judgments based
on practical thinking and previous
experience
Creativity: You generate new ideas and original
solutions to move things forward
Critical thinking: You approach problems and arguments
by breaking them down systematically
and evaluating them objectively
Detail orientation: You pay attention to detail in order to
produce high quality output, no matter
what the pressures
Strategic mindedness: You focus on the future and take a
strategic perspective on issues and
challenges
®
Emotional Relational Execution Thinking
Tools to optimize your performance
Want to find out more about your performance at work? Why not take:
Strengthscope360
Strengthscope360™ is a quick and simple multi-rater assessment which builds on the initial Strengthscope® self-report,
plugging in other people’s feedback (e.g. co-workers)
StrengthscopeLeader
This report allows leaders to discover what it is that makes them truly unique, and provides valuable feedback on how to bring
their authentic style into their leadership role
StrengthscopeTeam
The StrengthscopeTeam™ report consolidates individual Strengthscope® reports at team level, as well as assessing current
team behaviour, enabling teams to take their performance to the next level
StrengthscopeEngage
StrengthscopeEngage™ is split into two reports: StrengthscopeEngage™ Baseline and StrengthscopeEngage™ Progress and
together they measure changes in staff engagement and productive use of strengths following on from development initiatives.
For additional resources to optimize your strengths and reduce performance risks, visit
www.strengthscope.com
Strengthscope is a registered trademark of Strengthscope Limited. While utmost care and attention have been
taken in the creation of Strengthscope , the authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any decisions
arising from the use of the data, or any specific interpretations or inferences arising from the report.
Please note that the content of this report remains proprietary to Strengthscope Limited, and that any distribution or
copying of the report or any of its content is prohibited unless prior agreement is given by Strengthscope Limited in
writing.
™
™
™
™
®
®
WEI CUI. 2024 October 21
© Strengthscope Ltd. All Rights Reserved
14
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Breakthrough Leadership Skills MN7028
Topic 2: Organisational Design
1
1
Learning Outcomes
To contrast “Classical” models with human relation models of management
To trace some of the corresponding changes from traditional to contemporary models of organisational design
Explore the emergence of autonomous work teams (drivers?)
2
Some alternative schools of management and some advocates
Classical: Taylor, Fayol, Weber
Human Relations: Mayo, (later McGregor, 1960s)
(Communication) Systems: Barnard
Learning Organisation (Senge, 1990)
3
Job design in the context of personnel as a ‘cost’ to the business
Taylorism and Fordism
management studying the work methods for each job
establishing the most efficient methods
Scientific management: time and motion studies
Fordism; increased division of labour
4
Fayol (1949)
Refocused attention away from the shop-floor toward management itself
‘General and Industrial Management’ pamphlet (1949) presented the functions of management as:
Planning: (including forecasting, setting goals, determining actions)
Organising: (designing a suitable organisational structure to effectively harness the HR and non-hr elements required)
Co-ordinating: uniting activities and providing required resources
Commanding (and directing): Including leadership and motivation towards goals
Controlling: ensuring they stick to the plan
5
Fayol (continued)
Fayol’s 14 Principles of management (1949) implied :
a rigorous hierarchy (Unity of Command/Unity of Direction/line of command)
But also encouraged the nurturing of initiative in their workers by managers
Esprit de corps (Teamwork).
6
Max Weber
Bureaucracy Theory (1947) emphasised:
‘order’
‘focus on authority’.
It can be seen as limited in the context of organisations viewed as social systems
It can also be seen as limited in the context of societal embeddedness
7
Job design begins to recognise needs and broader contribution of the worker
Early industrial revolution: personnel had a welfare role
Consider origins Cadbury, Rowntree.
Rise of trade unionism: industrial relations role
The Hawthorne studies
‘soft’ HR tracks through to Mayo (1933), who founded the Human Relations school and McGregor (1960) who recognised that the needs of both the organisation and the individual need to be recognised
8
Brings us to a consideration of Organisational Design (OD)
OD is the ‘process of assigning responsibilities and structuring work to support enterprise goals, objectives and strategies’ (Bloisi, 2007)
It is reflected in the title of Chandler’s iconic book: ‘Strategy and Structure: Chapters in the history of Industrial Enterprise’ (1962)’,
Two contrasting perspectives about the design of the organisation emerged in the 60s largely influenced by the works of Burns and Stalker (1966) and Lawrence and Lorsch (1969)
9
Mechanistic structure
Hierarchical structure
Well-defined roles and responsibilities
Highly specified tasks
This form lends itself to organisations operating in stable marketplaces with little external change and low levels of uncertainty. Work efficiencies can be achieved through the structure but the design does not offer much versatility or flexibility.
10
Organic structure
Knowledge is valued at all levels of the firm
Tasks are continuously being redefined in processes of collaboration
Knowledge may be found anywhere in the organisation and equates to power
Communications in the organic organisation serve to build knowledge rather than give orders
11
Four basic organisational structures spanning 50 years
Since the 1960s organisations have been structured according to the following criteria:
Function
Geography
Product
Customer
Each of these designs ‘produces different behaviours and different outcomes’ (Bloisi, 2007) and also requires different trade-offs.
Whitbread
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6h3ngHtoMO0
12
Contemporary organisation beyond the team level (work system design)
By Function
By Product
By Customer
Matrix Structure
Lattice structure
13
Greater emphasis on the HRM orientation is further stimulated by:
The Great Depression (1929-1939)
‘Loss of faith’ in traditional mass-production techniques (Henderson, 2017)
The eclipse of US management practices by those used in Japan in the 80s.
E.g. Pascale, Managing on the Edge (1990)
14
The Autonomous Work Group (AWG)
Tavistock Work Organization Model (e.g. Trist and Bamfoth 1951; Emery, 1963)
Work should be organized in teams.
Individual jobs should provide:
Variety;
A meaningful task;
An optimum work cycle;
Worker’s control over work standards;
Feedback of results;
A perceived contribution to end product.
The AWG concept is not dependent on any specific technology so it applicable in virtually all work situations.
(Henderson, 2017)
15
Maslow and self-actualisation
‘Maslow’s influence is clearly stamped across the work design theories and practices of the latter half of the twentieth century.’
(Buchanan, 1994)
Theory of Motivation’ (1954) was the study of ‘ultimate human goals’.
Maslow’s work:
Emphasised primacy of individual needs
16
General principles derived from ‘motivation theory’ (Maslow, 1954)
Importance of ‘self-actualisation’ of workers at an individual level
Set goals.
Involve the employees concerned in designing and agreeing the goals.
‘Stretch’ goals lead to significant increases in employee performance.
Link rewards to performance when possible.
Increase employees’ sense of ‘self-efficacy’ (confidence that they can perform the job or task well).
17
General principles derived from motivation theory (cont’d)
Let employees know the expected level of performance and give them accurate and timely feedback.
Giving positive rewards for good performance is more effective in motivating people then punishing them for poor performance.
Perceived fairness or equity is vital to the motivation.
18
McGregor (1961)
Influenced by Maslow’s theme of self-actualisation. Douglas McGregor wrote The Human Side of the Enterprise’ (1961). McGregor’s perspective embraced the themes of ‘participation, openness, trust, exchange and a resolution of the conflict between personal and organisational goals’ (ibid, foreword by G.Bennis).
McGregor developed the concepts of Theory X and Theory Y
Theory x: ‘people are a cost that must be monitored and controlled’
Theory Y: ‘people are an asset that should be valued and developed’
Also made the following observation: ‘The capacity to exercise a relatively high degree of imagination, ingenuity and creativity in the solution of organizational problems is widely, not narrowly distributed in the population.’ (ibid)
19
Job Design
‘Job design specifies the contents of jobs in order to satisfy work requirements and meet the personal needs of the job holder, thus increasing levels of employee engagement.’
Armstrong (2014, p. 145)
20
Work Design
‘Work design is the creation of systems of work and a working environment that enhance organizational effectiveness and productivity, ensure the organization becomes a “great place in which to work” and are conducive to the health, safety and wellbeing of employees’.
Armstrong (2014, p. 136),
21
Intrinsic Motivating through job design
Lawler (1969) identifies three elements to job design which are necessary to make a job ‘intrinsically’ motivating:
Feedback relating to performance: this should be meaningful (Armstrong, 2010). Armstrong also states that this means they be able to see more of the picture, i.e. how their role fits into the whole process.
Abilities: the jobholders must feel that they are making use of those abilities which they values.
Self-control (autonomy): the jobholders must feel they have discretion
Increased focus on ‘job characteristics’ in job design (Hackman and Oldham, 1976)
Hackman and Oldham, 1976, propose a ‘job characteristics model’ (ibid), comprising five key elements:
Skill variety (the range of skills and talents required)
Task identity (the breadth within the task)
Task significance (in relation to the “bigger picture”)
Degree of autonomy (discretion, e.g. in methods)
Feedback (clarity on performance)
If jobs are designed in a way that maximises these dimensions then three psychological states can occur:
Experience of meaningfulness at work
Experience of responsibility for work outcomes
Knowledge of results of work
Managing the intrinsic element through job design contd.
Robertson and Smith (2005) propose five similar aspects of the job design which can influence intrinsic motivation:
Skill variety
Pooling tasks together
Task significance
Degree of autonomy
Feedback (delivered through ‘good relationships and opening feedback channels’) (Armstrong, 2010)
Armstrong advocates adopting these approaches when setting up new work-systems or jobs, but he also stresses that ‘the greatest impact on the design of work systems or jobs is made by line managers on a day-to-day basis’
Job Design: The Job Characteristics Model (JCM) and how it relates to EE
Job Characteristics Model (Hackman and Oldham, 1976)
Skill variety: the extent to which a jobholder is required to use a range of different skills.
Identity: the extent to which a job involves the completion of a ‘whole’ piece of work with end-to-end responsibility.
Significance: the amount of impact that a job has, and the contribution that the job makes.
Autonomy: the amount of discretion that the jobholder has in making decisions about what to do and how to do it.
Feedback: direct information about the performance requirements of the job.
25
Toyota Production System (TPS)
Features of both AWG and Taylorism?
Just–in-Time (JIT) production processes.
Teamwork
Jidoka quality principle (error-free processes)
Standardized work and kaizen (continuous improvement )
26
Sparrow on Lean management
‘building people, then building products’
Toyota build teams of ‘skilful systems thinkers’ and build a culture of ‘challenge the status quo’ or continuous improvement (or Kaizen)
27
Some mechanisms (largely driven by HR) which can help deliver lean management
‘genchi genbutsu’ (trans.: going to the real place of work)
‘Out-learning’ (matrix teams, action learning)
‘Yokoten’ (Communities of practice)
Finding the root cause of problems (facilitated by cultures of empowerment, collaboration, and challenging the status quo)
Retrospectives (frequent events to analyse and design activities) Maximising “pull” and minimising “push” activities (by a rigourous focus on quality and ‘perfection’ (Sparrow)
28
Learning Organisation (Senge, 1990)
Personal Mastery
Mental Models
Shared Vision
Team Learning
… and the Fifth Discipline:
Systems thinking
29
McDonaldization (Ritzer, 1993)
Efficiency
Calculability
Predictability
Control
30
Smart working (CIPD, 2008)
Self-management
Virtual teams
Outcome-based performance criteria
High performance working
Flexibility in both hours and locations
Use of more advanced technology
Hot-desking and working from home
Trust
Alignment to business objectives
31
Flexibility
Employers pursue flexibility to:
minimize human resource costs in both the short and long run.
protect the core from short term, fluctuations in market demand.
respond to the demands of an increasingly diverse workforce in terms of (i) legal compliance and (ii) discretionary entitlement to attract/retain Core employees.
32
Types of flexibility (Henderson, 2017)
Functional flexibility
employees can be redeployed quickly to new tasks and activities (e.g. multi-skilled craftsmen and team-workers).
Numerical flexibility
enabling the organisation quickly to increase and decrease the numbers employed in response to market demand.
Financial flexibility
pay systems that reinforce the requirement for flexibility (e.g. performance-related pay, pay-for-skills).
33
Some alternatives to full-time permanent employment
Temporary working
Part-time working
Job-sharing
Home-working
34
New forms of employment (Henderson, 2017)
Employee sharing, where an individual worker is jointly hired by a group of employers.
Interim management, in which highly skilled experts are hired temporarily for a specific project or to solve a specific problem
Casual work, where an employer is not obliged to provide work regularly to the employee but has the flexibility of calling them on demand.
Voucher-based work where the employment relationship is based on payment for services with a voucher purchased form an authorised organisation that covers both pay and social security contributions.
Portfolio work where a self-employed individual works for a large number of clients
35
New forms of employment (Cont’d)
New forms of employment which utilize Information and Communications Technology (ICT), such as ‘crowd working’ (Henderson, 2017)
36
Contemporary ideas about Organisational Structure and Work Design
Greater emphasis on organisations as a social system, especially in contexts where “soft” HR practices are suitable.
Progression from control to enablement
Learning Organisation
Greater emphasis on organisations as a part of set of social relations outside the immediate organisation, e.g. Granovetter (2002), e.g. Teece’s concept of the business eco-system (e.g. 2007) in dynamic capability theory
37
Selected References
BLOISI, W., COOK, C. W., & HUNSAKER, P. L. (2006). Management and organisational behaviour. Maidenhead, McGraw-Hill Education.
BUCHANAN, D. A., & HUCZYNSKI, A. (2019). Organizational behaviour. Part 4
CLEGG, S., KORNBERGER, M., PITSIS, T., & MOUNT, M. (2019). Managing and organizations: an introduction to theory and practice.
SENGE, P. M. (2010). Fifth Discipline: the Art & Practice of The Learning Organization. New York, Random House US.
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Topic 1: Introduction to Leadership
Breakthrough Leadership Skills
MN7028
1
Learning outcomes for the session
Explore some theories of management
Identify some of the components/styles of management
Compare the terms “management” and “leadership”
Explore some theories of leadership
Conclusions: developing theories on leadership?
Introduction to module assessments (and team allocation)
2
Discuss in pairs (10 mins)
What do managers do?
What are their key activities/functions?
3
Fayol’s (1949) five activities of managers
•
Forecasting & Planning – examine the future and decide on what needs to be achieved and develop a plan of action
Organising – providing material or resources & build a structure to carry out the activities Command – getting the best out of the staff
Co-ordination – harmonising activities Control – ensures everything goes according to the plans, instructions
•
•
•
•
3
Drucker on management (1954, 1974, 2005)
•
•
•
3
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
They have three tasks (all important but essentially different):
Achieve the mission of the organisation Ensure performant, contented workers
Manage social impacts/responsibilities Five basic operations of the manager:
Sets objectives
Organises Motivates Communicates Measures
These require combination of: analytical ability
Integrity
human perception and insight social skills
Theories X and Y (McGregor, 1961)
6
The style of management is a function of the managers attitudes towards people and assumptions about people
Theory X: workers dislike working, need to be watched; motivated by physiological and security needs
Theory Y: given responsibility workers have potential to add creativity and value; motivated by esteem and self- actualisation
Theory Z (Ouchi, 1985): focus on long term well being of the employee; consensus decision making and strong company culture
The different roles of a manager: Mintzberg (1973)
Interpersonal
Informational
Decisional
Figurehead Leader
Handler
Liaison
Monitor Disseminator
Entrepreneur Disturbance
Spokesperson
Resource allocator Negotiator
7
Mullins (2013) philosophy for the successful management of people
10
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
consideration, trust and respect recognition and credit involvement & availability
fair and equitable treatment
positive action on an individual basis – not blanket treatment
emphasis on end results
staff and customer satisfaction
What are the measures of effectiveness?
•
Mullins believes that managers are judged on the performance of their staff, which therefore makes these aspects critical:
–
–
–
strength of motivation and morale of staff success of training and development
creation of positive culture but these are hard to measure
•
These can be measured as follows:
–
–
–
–
–
staff turnover absenteeism sickness time keeping
accidents at work
•
And in some workplaces can be measured as follows:
–
–
–
meeting deadlines accuracy or recorded errors
level of complaints from clients, other departments, suppliers etc
keeping within budget productivity
–
–
10
Some observers perceive differences between managing in the public and private sectors (Mullins, 2013)
•
•
aims concerned with providing a service for and for the well being of the community rather than just commercial nature
scale, variety and complexity of operations (arguably)
high media profile (scrutiny)
political make up (elected members and permanent officers) Higher level of unions involvement
difficulty in measuring standards of performance compared with profitability
demand for uniformity of treatment
more rigid personnel policies and specific limitations on authority
10
… but they still face same general problems of management (Mullins, 2013)
•
•
•
•
•
efficiency and effectiveness of their operations
clarification of aims and objectives
design of suitable structures and carrying out essential admin functions
basic principles of management apply in any organisation
10
Key management skills may be contingent on the stage and context of the organisations
Different skills are required to manage (lead?) start-up organisations, maturing organisations, failing organisations.
10 minute discussion in small groups:
What do you think those different skills are?
Would you use a former Marketing Director to conduct a turnaround or a former FD to create a start-up?
10
Managers of the future? (Heller, 1997)
10
Heller identified ten key strategies for Europe’s new breed of managers including:
develop leadership
drive radical change
reshape culture
divide to rule
ensure the competitive edge
manage the motivators
ensure team working
achieve TQM
Small Group Discussion (15 mins)
10
•
•
•
•
Who do you consider to be a great leader?
Why have you chosen the person(s) you have identified?
What traits, abilities or skills do they possess?
As a class consider if the people you have identified/share any common traits, abilities or skills
Kotter on Leadership v Management
15
Kotter’s (1990) Distinction Between Managers and Leaders
Planning and budgeting (deductively producing orderly results)
Motivating people (creating Involvement, emphasising values, building informal networks of relationships)
Controlling and problem solving (comparing behavior with plan, taking action to correct deviations)
Aligning people to the vision (emphasising communication, credibility, and Empowerment)
Setting a direction (inductively creating a vision and strategies to provide focus for planning)
Organising and staffing (structuring jobs and reporting relationships to efficiently implement plans)
Managers
Coping with complexity
Leaders
Coping with change
3 Basic Tasks
Deciding what needs to be done
Creating networks and relationships
Ensuring people do the job
15
Managers versus Leaders
17
•
•
•
•
Managers have formal power and authority to be in charge. Leaders influence others to follow and have personal power
“Managers do things right while leaders do the right thing” (Bennis & Nanus, 1985)
The leader establishes vision & direction, influences others to sign up to that vision, inspires them to overcome obstacles, and produces positive, radical change. The manager establishes plans & budgets, designs & staffs the organisation structure, monitors & controls performance and delivers order & predictability (Kotter, 1990)
The leader is prophet, catalyst, mover-shaker, focused on strategy. The manager is operator, technician and problem solver, concerned with the “here and now of goal attainment” (Bryman, 1986)
Some Theoretical Approaches to Leadership
•
•
The traits/qualities approach
Behavioural approach (focus on leader as key actor)
Situational (focus on follower as key variable)
Contingency approach
•
•
17
Traits approach: distinguishes leaders from non-leaders by their traits
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Self-confidence
Drive for achievement Honesty & integrity
Ability to motivate people towards a common goal
Intelligence
Creativity Ability to adapt
Clegg et al (2005) in Watson and Reissner (2016)
17
Behavioural approach to leadership (Likert, 1961)
•
Relationship orientated leaders (managers)
Task orientated leaders (managers)
•
Emphasise the technical or task aspects of the job: people are means to an end
Emphasise interpersonal relations and accept individual differences
Production Oriented
Employee Oriented
Behavioral Theories:
University of Michigan Studies and Ohio State University studies
Developed two dimensions of leadership behavior:
22
Where X axis measures ‘concern for production’ and y axis measures ‘concern for people’
•
•
•
Impoverished management
Produce or perish (Authority/compliance) management Country club management
Middle of the road Team management
Blake & Mouton Management and Leadership Grid (1964)
Distinguishing between leadership for stability and leadership for change (Burns, 1978)
Transactional Leader:
•
•
Determines what subordinates need to do in order to achieve both their own and organisational objectives.
Helps subordinates reach their objectives. Focussed on exchanges between leader and follower
Transformational Leader:
Uses his/her personal vision and energy to inspire people to exceed their own expectations
Raises motivation and stresses the value of team member contributions to the organisation.
23
Transactional Leadership
•
Uses reward and coercive powers to encourage high performance
Problem-solving and implementing If subordinates do what is required by leader then given rewards
Tend to support and maintain a ‘status quo’ and promote stability within organisations
•
•
•
23
Transformational Leadership (Burns, 1978)
•
•
Leading for change
Broadens and elevates the interests of their employees – more visionary Work through social and emotional
behaviours in order to create awareness and commitment
Stirs employees to look beyond their own self-interest for the good of the group/organisation
Have ability to energize others to follow a particular direction – influences using charisma and personal power
•
•
•
23
Components of Transformational Leadership Style (Burns 1978, Bass 1985, Bass and Ovolio 1994)
Individualised consideration
Leader treats each follower on his/her own merits, seeks to develop followers through delegation and coaching/mentoring
•
•
Intellectual stimulation
Encourages free thinking and emphasises reasoning before taking any actions Inspirational motivation
Creates an optimistic, clear and attainable vision of the future, encourages others to raise their expectations
Idealised influence
Makes personal sacrifices, takes responsibility for actions, shares credit and shows determination
23
Situational theory of leadership (Fiedler, 1971 in Watson and Reissner, 2016)
The leader’s effectiveness will depend on these variables:
Relationships structure (how much workers trust and like the leader)
Task structure (how clear workers are about the task)
The power of the leader to influence the workers (whether legitimate power, coercive power, or reward)
The leader can influence these variables by
•
•
Presenting clearly defined job outcomes Rewarding in line with motivators of the worker (i.e. bundling outcomes with rewards)
Removing obstacles to effective performance
Showing confidence in the worker
23
In Situational Leadership Theory
Leaders are diagnosticians and are capable of changing their style.
The “right” style leadership style will depend on the degree of the workers’ readiness and commitment, or levels of competence to do the task.
The leader should assess workers’ needs and adapt his/her style to those needs.
Hersey et al (2001) propose four different styles according to the circumstances: Telling, Selling, Participating and Delegating.
Kreitner (2001) suggests that deploying these different approaches might be especially relevant in cross-cultural management contexts
28
Hersey & Blanchard’s Situational
Leadership Theory (1988):
•
Belief: Right leadership style must depend on the level of the followers’ readiness or maturity.
Premise: The leader should assess follower needs and adapt the style to those needs.
Assumption: Leaders are diagnosticians and are capable of changing their style.
•
•
Situational Leadership Model
A leader is expected to use the appropriate style based on the subordinate’s readiness & willingness to be led by others.
Four leadership styles or roles
•
•
•
•
Delegating (S4) Participating (S3) Selling (S2) Telling (S1)
To be used according to follower readiness
Willing & able (R4): Delegating style
Unwilling & able (R3): Participating style
Willing & unable (R2): Selling style
Unwilling & unable (R1): Telling style
Contingency Approaches (after Fiedler, 1971)
•
Examines the impact of the leader’s style and the situation on desired outcomes.
All contingency theories define:
–
–
–
Leader’s behaviour or style The situation (context) Outcome(s) that are desired
•
•
•
There must be a match between the leader’s style and the demands of the situation for the leader to be effective.
Snowden and Boone (2007) offers a framework for decision-making.
Snowden (2007): ‘A leader’s framework for Decision-making’
Contingency approach continued:
“Contingency theory of leadership (is) a perspective which argues that leaders must adjust their style in a manner consistent with aspects of the context” (Huczynski & Buchanan, 2007 p. 695)
Aspects include
•
•
the relations structure (how much workers like the leader)
The task structure (how clear workers are about the task)
The power of the leader to influence the actors
(Watson and Reissner, 2016)
Fiedler’s contingency model can be applied to this approach where:
Job outcomes are clearly defined
Rewards are correlated to performance
Obstacles to performance are removed
Leader-confidence in employees’ abilities is evident
Moorcroft (2000) – ‘new principles’ for ‘managing in the 21st Century’
33
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Manage information through people Change is constant, and must be managed Technology is the future
Relationships matter
Investment in Training and Development is important
Measure only against the best The market is global
Unity of Direction is important
Equity is expected Initiative is important
The Most Frequently Cited Skills of Effective Managers/Leaders (Carlopio and Andrewartha, 2011)
33
•
Verbal communication (including listening)
Managing time and stress
Managing individual decisions
Recognizing, defining, and solving problems Motivating and
influencing others
Delegating Setting Goals and
articulating a vision
Self-awareness Team building Managing conflict
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Any conclusions about the emerging perspective on the concept of leader?
Change (whereas management is about stability)
Process (not personality)
Interactive
Goals
‘Leadership is a process whereby an individual influences a group of individuals to achieve a common goal’ (Northouse, 2019)
33
Talking through the assessments
33
Useful Resources
33
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•
•
•
•
•
•
Hamel G. Moon Shots for Management. Harvard Business Review. 2009;87(2):91-98. Accessed November 13, 2020.
Kotter, John P. (1996). Leading Change. Harvard Business School Press
Mintzberg, H. (2013) Simply Managing. London: FT Publishing
Mullins L (2013) Management & Organisational Behaviour, 10th ed. FT Prentice Hall, Essex Northouse, P.G. (2018) Leadership: Theory and
Practice (8th ed.) Sage: London
Perkins, S. J., & Arvinen-Muondo, R.
(2013). Organizational behaviour: [people, process, work and human resource management]. London, Kogan Page. (ch.5)
Uhl-Bien, M & Arena, M 2018, ‘Leadership for organizational adaptability: A theoretical synthesis and integrative framework’, Leadership Quarterly, vol. 29, no. 1, pp. 89–104.
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Breakthrough Leadership Skills MN7028
Topic 3: Transformational Leadership – Harnessing Motivation
1
1
Learning Outcomes
Situating Transformational Leadership
Organisational culture and the implications for leadership and management.
To examine the main sources of power in organisational settings and the methods by which power and resources can be enhanced to increase effectiveness in such contexts.
To analyse authority, power and politics as sources of control.
To clarify any queries related to assessments
2
‘Transforming leadership’ (Gregor Burns 1978)
View of the leader as a transformer (visionary) and as a motivator rather than simply as a transactor (day to day operations) (Burns, 1978; Peters and Waterman, 2004)
‘leadership builds on man’s need for meaning’ (Peters and Waterman, 2004, p.82)
‘leadership creates institutional purpose’ (ibid)
Has a moral component in that it transcends personal interests of leader and meets those of others
3
‘Transforming leadership’ contrasted with power
Leadership is exercised when leaders ‘arouse, engage and satisfy the motives of followers’ (Burns cited in Peters and Waterman, 2004)
‘Leadership, unlike naked power wielding, is thus inseparable from followers’ needs and goals’ (ibid)
Power bases therefore become ‘mutual support for common purpose’
Transforming people ‘from neutral, technical units into participants who have a particular stamp, sensitivity and commitment’ (Selznick, 1957)
‘reworking of human and technological materials to fashion an organism that embodies new and enduring values’ (ibid)
The ‘dynamic’ outcomes from transformational leadership (contrasted with power)
‘Transforming leadership is dynamic leadership in the sense that the leaders throw themselves into a relationship with “followers” who will feel “elevated” by it and often become more active themselves, thereby creating new cadres of leaders’ (Peters and Waterman, 2004, p.83)
5
What values?
Peters and Waterman, 2004 offer some examples from business:
‘beauty in a hamburger bun’ (Ray Kroc. McDonalds)
‘48 hours parts service anywhere in the world’ (Caterpillar)
However a more critical challenge of the leader is to ensure that the vision is enacted/lived by employees and that such values are indeed transforming the organisation.
Problems of over-simplifying definition of culture
The ‘Excellence’ school (Peters and Waterman, 1981) certainly popularised the notion of culture and Marvin Bower (also CEO of McKinsey) coined perhaps the most famous definition of culture as ‘the way we do things around here’.
Yet Schein (1992) distinguishes different depths to the concept: ‘a pattern of shared basic assumptions (that the group learned as it solved its problem of external adaptation and internal integration)’
Organisational Culture: What are your perceptions about/definitions of culture? 10 Minute discussion
Definitions: Culture as cohesive (“glue”)
Culture is ‘how things are done around here’. (Drennan, 1992:3 after Bower)
Culture…is a pattern of beliefs and expectations shared by the organization’s members. These beliefs and expectations produce norms and powerfully shape the behaviour of individuals and groups in the organization. (Schwartz and Davis, 1981:33)
By culture I mean the shared beliefs top managers have about how they should manage themselves and other employees, and how they should conduct business(es) (Lorsch, 1986: 95)
Mintzberg et al: ‘tissue’
Definitions: Culture as Constraining (“glue”!)
Culture represents an interdependent set of values and ways of behaving that are common in a community and that tend to perpetuate themselves, sometimes over long periods of time. (Kotter and Hesketh, 1992:141)
Because…
Common values and beliefs which can increase ‘the level of inertia and breed similarities in “strategic postures” (Abrahamson and Fombrum, 1994, cited in Mintzberg et al, 2005)
This Photo by Unknown Author is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND
10
Value of culture in HR terms
Alvesson talks about some other common metaphors for change:
As a “regulator”: i.e. an unwritten element of company policy, which influences and directs aspects such recruitment/rewards
As a “compass”: helping to draw attention to the values, behaviours which are “right” for the organisation
As “glue”: encourages teamwork, cohesion.
Challenges of culture in HR terms
As “glue” again: but this time inhibiting necessary change
As “blinkers” but also may blinker people to new ideas (Leonard Barton talks of ‘core rigidities’).
Culture as a mechanism for leadership
Cultural ‘schools’ of strategic management (Mintzberg et al, 2005)
Mintzberg et all (2005) describe a number of schools of strategy including the Cultural School. Within the Cultural school are two perspectives which reflect a strong human relations orientation:
The ‘Excellence’ school (Peters and Waterman, 1981)
Resource based View of the Firm (Wernerfelt 1984 and Barney (1991)
Drucker said ‘culture eats strategy for breakfast’. What do you think he meant by that?
14
Culture and Performance
The ‘excellence’ school (Peters and Waterman, 1985). Developed a blueprint for high performing organisations, which consisted of 8 ‘attributes’ shared by their ‘excellent’ organisations:
Bias for action
Close to the customer
Autonomy and entrepreneurship
Productivity through people
Hands on/value driven
Stick to the knitting
Simple form/lean staff
Loose-tight properties
Culture and Performance?
Culture may be easily “linked” to superior performance (e.g. Peters and Waterman, 2004)
But there is an issue about causality
Compare with the ‘black box’ relating to contribution of HR to performance (e.g. Purcell et al, 2003)
Compare with the challenge of “proving” value of Employee Engagement (what comes first?)
What has happened to many of the organisations studied by Peters and Waterman?
Depths of Culture
Artefacts: ‘the visible products of the group … That one sees, hears, feels’
Espoused beliefs and values: e.g. “our customers come first”, “innovation drives our business”
Basic Underlying assumptions: e.g. engineers do not deliberately design a product that is unsafe
(Schein, 2004)
17
Matching up the artefacts, the espoused values and the behaviours
Schein (1992) distinguishes in the video between the artefacts, the espoused values and the behaviours/assumptions of the members of a firm
Northern Rock ‘Mission Statement’ from 2006
‘superior value to customers .. through excellent products, efficiency and growth’ (2006 Annual Accounts)
RBS Values: https://www.rbs.com/rbs/about/our-values.html Accessed 24/10/17
‘we want to be trusted, respected and valued by our customers, shareholders and communities’
Compare with the notion of ‘due diligence light’ (2011) which was applied to the acquisition of ABN AMRO Bank
Challenges with/critiques of organisational culture
You cannot just “implement” culture or culture change. It takes time.
Paradoxically it is fragile and easy to destroy (e.g. at the whim of a new CEO)
One critique of the culture school is that it renders firms vulnerable to change and indeed many of the firms identified in Peters and Waterman’s classic text have since struggled or gone out of business.
Why?
It can discourage necessary change because the ‘common values and beliefs’ embedded in people also ‘increase their levels of inertia and breed similarities in “strategic postures” (Abrahamson and Fombrun, 1994, cited in Mintzberg et al, 2005)
It is inwardly focussed (‘inside-out’) and explains ‘too easily what already exists, rather than tacking the tough questions of what can come into being’ (Mintzberg et al, 2005). So it is valuable for HRM but is it valuable for strategic HRM?
Other notions of values
In 2016, financial and insurance services contributed £124.2 billion in gross value added (GVA) to the UK economy, 7.2% of the UK’s total GVA. London accounted for 51% of the total financial and insurance sector GVA in the UK in 2015. There are over one million jobs in the financial and insurance sector (3.1% of all UK jobs). The UK had a surplus of over £60 billion on trade in the financial and insurance sectors in 2016. In 2015-16, the banking sector alone contributed £24.4 billion to UK tax receipts in corporation tax, income tax, national insurance and through the bank levy.
Commons Briefing papers SN06193
Author: Gloria Tyler
Topics: Economic situation, Financial services
http://researchbriefings.parliament.uk/ResearchBriefing/Summary/SN06193
Accessed 24/10/17
20
Power
‘Power lies in the acceptance of your authority by others – their knowledge that if they try to resist you, they will fail and you will succeed.’ Jay, A. (1967)
‘Power is the capacity to impress the dominance of one’s goals or values on others.’ (Armstrong, 2001)
21
Sources of Power
Reward – being able to give the other what he or she wants
Coercive – forcing him or her to do it
Referent – having desirable attributes that make people wish to refer to the leader
Legitimate – as opposed to illegitimate in the eyes of the followers
Expert – having an expertise that others want to use.
French and Raven (1958)
Informational – (added in 1965)
22
Sources of Power (2)
| Source of Power | Referred to as: |
| Ability to apply sanctions Status and formal position Ability to give valued resources Superior knowledge & experience Personal relationships: charisma Access to inside information | Coercive Legitimate Reward Expert Relationship Connection |
23
Authority is… (1)
Definitions:
The power or right to enforce obedience (Oxford English Dictionary);
Power made legitimate by position or expertise (Weightman, 2004)
24
Authority is… (2)
Distinctions:
In authority – relies on control over resources to influence people; it confers the right to control and judge the actions of others
An authority – based on personal attributes, credibility or ability to influence people; it is the basis of credibility that you must earn and maintain for yourself
Moral authority – based upon equity, ethics and fairness
Authority to act
Authority to authorise
25
Legitimacy of power?
Not all power is legitimate
“persuasion” of the Mafia
Gotti and Machiavelli
26
Some Theories of Power relevant to HR
Culture as power: ‘it’s the way we do things around here’ (Bowers).
‘the greatest conceivable power lies in the possibility to preform somebody in such a way that, of his own accord, he does what one wants him to do, without any need for domination … or for explicit power’ (Castoriadis, 1992 in Alvesson, 2002)
Clegg (1987) states that ‘the most important kinds of power’ consist of ‘those occcasions when A’s didn’t have to get B’s to do things because B’s would do those sort of things anyway.
Power/dependence theory (Emerson, 1962)
Social Exchange theory (Blau, 1964)
27
Some Theories of Power relevant to HR contd:
Persuasion is more effective than exercise of power through coercion
Power/dependence theory (Emerson, 1962)
Social Exchange theory (Blau, 1964)
28
Gaining and Retaining Power
“Generally dominance is manifested not in significant political acts but rather in the day to day taken for granted nature of organizational life. As such the exercise of power and domination exists at routine level, further protecting certain interests and allowing the order of organizational life to go largely unquestioned by its members” (Deetz and Mumby, 1986 in Alvesson, 2004)
29
Empowerment
Empowerment is a concept whereby employees at all levels are responsible for their actions and should be given authority to make decisions about their own work.
It concerns the ownership of problem and solution
Empowerment requires training for employees and their managers – previous managers need to give up some of their power.
30
Power and Politics
Political behaviour in organisations has been described as ‘a process, that of influencing individuals and groups of people to get your own point of view, where you cannot rely on authority’ (Kakabadse, 1983)
31
Playing Politics
Power is a property of all organisations – politics reflects how power is put into action
Ethical or unethical behaviour?
Ends versus means?
The nature of competition
32
Control versus Participation
Scientific management – control
Continuum of behaviour depending on control of leader over the led
Unitarist and pluralist perspectives
Tells, sells, consults, joins
33
Selected reference list (online options in red)
Alvesson, M. (2002) Understanding Organizational Culture. London: Sage
CIPD (2014) ‘Keeping culture, purpose and values at the heart of your SME’
Collins, J. (1995) ‘Building Companies to Last’. Available at ‘https://www.jimcollins.com/article_topics/articles/building-companies.html
Emerson, R.E. (1962) ‘Power-Dependence Relations’, American Sociological Review, vol. 27, pp. 31-41.
French, J and Raven, B (1958) ‘The Bases of Social Power’ in Cartwright, D. (ed.) Studies in Social Power, Ann Arbor, Mich: University of Michigan Press.
Hofstede, G. (1990) ‘The Cultural Relativity of Organizational Practices and Theories’, in Wilson, D.C. & Rosenfield, R.H. (eds.), Managing Organizations: Text, Readings and Cases, London: McGraw-Hill.
Peters, T. and Waterman, R.H. (2004) In Search of Excellence: Lessons from America’s Best-Run Companies, Exmouth: Profile
Schein, E.H. (1985) Organizational Culture and Leadership: A Dynamic View, San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass
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Breakthrough Leadership Skills MN7028
Session 10: Negotiation: Priorities, Processes, Strategies
1
1
Learning Outcomes
Define Negotiation
Characteristics of successful negotiation
The importance of questioning, probing and listening
Needs, wants and influencing
The importance of a continued listening actively
Getting to Yes / BATNA
Explore related processes
Exercise on Interim Recruitment Negotiations
2
Definitions of negotiation
‘An extended communication created in dialogue by two sides’ (Mead 2005)
‘A process of discussion between 2 or more parties with the aim of achieving a satisfactory agreement’ (Tayeb 2003)
‘Requires parties with opposing interests to get together to make a decision’ (Elahee and Brooks 2004)
frances tomlinson
3
Negotiator skills
Research and Planning skills
Ability to think clearly under stress
Practical intelligence
Verbal ability
Product knowledge
Personal integrity
Ability to perceive and exploit power
Understand the issue
Negotiator skills
Is prepared
Recognises key issues quickly
Seeks the win-win
Has stamina
Knows when (if) to compromise
Tolerates conflict and stress
Listens well
Has sensitivity to other‘s needs
Shows patience
In the room
Confident (tone, handshake, eye contact)
First impressions count (appearance)
6
The £150 Game
“I will give a prize of £150 to each of the first two people who can persuade another MBA student to get up, run around Holloway campus, return to the class and stand behind his or her chair.”
What would you do?
You have to move quickly
What is your instinct?
7
The £150 Game
Option 1: don’t play
This is the approach of the Avoider
• Prefers not to get involved at all
• Dislike stress
• Avoids situations with “winners” and “losers”
• Can be (surprisingly) very difficult to negotiate against
8
The £150 Game
Option 2: Run and stand behind the chair of the person opposite you, trusting that she will give you a fair share of the cash
This is the approach of the Accommodator
Resolves conflict by solving the other party’s problem
If the counterpart is similar, he shares the wealth
But if the counterpart has another approach, the Accommodator may end up with nothing
9
The £150 Game
Option 3: Shout to the person sitting across from you that he should run over and get behind your chair and that you’ll share the money with him if he does
This is the approach of the Competitor
• First instinct is to see “zero sum” allocations
• Likes to “win”
• May even lie if he’s asked to get up and move, claiming he has a sprained ankle
10
The £150 Game
Option 4: If the person across from you is offering you £75 to stand behind her chair, take the deal (even if you made the same offer to her)
This is the approach of the Compromiser
• Favours deals that give something to each party
• Interested in maintaining relationships
• Tends to “split the difference”
11
The £150 Game
Option 5: Suggest to the person opposite you that you BOTH get up and stand behind each other’s chair, so you BOTH get £150
This is the approach of the Collaborator
• Tries to find a way for both parties to get the best outcome
• Willing to be creative and brainstorm
• May not be successful against a strong competitor
12
The £150 Game: Conclusions?
• There is no one “right” way to negotiate
•We must learn to be conscious of our own style
• Five basic types of negotiators
• Competing
• Accommodating
• Avoiding
• Collaborating
• Compromising
13
Negotiation styles
•Most people use a combination of these styles
•Be aware of your “default” style
• Recognising it will allow you to move away from knee-jerk responses
•Be aware of your counterpart’s style
•Be tactical about altering style as appropriate
14
Communication styles
How We Communicate Could Determine How Persuasive We Are
• Verbal (the words)
• Vocal (the tone)
• Silence
• Facial (the expressions)
• Non-verbal ( the body movements)
15
Cultural Patterns/styles
How We Perceive the word “negotiation” could dictate your approach
Japan, China: negotiations are part of relationship building process (there is no getting to yes in the room)
Spain: it’s the deal that matters
Germany: formal
Mexico/USA: informal
Netherlands/Israel: direct
May show video on cross cultural negotiation
16
BATNA
“Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement.”
It is defined as the most advantageous alternative that a negotiating party can take if negotiations fail and they do not secure the desired agreement
The BATNA is a party’s best alternative is if negotiations are unsuccessful.
It helps clarify alternative agreements proposed by the other party that you should reject.
It underpins the art of letting them have your way.
May show video on cross cultural negotiation
17
BATNA
So, generate possible BATNAs:
• Invent a list of actions you might take if no agreement is reached
• Improve some of the better ideas and convert them into options
• Select your Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement
• Then, consider what the other side’s BATNA might be…
May show video on cross cultural negotiation
18
19
Key Negotiation Strategies
Time issues and Deadline strategies
• Conceal your real deadline
• Declare an earlier deadline
• Find the other side’s deadline
Information
• Considered the heart of negotiations – shapes strategy, reality • Preparation is key – side with more info. has edge
• BATNA
Power
• Is it about power, ego, leverage • Balance between parties is a key factor
20
Key Negotiation Strategies
Getting to Yes, key elements:
Focus on interests, not positions:
• Interests = needs, desires, concerns, fears that lead to “why”
• Positions = specific demand
Separate people from positions
• People negotiate – are affected by egos, feelings, anger
• “Step into their shoes” to discover their reasoning
Focus on objective criteria
• Facts, principles, standards can be used to frame an offer Develop mutual-gains options
A settlement must be better than no agreement for both parties
• Propose options with gains for both parties
21
Interests, not positions
The basic problem in a negotiation lies not in conflicting positions, but in the conflict between each side’s needs, desires, concerns and fears. So, identify the Interests of the other side:
Ask why they take a particular position [to understand]
Isolate the other side’s choices [how do you want to affect them?]
Analyse the consequences of accepting or rejecting your request
22
Options for mutual gain
Is this distributive (win lose/zero sum) or integrative(win win) negotiation? How can you expand the pie? How can you have your cake and eat it? Invent solutions which are advantageous to both sides.
But beware of :
• Premature judgment
• Searching for a single answer
• The assumption of a fixed pie
• Believing that ‘solving their problem is their problem’
Story about cooks arguing over the orange. Do we chop it in half or does one of use want the peel.
23
Objective criteria
Frame each issue as a search for objective criteria
What objective standard might be relevant?
Be open to reasoned persuasion on their merits
Never yield to pressure, only to principle
24
True or false?
“In Business As in Life, You Don't Get What You Deserve, You Get What You Negotiate” (Chester Karrass, 1996)
25
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Breakthrough Leadership Skills MN7028
Topic 11: Diversity and Inclusive Leadership
1
1
Learning Outcomes for this session
Compare/Contrast Equality agenda with Diversity agenda
Current situation
The business case
Solutions
2
Equality and diversity – background and context
Societal context – landmark legislation in UK includes: Race Relations Act, 1965; Equal Pay Act 1970; Sex Discrimination Act 1975; Disability Discrimination Act 1995; Equalities Act 2010…. Extension to organisational users/customers as well as employees.
Equal opportunities policies
Managing diversity – origins in radical social movements in USA; ‘diversity’ a multiplicity of differences beyond gender and race; concept of diversity adopted and promoted in late 20th century as a response to challenges presented by demographic change
3
Consolidation: Equal Opportunities under Equality Act 2010
Acknowledgement that some groups in society face discrimination.
Legislation by Government
The Equality Act (2010) brings together the legislation governing all forms of discrimination in the workplace and established the right of everyone ‘to be treated fairly’ and ‘in exactly the same way’ (CIPD, 2017)
Fair access, treatment and promotion (orgs)
Equal Opps. policies (orgs)
Positive actions encouraged (orgs)
Positive discrimination illegal
4
Scope of legislation:
Some areas of discrimination covered by law include
age
disability
gender reassignment
marriage and civil partnership
pregnancy and maternity
race (including ethnic origin, colour, nationality and national origin)
religion or belief (including philosophical belief)
sex
sexual orientation
5
The equal opportunities approach
Concern of social justice and equality in line with the humanistic tradition of HRM
Employers’ responsibility to ensure legal compliance and counter discrimination
‘Equality proofing’ of organisational policies and practices – e.g. in recruitment and selection
Targeted groups and positive action (e.g. Police Force).
6
Managing Diversity
‘The basic concept of managing diversity accepts that the workforce consists of a diverse population of people. The diversity consists of visible and non-visible differences which will include factors such as sex, age, background, race, disability, personality and workstyle. It is founded on the premise that harnessing these differences will create a productive environment in which everybody feels valued, where their talents are being fully utilised and in which organisational goals are met’. (Kandola & Fullerton, 1998)
7
The “Managing Diversity” approach
Link with a more strategic model of HRM
Intended to engage and interest everyone (particularly managers) in promoting organisational inclusion and equality
Focus on individual, rather than group, differences.
Encompass all the ways that people differ, not just those associated with discrimination and disadvantage
Push the centrality of the ‘business case’ – economic, rather than moral, rationale for diversity
8
Current context
References to equality or diversity may create competing discourses
Distraction of working towards a target > tokenism?
9
Processes for achieving equality/diversity
Equality agendas:
Equal chance
Equal access to (all) opportunities
Equal mechanisms to progress
The short versus the long agenda
Human Capital agendas:
As above but beyond compliance with law) they may be fragile, and influenced by commercial expedience.
10
Positive Action for achieving equality/diversity
Encourage applicants from an under-represented group to apply for roles
Encourage applicants from an under-represented group to take training and development opportunities which will increase access to roles
Build mentoring schemes inside firms.
11
Links with HRM
Social justice
Humanistic traditions of HRM
Commitment
Transcends legal compliance
Human capital
Economic expediency
Driven by business interests
Concerned with maximising efficiency
12
Alignment with HR strategy
Recruitment and selection
Appraisal and reward
Training and development
Culture change
How realistic is a strategic approach to equality?
13
Key elements of the business case
Enables organisations to recruit employees from the widest pool of talent
Diversity is linked in some studies with greater creativity and innovation and superior performance
People are more engaged in organisations with a diverse set of employees
14
Enables organisations to recruit employees from the widest pool of talent …
Neurodiversity
Movement to work
Older employees
Ex convicts?
15
People are more engaged in organisations which encourage a diverse set of employees
Culture
Networks
Safe environments where people can be authentic and self-actualised
16
Stonewall, 2010
17
Employee engagement
Stonewall (2010) ‘concealing sexual orientation at work reduces productivity by up to 30%’
Catalyst (2009) LGBT employees in organisations with networks, resource groups and/or mentoring programmes are 7% to 16% higher in their workplace experience scores.
18
Managing Diversity
What do you think the figures are in terms of women and ethnic minorities in the workplace?
19
Continued under-representation of women and ethnic minorities…
Gender split in the UK workplace is now around parity.
However in the board room there is still a gender imbalance (circa 33% women to 77% men) ( www.gov.uk, 2020)
Over half of FTSE 100 firms have no ethnic minorities on their boards at all and they occupy 2% of the positions overall (City AM 2017).
Male BAMEs 6% and female BAMEs 3.8% of FTSE100’s board roles (DiversityQ, 2020)
Pay discrepancy: https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2018/mar/10/top-paid-men-women-gender-gap
20
Managing cultural diversity
Impact of globalisation, increased movement of people and internationalisation of business
Focus on ‘culture’ as a key dimension of difference
Emergence of cross-cultural management as a distinctive field of theory and practice
Key theorists include: Hofstede, Trompenaars, Hall…
21
Selected references
CIPD (2018) Diversity and Inclusion at Work. Facing up to the Business Case
Accessed 13/03/19 at CIPD website
Cockburn, C. (1989) ‘Equal opportunities – the short and long agenda’ Industrial Relations Journal 20/3 213-25
French, R. (2015) Cross-Cultural Management in Work Organisations (3rd edition) London: CIPD
Kirton, Gill, and Anne-Marie Greene. The Dynamics of Managing Diversity : A critical approach, Taylor & Francis Group, 2015. ProQuest Ebook Central, https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/londonmet/detail.action?docID=2126963.
Noon, M. (2007) ‘The fatal flaws of diversity and the business case for ethnic minorities’ Work Employment and Society 21/4 773-84
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Breakthrough Leadership Skills MN7028 Topic 4: Motivation, Reward and Engagement at Work 1
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Learning Outcomes To understand the importance of work to individuals and functions it performs. To understand, explain and critically evaluate major theories of motivation. To relate the contribution of employee motivation to commitment and engagement. To explore the concept of Total Reward To understand and explain the nature of the psychological contract and its role in forging commitment and engagement. To consider several HR strategies in relation to building greater employee engagement: case study of M&S
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The Importance of Work Motivation Central role in management Integral to performance Permeates many sub-fields in the study of management Research history Research future
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Origin and Definitions From the Latin – Movere ‘The contemporary (immediate) influence on direction, vigor, and persistence of action’ (Atkinson, 1964) ‘A process governing choice made by persons…among alternative forms of voluntary activity’ (Vroom, 1964)
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Early History of Motivation Research Scientific Management movement (Taylor, 1911) Human Relations movement (Mayo, 1933) Theory X and Theory Y (McGregor, 1960)
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Theory X (McGregor, 1961) People inherently dislike work and, whenever possible, will attempt to avoid it. Since people dislike work, they must be coerced, controlled, or threatened with punishment to achieve goals. People will avoid responsibilities and seek formal direction whenever possible. Most people place security above all other factors associated with work and display little ambition
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Theory Y (McGregor, 1961) People will exercise self-direction and self-control if they are committed to the objectives of their work. The average person wants to accept responsibility and will seek it as well. The ability to make innovative decisions is widely dispersed throughout the population and is not necessarily the sole province of those in management positions.
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Theory Z (Ouchy, 1980) Elements of this are now considered outdated (e.g. the job for life) However Ouchy places profound emphasis on the notion of Trust
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Content Theories Individual differences/needs: Hierarchy of needs (Maslow, 1954) Three needs: components of ERG Theory (Alderfer, 1972)
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Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Physiological needs Safety needs Social needs Ego/esteem needs Self-actualisation needs
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Applying Maslow’s model to the context of work Physiological – pay, pleasant work conditions, dining facilities Safety – health and safety, job security Social – cohesive work group, friendly supervision, professional associations Esteem – social recognition, job title, high-status job, feedback from job itself Self-actualisation – challenging job, opportunities for creativity, achievement in work, advancement in the organisation
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Content theories (2) Defined needs of achievement, affiliation, power, and autonomy (McClelland, 1961, 1971) Work activities/nature of job: Motivation-hygiene (Herzberg, 1966)
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Herzberg’s two factor theory Hygiene Factors Company policy & administration Supervision Working conditions Salary Relationship with peers Personal life Relationship with subordinates Status Security Satisfiers Achievement Recognition Work itself Responsibility Advancement Growth
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Process Theories The ‘golden age’ of cognitive motivation theories Expectancy Theory (Vroom, 1964; Porter and Lawler, 1968) Goal-setting (Locke, 1968; Locke and Latham, 1990)
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Expectancy Theory (Vroom, 1964; Porter and Lawler, 1968) Effort expended Effective level of performance Rewards (desired outcomes) related to performance Availability of rewards
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Equity Theory Equity (Adams, 1963) Animals share this sense of equity Individual exercise – how fair is your employer?
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Recent Developments 1960s and 1970s research extended and refined in the 1980s 1990s research into motivation has declined World of work has changed dramatically Future of motivation research? Academy of Management Review (2004) Special Topic Forum on the Future of Work Motivation Theory , Vol. 29, No. 3, July 2004, pp. 339-499.
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Roots of the concept of Employee Engagement Kahn (1990) was the first to propose that individuals could become personally engaged in their work. He defined ‘personal engagement’ as ‘the harnessing of organization members’ selves to their work roles : in engagement, people employ and express themselves physically, cognitively, emotionally and mentally during role performances”.
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Levels of engagement Engaged employees work with passion and feel a profound connection to their work and company. They drive innovation and move the organisation forward. Disengaged employees are essentially ‘checked out’. They’re ‘sleep walking’ through their work- day putting time (not energy or passion)into their work. Actively disengaged employees aren’t just unhappy at work: they’re busy acting out their unhappiness. These employees can often undermine what their engaged colleagues accomplish. See :Engaged employees inspire company innovation (2006) Gallup management Journal; http://gmj.gallup.com
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Commonly recognised Components of Employee Engagement (e.g. Armstrong 2017) Commitment Organizational Citizenship Behaviour Motivation Job Satisfaction (critiqued by Macey and Schneider, 2008)
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Some antecedents of EE might be Satisfaction (although dismissed by Macey and Schneider). Social Exchange Theory (SET) is presented by Saks (2006) who believes it poses a strong case A basic principle of SET is that ‘relationships evolve over time into trusting, loyal and mutual commitments as long as the parties abide by certain rules of exchange’ (Kular et al, 2008, referencing Cropanzano and Mitchell, 2005) So … In both SET and EE mutuality is required (and mutuality we agreed last week is one of the factors distinguishing EE from some closely related concepts such as Motivation) Trust
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Elaborating on SET ‘when individuals receive economic and socio-emotional resources from their organisation, they feel obliged to respond in kind and repay the organisation (Kular, 2008 referencing Cropanzano and Mitchell, 2005) We may conclude that the concept of SET represents at least one factor explaining why employees chose to engage or disengage at work.
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Trust Erosion of trust evident at societal level in ‘distrust of political elites’ (The Economist, 2017). ‘Rising distrust of … big business, banks and the media’ (ibid). Erosion of ‘public confidence in major companies’ (CIPD, 2014a). Two thirds of employees no longer trust senior management, influenced by recession, cost reduction programs, reduced working hours, freezes on payrises/benefits/promotions.
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Erosion of the trust which is/was implicit in the ‘psychological contract’ (Rousseau, 1995) The most important trust relationship for HR is that between employees and management (CIPD, 2012). The increasing ‘personalisation of trust’ through social media channels (CIPD, 2013) means that scrutiny of the behaviours of the organisation is more intense. When HR adopts a ‘hard model’ of HRM ( Legge ) and aligns itself to ‘organisational aims’, it will also suffer from an erosion of trust and a breakdown of the psychological contract. HR professionals may need to recalibrate toward a ‘soft’ model (ibid) which emphasises elements like socialisation, training and transparent communication with employees.
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The psychological contract Definitions: A set of perceived reciprocal promises and obligations between the individual and the organisation (Makin, P., 1999) The perceptions of both parties to the employment relationship, organisation and individual, of the reciprocal promises and obligations implied in that relationship (Guest, D. 2004)
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The “deal” Employer delivers on promises Employee delivers on promises = fairness, trust, commitment, well-being, performance.
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The Changing Nature of the Psychological Contract Old deal v. new deal (Ref: Guest, D. 2004) Breakdown of the traditional ‘deal’ A career in return for loyalty A fair day’s work for a fair day’s pay Individualisation of the employment relationship Organisational change and violation
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The impact of the psychological contract Fulfilling the psychological contract is important – it influences: Performance Extra role behaviour Job satisfaction Organisational commitment Intention to quit Source: Makin, P. and van Ruitenbeek, D., 1999
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Reward Understand the concept of financial rewards. Have an appreciation of the main types of payment Understand the concept of non-financial rewards. Understand the concepts of new reward and total reward.
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Reward or ‘compensation’? Marchington et al (2016) refer to the negative connotations related to compensation for ‘something bad happening to you’ Contrast with the more positive ‘rewards’, which may include ‘money, activities, variety, status, social contacts’ (ibid)
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Performance and Rewards Rewards are of obvious concern to both employers and employees. The emergence of HRM has produced or coincided with great expansion of both: Performance-related pay (a culture of “pay for contribution not pay for position”) Performance management
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Philosophy of Pay/Reward Systems Management will normally seek a pay system which they believe will give: the best balance between cost and supervisory control, and; provide the best incentive for employees. Marchington et al (2016) stress the importance of the reward philosophy in reflecting the overall objectives of the employer. Likewise the different elements of the package should all coherently ‘send a clear message to employees’
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Employer’s Assumptions about Reward Systems That the HR processes are a strategic fit for the business strategy Unitarist perspective which assumes that employees will endorse the business strategy Deterministic assumption that reward will have a direct impact on organisational performance Assumption that employees will work in a way that, in the absence of the reward system, they would not
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Employee’s Assumptions about Reward Systems Expectancy Theory (Vroom, 1964; Porter and Lawler, 1968) Motivational Force (MF) = Expectancy x Instrumentality x Valence
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Fairness Any pay system will fail if it is perceived to be unfair by the employees. Fairness of pay is a comparative concept not an absolute one. Equity Theory tells us that people will be better motivated if they feel that they are fairly paid – called the ‘felt-fair’ principle (Jacques, 1962) But fair in relation to what or whom? Usually the person at the next desk!
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Types of Payment Systems (e.g. Gilman, 2016) Payment by time. Performance-related pay or “Incentive Pay Schemes”: Payment by Results (PBR) – a variable element is determined by some ‘objective’ measure of the work done or its value. In the UK, this is losing favour in the shadow of the pension selling scandals. Merit-based systems – the variable element is related to an assessment of overall job performance
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Benefits of Payment by Results (PBR) according to Armstrong (2010) Motivate employees Serve as a lever for innovation and change (through modifications of processes to achieve performance) Send a message about the importance of good performance Link rewards directly to performance (and perhaps also to organisational goals) Help attract and keep the best staff Diminish the possibility of “golden handcuffs” where under-performers linger Meet the fundamental human need for achievement.
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Flaws of Payment by Results (PBR) according to Marchington et al (2016) Demotivate other employees Generally cost more to implement than they generate in increased revenue. Assume everyone works for/is motivated by money
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Payment by Results policies are growing in popularity NHS, teachers, Civil Service in the UK Asian countries – even Japan (which historically has paid on seniority)
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Case study of Payment by Results (Marsden, 2015) A PBR was rolled out in USA in certain schools who allocated part of their budget to spend on high performing teachers. The plan failed, arguably because: They didn’t give it enough time (2 years) There was a lack of understanding about how it worked There was a lack of money motivation in the targets (who instead focused on other more pastoral priorities) The PBR did not “create new budget”. The money had to be taken from somewhere else, creating tensions.
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Reasons to Pay well: Delivers a better choice of applicant Reduces performance ‘issues’ (Marchington et al, 2016) Reduces staff turnover May increase effort/contribution (in line with Social Expectancy Theory)
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‘New rewards’ (Lawler, 1990) Asserted that reward: Can (and should) align with the business strategy Can therefore help deliver the business strategy Offer the potential to lever/deliver cultural change Yet two‐thirds of organisations in the United Kingdom do not have a reward strategy (Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development 2008)
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Rejection of ‘new rewards’ logic CIPD (2015) report suggests that strategies of ‘new rewards’ are being ‘set aside or at least tempered by contemporary operating conditions’ Individual pay schemes are being used despite ambitions to promote a team ethic Such schemes ‘frustrate team cooperation’ HR prescriptions around team based logic has not gained traction.
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Nature of rewards: Financial Job-based pay Person-based pay Pensions Financial recognition schemes (bonuses?) Share schemes
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Financial “benefits” ‘Fringe’ or ‘employee’ benefits: to ensure that a competitive total remuneration package is provided to attract, retain and motivate staff. to increase the employee’s commitment to the organization. to take advantage of tax efficient methods of rewarding employees.
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Typical Non-Pay (but still Financial) Benefits Pension schemes Share schemes Company car Personal security E.g. extra-statutory sick pay; death in service benefits; personal accident cover; medical insurance etc Financial assistance
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Pension schemes Around half of employees in the UK are in occupational pensions schemes Pension schemes are the single most costly element in remuneration (notably in relation to workers with longer service) Two types: Defined benefit (DB): where the risk is taken by the employer Defined contribution (DC): where the risk is taken by the employee DC is on the increase but DBs are being wound up. (Antunes, 2016)
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Share ownership schemes Benefits? Education Motivation Recruitment and retention Performance Paternalism Drawback? Lack of direct correlation between effort and reward
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Cafeteria Approach to Rewards Management (Perkins and White, 2011) Allows employees a degree of choice in their total remuneration package, e.g. by permitting them to take less in non-pay benefits and more in pay, or vice versa The core benefit element will be salary The costed benefits will be elements such as car, Health Insurance, Childcare, extra holiday Employees chose the package” they wish to “construct”. The total overall value of their compensation will be the same whatever choices they make. This allows the individual to tailor their rewards to their particular needs and alter these as their needs change.
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Non financial rewards and recognition ‘managers do not motivate employees by giving them higher wages, more benefits, or new status symbols. Rather, employees are motivated by their own inherent need to succeed at a challenging task. The manager’s job then is not to motivate people to get them to achieve; instead, the manager should provide opportunities for people to achieve so they will become motivated.’ (Herzberg, 1987) ‘The desire of many individuals to seek opportunities for personal growth through their work is very powerful’ (Marchington et al, 2016, citing Giancola , 2010)
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Armstrong on Non-financial rewards ‘Financial incentives may increase engagement for some people in the short run, but the greatest impact on engagement is made by non-financial rewards, especially when they generate intrinsic motivation through the work itself and the work environment, and when they are provided by line managers’ (Armstrong, 2017, p.132).
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Reilly and Brown (2008) propose an engagement model for the Reward Strategy Examine the current strategy and structure Decide on the desired strategy and structure Understand ‘what brings people to work, keeps them with the organisation and motivates them to perform while there …’
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Non financial rewards and recognition ‘managers do not motivate employees by giving them higher wages, more benefits, or new status symbols. Rather, employees are motivated by their own inherent need to succeed at a challenging task. The manager’s job then is not to motivate people to get them to achieve; instead, the manager should provide opportunities for people to achieve so they will become motivated.’ (Herzberg, 1987) ‘The desire of many individuals to seek opportunities for personal growth through their work is very powerful’ (Marchington et al, 2016, citing Giancola, 2010)
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Nature of rewards: Non-financial (after Armstrong, 2017) Recognition in looser sense Achievement Personal growth Learning and Development opportunities Enhancement of well-being Some are extrinsic (e.g. verbal encouragement from manager) Some are intrinsic (e.g. job content)
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‘Total rewards’ defined. The CIPD define total reward as encompassing ‘all aspects of work that are valued by employees, including elements such as learning and development opportunities and/or an attractive working environment, in addition to the wider pay and benefits package’ (CIPD, 2015)
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Elements of ‘Total rewards’ The CIPD (2015) cite the US organisation WorldatWork as identifying six separate components of the work experience in addition to pay and benefits: performance and recognition work/life balance organisational culture employee development and career opportunities business strategy human resource strategy.
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Elaboration of ‘Total rewards’ concept Zingheim and Schuster (2001) suggest that the concept of total rewards has four components: Compelling future Individual growth Positive Workplace Total Pay. Towers and Perrin and Hay Group have adopted this model
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Managing the intrinsic element through job design Lawler (1969) identifies three elements to job design which are necessary to make a job ‘intrinsically’ motivating: Feedback relating to performance: this should be meaningful (Armstrong, 2010). Armstrong also states that this means they be able to see more of the picture, i.e. how their role fits into the whole process. Abilities: the jobholders must feel that they are making use of those abilities which they values. Self-control (autonomy): the jobholders must feel they have discretion
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Increased focus on ‘job characteristics’ in job design (Hackman and Oldham, 1976) Hackman and Oldham, 1976, propose a ‘job characteristics model’ (ibid), comprising five key elements: Skill variety (the range of skills and talents required) Task identity (the breadth within the task) Task significance (in relation to the “bigger picture”) Degree of autonomy (discretion, e.g. in methods) Feedback (clarity on performance) If jobs are designed in a way that maximises these dimensions then three psychological states can occur: Experience of meaningfulness at work Experience of responsibility for work outcomes Knowledge of results of work
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Motivation alone is not enough Marchington et al (2016) argue that people with a high ‘growth need’ will be more likely to experience changes in their psychological contract as a result of exposure to such job design However they also need abilities. As with performance more generally AMO seems to apply: Performance = Ability x Motivation X Opportunity
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Recurrent theme in the EE literature: ‘The line manager relationship is crucial’ (Robinson and Hayday, 2009) ‘Leaders and leadership can influence each facet of engagement through a range of processes’ (Soane, E (Leadership and Employee Engagement. in Truss et al, 2014, Employee Engagement in Practice)
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Selected Bibliography Armstrong, M. (2017) Armstrong's Handbook of Human Resource Management Practice. 14 th Edition. London: Kogan Page Armstrong, M. (2010) Armstrong's Handbook of Reward Management Practice. London: Kogan Page (available as ebook through Lonmet catalogue) CIPD (2015) Reward Strategy and Total Reward Factsheet (updated 2016) accessed 31/10/17 at https://www.cipd.co.uk/knowledge/strategy/reward/strategic-total-factsheet#7370 Henderson, I. (2010) Human Resource Management for MBA Students. London: CIPD Institute for Employment Studies (IES) (2016) The Relationship between Total Reward and Employee Engagement. Accessed 31/10/17 at http://www.nhsemployers.org/~/media/Employers/Publications/Reward/Total%20reward%20and%20employee%20engagement%20report.pdf Marchington, M., Wilkinson, A., Donnelly, R. and Kynighou , A. (2016) Human Resource Management at Work. 6 th Edition. London: CIPD
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Motivation Theory Ashley Read Collins Natalie Langley 134 2020-11-12T11:33:41Z 2004-05-11T05:27:24Z 2023-09-21T13:42:15Z
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0 3772 Microsoft Office PowerPoint Widescreen 388 62 29 0 0 false Fonts Used 3 Theme 1 Slide Titles 62 Arial Calibri Times New Roman Default Design Breakthrough Leadership Skills MN7028 Learning Outcomes The Importance of Work Motivation Origin and Definitions Early History of Motivation Research Theory X (McGregor, 1961) Theory Y (McGregor, 1961) Theory Z (Ouchy, 1980) Content Theories Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Applying Maslow’s model to the context of work Content theories (2) Herzberg’s two factor theory Process Theories Expectancy Theory (Vroom, 1964; Porter and Lawler, 1968) Equity Theory Recent Developments Roots of the concept of Employee Engagement Levels of engagement Commonly recognised Components of Employee Engagement (e.g. Armstrong 2017) Some antecedents of EE might be Elaborating on SET Trust Erosion of the trust which is/was implicit in the ‘psychological contract’ (Rousseau, 1995) The psychological contract The “deal” The Changing Nature of the Psychological Contract The impact of the psychological contract Reward Reward or ‘compensation’? Performance and Rewards Philosophy of Pay/Reward Systems Employer’s Assumptions about Reward Systems Employee’s Assumptions about Reward Systems Fairness Types of Payment Systems (e.g. Gilman, 2016) Benefits of Payment by Results (PBR) according to Armstrong (2010) Flaws of Payment by Results (PBR) according to Marchington et al (2016) Payment by Results policies are growing in popularity Case study of Payment by Results (Marsden, 2015) Reasons to Pay well: ‘New rewards’ (Lawler, 1990) Rejection of ‘new rewards’ logic Nature of rewards: Financial Financial “benefits” Typical Non-Pay (but still Financial) Benefits Pension schemes Share ownership schemes Cafeteria Approach to Rewards Management (Perkins and White, 2011) Non financial rewards and recognition Armstrong on Non-financial rewards Reilly and Brown (2008) propose an engagement model for the Reward Strategy Non financial rewards and recognition Nature of rewards: Non-financial (after Armstrong, 2017) ‘Total rewards’ defined. Elements of ‘Total rewards’ Elaboration of ‘Total rewards’ concept Managing the intrinsic element through job design Increased focus on ‘job characteristics’ in job design (Hackman and Oldham, 1976) Motivation alone is not enough Recurrent theme in the EE literature: Selected Bibliography false false false 16.0000