Why are psychometric tests important today?

There are many psychometric tests out there today, and you have probably tried a few yourself at school or when applying for jobs. Isn’t it time you took one for you?

Being able to hear our own unique selves above the noise of information and identities we are bombarded with each day is difficult. Yet our success comes when we strike a chord within ourselves - when we love what we do and do what we love.

The Genius Test is a free ‘light’ version of the Wealth Dynamics and Talent Dynamics tests designed by Roger James Hamilton. These tests are more detailed and give you one of eight different profiles, each with detailed strategies and case studies to learn from. These have become leading systems with organisations and entrepreneurs around the world.

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Review of the Top 5 Psychometric Tests

To give you an idea of how the top tests compare, here is our review of the Top 5 Psychometric Test:

Myers Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)

Launched in 1962, this old classic has been around for close to 50 years. Taking the test results in one of 16 types with titles like “ESTJ” and “INFP”. These refer to four polarities (such as extroversion / introversion and thinking / feeling). The test is used to assess preferences without easy links to strategies or role models, so really require an expert to interpret the results and translate it into effective action.

DISC profile

Launched in 1928, this system is simpler, and more intuitive. DISC refers to the four behaviour types the test assesses: Dominance, Influence, Steadiness and Compliance. It is more focused at behaviours than preferences, but has the same Jungian roots as MBTI, and there are correlations to the two. Teams find DISC easier to grasp and explain back than MBTI, but both systems lack clear strategies for success, or tailored tools for specific industries or modern challenges.

Strength Finder

A more modern test created by Gallup and championed by Marcus Buckingham, Strength Finder focuses at your strengths rather than focusing on preferences or behaviours. The test identifies your top 5 strengths out of a possible 34. Accompanied with a relevant modern philosophy (focus at your strengths and you will be happier and more productive for it), this test is more prescriptive on proactive strategy than MBTI and DISC, but lacks an intuitive model that team members can transfer (Few can remember all 34 strengths, let alone how they relate to each other). It also does not identify top weaknesses, in either individuals or teams.

Wealth Dynamics & Talent Dynamics

Created eight years ago by Roger James Hamilton, a social entrepreneur and founder of XL Nation, Wealth Dynamics has rapidly grown into the most widely adopted profiling systems for entrepreneurs and business owners around the world. The reason for its success is that it links both your strengths and weaknesses to your preferences, and then gives you clear role models and strategies to follow. It takes the very best of MBTI, DISC and Strength Finder, and delivers to you a system that is intuitive, relevant and easy to explain to others. In 2009, Talent Dynamics was established to give multi-national companies and organisations the benefit of the system. It is now the No. 1 business development pathway for accelerating trust and flow in corporations.

Five-Factor Model (Big Five)

This last of the five is not an established test like the other four, but it is the acknowledged system by which the behavioural sciences industry and psychologists assess all psychometric tests. It identifies the five factors that make up our personality and that all tests seek to measure. These are: Openness (are you more curious or cautious?); Conscientiousness (are you more organized or careless?); Extraversion (are you more outgoing or reserved?); Agreeableness (are you more friendly or cold); and Neuroticism (are you more sensitive or secure?). Ensure the system you choose does a good job at measuring all five of these elements.


Do all psychometric tests have the same roots?

A trait of modern man is that we like to take credit for new inventions, but psychometric tests go back 5,000 years. Today’s entire psychometric testing industry is based on the work of Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung, and his book Psychological Types published in 1921. Jung was the understudy of Sigmund Freud until he broke off with his own theories of psychology. If you have ever heard of the concept of archetypes, synchronicity or the collective unconscious, these are all terms popularized by Carl Jung (as are the Jungian psychometry terms of introvert / extrovert, and sensory / intuitive).

Where did Jung’s information come from? In 1920, a year before he published ‘Psychological Types”, Carl Jung was the first in the west to publish the ancient Chinese text, the I Ching (The book of Changes, said by the Chinese to be the oldest book of humanity, written in 3,000 BC). Richard Wilhelm, who brought the text back from China, explained to Jung the intricacies of the Chinese five elements which are the basis of Chinese Taoist philosophy and the nature of all things (WATER grows WOOD that fuels FIRE that settles to EARTH which mines METAL that flows back to WATER).

These five elements relate to the five factors in the established Five-Factor Model. The structure of the five elements and the ‘Yin’ / ‘Yang’ model of the I Ching Philosophy are the underpinnings for all modern psychometric testing. The Wealth Dynamics system is the only one of the modern systems that goes right back to the roots of where modern psychometric testing comes from, to the primary purpose that the ancient Chinese had within the I Ching.

This primary purpose is for us to find our flow. When we are connected to our flow, we are following our personal path of least resistance, when things come naturally and synchronicity occurs. This is a far deeper notion than simply having preferences, behaviours or even strengths. At the core of all mastery, we know that when we tune into the world, the world also tunes in to us. When an entire team gets into flow – by synchronizing everyone’s flow into one harmony – magic occurs.