[Define each strength theme. Definition included – paraphrase and write in your own words]: Relator: Relator describes your attitude toward your relationships. In simple terms, the Relator theme pulls you toward people you already know.

Team Composition:

Person A: Relator、Ideation、Individualization、Responsibility、Focus

Person B: Consistency、Relator、Discipline、Connectedness、Empathy

Person C: Restorative、Empathy、Responsibility、Focus、Futuristic

Person D: Woo、Adaptability、Communication、Includer、Maximizer

Person E: Responsibility、Relator、Futuristic、Strategic、Ideation

 

I have classified all the strength themes into those 4 leadership domains for you. I highlighted them in different colors. You will see the colors in the image (Red – Executing, Purple – Influencing, Yellow – Relationship building, Gray – Strategic thinking)

Just follow the instructions and questions and write about 750 words in total.

 

There are 17 different strength themes in this team.

[Define each strength theme. Definition included – paraphrase and write in your own words]:

Relator: Relator describes your attitude toward your relationships. In simple terms, the Relator theme pulls you toward people you already know. You do not necessarily shy away from meeting new people—in fact, you may have other themes that cause you to enjoy the thrill of turning strangers into friends—but you do derive a great deal of pleasure and strength from being around your close friends. You are comfortable with intimacy. Once the initial connection has been made, you deliberately encourage a deepening of the relationship. You want to understand their feelings, their goals, their fears, and their dreams; and you want them to understand yours. You know that this kind of closeness implies a certain amount of risk—you might be taken advantage of—but you are willing to accept that risk. For you a relationship has value only if it is genuine. And the only way to know that is to entrust yourself to the other person. The more you share with each other, the more you risk together. The more you risk together, the more each of you proves your caring is genuine. These are your steps toward real friendship, and you take them willingly.

Ideation: You are fascinated by ideas. What is an idea? An idea is a concept, the best explanation of the most events. You are delighted when you discover beneath the complex surface an elegantly simple concept to explain why things are the way they are. An idea is a connection. Yours is the kind of mind that is always looking for connections, and so you are intrigued when seemingly disparate phenomena can be linked by an obscure connection. An idea is a new perspective on familiar challenges. You revel in taking the world we all know and turning it around so we can view it from a strange but strangely enlightening angle. You love all these ideas because they are profound, because they are novel, because they are clarifying, because they are contrary, because they are bizarre. For all these reasons you derive a jolt of energy whenever a new idea occurs to you. Others may label you creative or original or conceptual or even smart. Perhaps you are all of these. Who can be sure? What you are sure of is that ideas are thrilling. And on most days this is enough.

Individualization: Your Individualization theme leads you to be intrigued by the unique qualities of each person. You are impatient with generalizations or “types” because you don’t want to obscure what is special and distinct about each person. Instead, you focus on the differences between individuals. You instinctively observe each person’s style, each person’s motivation, how each thinks, and how each builds relationships. You hear the one-of-a-kind stories in each person’s life. This theme explains why you pick your friends just the right birthday gift, why you know that one person prefers praise in public and another detests it, and why you tailor your teaching style to accommodate one person’s need to be shown and another’s desire to “figure it out as I go.” Because you are such a keen observer of other people’s strengths, you can draw out the best in each person. This Individualization theme also helps you build productive teams. While some search around for the perfect team “structure” or “process,” you know instinctively that the secret to great teams is casting by individual strengths so that everyone can do a lot of what they do well.

Responsibility: Your Responsibility theme forces you to take psychological ownership for anything you commit to, and whether large or small, you feel emotionally bound to follow it through to completion. Your good name depends on it. If for some reason you cannot deliver, you automatically start to look for ways to make it up to the other person. Apologies are not enough. Excuses and rationalizations are totally unacceptable. You will not quite be able to live with yourself until you have made restitution. This conscientiousness, this near obsession for doing things right, and your impeccable ethics, combine to create your reputation: utterly dependable. When assigning new responsibilities, people will look to you first because they know it will get done. When people come to you for help—and they soon will—you must be selective. Your willingness to volunteer may sometimes lead you to take on more than you should.

Focus: “Where am I headed?” you ask yourself. You ask this question every day. Guided by this theme of Focus, you need a clear destination. Lacking one, your life and your work can quickly become frustrating. And so each year, each month, and even each week you set goals. These goals then serve as your compass, helping you determine priorities and make the necessary corrections to get back on course. Your Focus is powerful because it forces you to filter; you instinctively evaluate whether or not a particular action will help you move toward your goal. Those that don’t are ignored. In the end, then, your Focus forces you to be efficient. Naturally, the flip side of this is that it causes you to become impatient with delays, obstacles, and even tangents, no matter how intriguing they appear to be. This makes you an extremely valuable team member. When others start to wander down other avenues, you bring them back to the main road. Your Focus reminds everyone that if something is not helping you move toward your destination, then it is not important. And if it is not important, then it is not worth your time. You keep everyone on point.

Consistency: Balance is important to you. You are keenly aware of the need to treat people the same, no matter what their station in life, so you do not want to see the scales tipped too far in any one person’s favor. In your view this leads to selfishness and individualism. It leads to a world where some people gain an unfair advantage because of their connections or their background or their greasing of the wheels. This is truly offensive to you. You see yourself as a guardian against it. In direct contrast to this world of special favors, you believe that people function best in a consistent environment where the rules are clear and are applied to everyone equally. This is an environment where people know what is expected. It is predictable and evenhanded. It is fair. Here each person has an even chance to show his or her worth.

Discipline: Your world needs to be predictable. It needs to be ordered and planned. So you instinctively impose structure on your world. You set up routines. You focus on timelines and deadlines. You break long term projects into a series of specific short-term plans, and you work through each plan diligently. You are not necessarily neat and clean, but you do need precision. Faced with the inherent messiness of life, you want to feel in control. The routines, the timelines, the structure, all of these help create this feeling of control. Lacking this theme of Discipline, others may sometimes resent your need for order, but there need not be conflict. You must understand that not everyone feels your urge for predictability; they have other ways of getting things done. Likewise, you can help them understand and even appreciate your need for structure. Your dislike of surprises, your impatience with errors, your routines, and your detail orientation don’t need to be misinterpreted as controlling behaviors that box people in. Rather, these behaviors can be understood as your instinctive method for maintaining your progress and your productivity in the face of life’s many distractions.

Connectedness: Things happen for a reason. You are sure of it. You are sure of it because in your soul you know that we are all connected. Yes, we are individuals, responsible for our own judgments and in possession of our own free will, but nonetheless we are part of something larger. Some may call it the collective unconscious. Others may label it spirit or life force. But whatever your word of choice, you gain confidence from knowing that we are not isolated from one another or from the earth and the life on it. This feeling of Connectedness implies certain responsibilities. If we are all part of a larger picture, then we must not harm others because we will be harming ourselves. We must not exploit because we will be exploiting ourselves. Your awareness of these responsibilities creates your value system. You are considerate, caring, and accepting. Certain of the unity of humankind, you are a bridge builder for people of different cultures. Sensitive to the invisible hand, you can give others comfort that there is a purpose beyond our humdrum lives. The exact articles of your faith will depend on your upbringing and your culture, but your faith is strong. It sustains you and your close friends in the face of life’s mysteries.

Empathy: You can sense the emotions of those around you. You can feel what they are feeling as though their feelings are your own. Intuitively, you are able to see the world through their eyes and share their perspective. You do not necessarily agree with each person’s perspective. You do not necessarily feel pity for each person’s predicament—this would be sympathy, not Empathy. You do not necessarily condone the choices each person makes, but you do understand. This instinctive ability to understand is powerful. You hear the unvoiced questions. You anticipate the need. Where others grapple for words, you seem to find the right words and the right tone. You help people find the right phrases to express their feelings—to themselves as well as to others. You help them give voice to their emotional life. For all these reasons other people are drawn to you.

Restorative: You love to solve problems. Whereas some are dismayed when they encounter yet another breakdown, you can be energized by it. You enjoy the challenge of analyzing the symptoms, identifying what is wrong, and finding the solution. You may prefer practical problems or conceptual ones or personal ones. You may seek out specific kinds of problems that you have met many times before and that you are confident you can fix. Or you may feel the greatest push when faced with complex and unfamiliar problems. Your exact preferences are determined by your other themes and experiences. But what is certain is that you enjoy bringing things back to life. It is a wonderful feeling to identify the undermining factor(s), eradicate them, and restore something to its true glory. Intuitively, you know that without your intervention, this thing—this machine, this technique, this person, this company—might have ceased to function. You fixed it, resuscitated it, rekindled its vitality. Phrasing it the way you might, you saved it.

Futuristic: “Wouldn’t it be great if . . .” You are the kind of person who loves to peer over the horizon. The future fascinates you. As if it were projected on the wall, you see in detail what the future might hold, and this detailed picture keeps pulling you forward, into tomorrow. While the exact content of the picture will depend on your other strengths and interests—a better product, a better team, a better life, or a better world—it will always be inspirational to you. You are a dreamer who sees visions of what could be and who cherishes those visions. When the present proves too frustrating and the people around you too pragmatic, you conjure up your visions of the future and they energize you. They can energize others, too. In fact, very often people look to you to describe your visions of the future. They want a picture that can raise their sights and thereby their spirits. You can paint it for them. Practice. Choose your words carefully. Make the picture as vivid as possible. People will want to latch on to the hope you bring.

Woo: Woo stands for winning others over. You enjoy the challenge of meeting new people and getting them to like you. Strangers are rarely intimidating to you. On the contrary, strangers can be energizing. You are drawn to them. You want to learn their names, ask them questions, and find some area of common interest so that you can strike up a conversation and build rapport. Some people shy away from starting up conversations because they worry about running out of things to say. You don’t. Not only are you rarely at a loss for words; you actually enjoy initiating with strangers because you derive satisfaction from breaking the ice and making a connection. Once that connection is made, you are quite happy to wrap it up and move on. There are new people to meet, new rooms to work, new crowds to mingle in. In your world there are no strangers, only friends you haven’t met yet—lots of them.

Adaptability: You live in the moment. You don’t see the future as a fixed destination. Instead, you see it as a place that you create out of the choices that you make right now. And so you discover your future one choice at a time. This doesn’t mean that you don’t have plans. You probably do. But this theme of Adaptability does enable you to respond willingly to the demands of the moment even if they pull you away from your plans. Unlike some, you don’t resent sudden requests or unforeseen detours. You expect them. They are inevitable. Indeed, on some level you actually look forward to them. You are, at heart, a very flexible person who can stay productive when the demands of work are pulling you in many different directions at once.

Communicator: You like to explain, to describe, to host, to speak in public, and to write. This is your Communication theme at work. Ideas are a dry beginning. Events are static. You feel a need to bring them to life, to energize them, to make them exciting and vivid. And so you turn events into stories and practice telling them. You take the dry idea and enliven it with images and examples and metaphors. You believe that most people have a very short attention span. They are bombarded by information, but very little of it survives. You want your information—whether an idea, an event, a product’s features and benefits, a discovery, or a lesson—to survive. You want to divert their attention toward you and then capture it, lock it in. This is what drives your hunt for the perfect phrase. This is what draws you toward dramatic words and powerful word combinations. This is why people like to listen to you. Your word pictures pique their interest, sharpen their world, and inspire them to act.

Includer: “Stretch the circle wider.” This is the philosophy around which you orient your life. You want to include people and make them feel part of the group. In direct contrast to those who are drawn only to exclusive groups, you actively avoid those groups that exclude others. You want to expand the group so that as many people as possible can benefit from its support. You hate the sight of someone on the outside looking in. You want to draw them in so that they can feel the warmth of the group. You are an instinctively accepting person. Regardless of race or sex or nationality or personality or faith, you cast few judgments. Judgments can hurt a person’s feelings. Why do that if you don’t have to? Your accepting nature does not necessarily rest on a belief that each of us is different and that one should respect these differences. Rather, it rests on your conviction that fundamentally we are all the same. We are all equally important. Thus, no one should be ignored. Each of us should be included. It is the least we all deserve.

Maximizer: Excellence, not average, is your measure. Taking something from below average to slightly above average takes a great deal of effort and in your opinion is not very rewarding. Transforming something strong into something superb takes just as much effort but is much more thrilling. Strengths, whether yours or someone else’s, fascinate you. Like a diver after pearls, you search them out, watching for the telltale signs of a strength. A glimpse of untutored excellence, rapid learning, a skill mastered without recourse to steps—all these are clues that a strength may be in play. And having found a strength, you feel compelled to nurture it, refine it, and stretch it toward excellence. You polish the pearl until it shines. This natural sorting of strengths means that others see you as discriminating. You choose to spend time with people who appreciate your particular strengths. Likewise, you are attracted to others who seem to have found and cultivated their own strengths. You tend to avoid those who want to fix you and make you well rounded. You don’t want to spend your life bemoaning what you lack. Rather, you want to capitalize on the gifts with which you are blessed. It’s more fun. It’s more productive. And, counterintuitively, it is more demanding.

Strategic: The Strategic theme enables you to sort through the clutter and find the best route. It is not a skill that can be taught. It is a distinct way of thinking, a special perspective on the world at large. This perspective allows you to see patterns where others simply see complexity. Mindful of these patterns, you play out alternative scenarios, always asking, “What if this happened? Okay, well what if this happened?” This recurring question helps you see around the next corner. There you can evaluate accurately the potential obstacles. Guided by where you see each path leading, you start to make selections. You discard the paths that lead nowhere. You discard the paths that lead straight into resistance. You discard the paths that lead into a fog of confusion. You cull and make selections until you arrive at the chosen path—your strategy. Armed with your strategy, you strike forward. This is your Strategic theme at work: “What if?” Select. Strike.

 

The 17 different strength themes do fall into all four domains of leadership, but the distribution is not even. Most of the strength themes are under the relationship building and executing domains. Only 3 themes come under the influencing one.

[How should this team work together? What are the challenges team members will encounter with one another?]:

For this reason, the way to work together… because the team would encounter… challenges…

[What strategies should the team use to leverage their strengths to meet the four basic needs of followers?]:

Therefore, the strategies the team should use to leverage the strengths to meet the four basic needs of followers should be…

[Using these strengths, how will you strengthen the people around you?]

[Give real life examples from personal experiences]

 

Around 750 words in total.

Team

Composition:

 

Person A

:

Relator

I

deation

Individualization

Re

sponsibility

F

ocus

 

Person B

:

Consistency

R

elator

D

iscipline

C

onnectedness

E

mpathy

 

Person C

:

Restorative

E

mpathy

R

esponsibility

F

ocus

F

uturistic

 

Person D

:

Woo

A

daptability

C

ommunication

I

ncluder

M

aximizer

 

Person E

:

Responsibility

R

elator

F

uturistic

S

trategic

I

deation

 

 

I have c

lass

i

fied all the strength themes into those

4 leadersh

ip domains for

 

you. I

highlight

ed them i

n different colors.

You will see the colors in the image (Red

 

Executing,

 

Purple

 

Influencing,

 

Yellow

 

R

elationship

building, Gray

 

Strategic

thinking)

 

Just follow the

 

instructions

 

and questions and write about 750 words in total.

 

 

There are 17 different

 

stren

gth themes

 

in this team

.

 

[

Define each strength theme

. Defini

tion i

ncluded

 

paraphrase

and

write in your own

words

]:

 

Relator

:

 

Relator describes your attitude toward your relationships. In simple terms, the Relator

theme pulls you

toward people you already know. You do not necessarily shy away from

meeting new people

in fact, you may have other themes that cause you to enjoy the thrill of

turning strangers into friends

but you do derive a great deal of pleasure and strength from bei

ng

around your close friends. You are comfortable with intimacy. Once the initial connection has

been made, you deliberately encourage a deepening of the relationship. You want to understand

their feelings, their goals, their fears, and their dreams; and y

ou want them to understand yours.

You know that this kind of closeness implies a certain amount of risk

you might be taken

advantage of

but you are willing to accept that risk. For you a relationship has value only if it is

genuine. And the only way to kno

w that is to entrust yourself to the other person. The more you

share with each other, the more you risk together. The more you risk together, the more each of

you proves your caring is genuine. These are your steps toward real friendship, and you take

the

m willingly.

 

Ideation

:

 

You are fascinated by ideas. What is an idea? An idea is a concept, the best explanation

of the most events. You are delighted when you discover beneath the complex surface an

elegantly simple concept to explain w

hy things are the way they are. An idea is a connection.

Yours is the kind of mind that is always looking for connections, and so you are intrigued when

seemingly disparate phenomena can be linked by an obscure connection. An idea is a new

perspective on f

amiliar challenges. You revel in taking the world we all know and turning it

around so we can view it from a strange but strangely enlightening angle. You love all these

Team Composition:

Person A: Relator、Ideation、Individualization、Responsibility、Focus

Person B: Consistency、Relator、Discipline、Connectedness、Empathy

Person C: Restorative、Empathy、Responsibility、Focus、Futuristic

Person D: Woo、Adaptability、Communication、Includer、Maximizer

Person E: Responsibility、Relator、Futuristic、Strategic、Ideation

 

I have classified all the strength themes into those 4 leadership domains for you. I

highlighted them in different colors. You will see the colors in the image (Red – Executing,

Purple – Influencing, Yellow – Relationship building, Gray – Strategic thinking)

Just follow the instructions and questions and write about 750 words in total.

 

There are 17 different strength themes in this team.

[Define each strength theme. Definition included – paraphrase and write in your own

words]:

Relator: Relator describes your attitude toward your relationships. In simple terms, the Relator

theme pulls you toward people you already know. You do not necessarily shy away from

meeting new people—in fact, you may have other themes that cause you to enjoy the thrill of

turning strangers into friends—but you do derive a great deal of pleasure and strength from being

around your close friends. You are comfortable with intimacy. Once the initial connection has

been made, you deliberately encourage a deepening of the relationship. You want to understand

their feelings, their goals, their fears, and their dreams; and you want them to understand yours.

You know that this kind of closeness implies a certain amount of risk—you might be taken

advantage of—but you are willing to accept that risk. For you a relationship has value only if it is

genuine. And the only way to know that is to entrust yourself to the other person. The more you

share with each other, the more you risk together. The more you risk together, the more each of

you proves your caring is genuine. These are your steps toward real friendship, and you take

them willingly.

Ideation: You are fascinated by ideas. What is an idea? An idea is a concept, the best explanation

of the most events. You are delighted when you discover beneath the complex surface an

elegantly simple concept to explain why things are the way they are. An idea is a connection.

Yours is the kind of mind that is always looking for connections, and so you are intrigued when

seemingly disparate phenomena can be linked by an obscure connection. An idea is a new

perspective on familiar challenges. You revel in taking the world we all know and turning it

around so we can view it from a strange but strangely enlightening angle. You love all these