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Everything you need to know about a Scholar

3 Lessons 15 minutes completion time

What you'll learn:

This course will cover the strengths and caution areas associated with the Reference Profile known as Scholar, the Team Type that Scholars are commonly associated with, how they balance other teams, and leadership styles most often associated with Scholars.

Scholars in a team

Your Reference Profile won’t only tell you about who you are, but also the unique work styles you contribute to a team. The PI Science team conducted research to link the four framework quadrants below to the four drives measured by the PI Behavioral Assessment™. Each individual on your team will be plotted into the quadrant framework based on their behavioral pattern. Below shows each of the profile types and where they land.

Now that we know which Reference Profiles fall into which quadrants, we can start talking about Team Types. The PI Behavioral Assessment™ provides a deep look into an individual’s workplace behavior by understanding that person’s motivations and needs. However, most of the time, work happens via teams, so it’s important to understand the overall behavioral makeup of a team.

Team Types provide a simple approach to understanding behavioral data at a team level. PI has defined a number of Team Types based on the collection of personalities on a team and where they fall within the four quadrants we mentioned earlier.

Scholar’s Team Type

When a team has multiple Scholars or similar personalities that fall within the Results & Discipline quadrant, you will be defined as a Producing Team.

A Producing Team is competitive, intense, task-oriented

Producing team strengths

Clear and efficient in approach
Undaunted by failure
Held to high standards

Producing caution areas

At risk of burnout
Potentially rivalrous
Prone to conflict

A Producing Team forms when a majority of team members fall within the Results & Discipline quadrant. But what happens when you’re a Scholar on a team with a majority of individuals in other quadrants? It’s common to have many unique personalities on a team.

The activity below shows not only the different Team Types associated with other quadrants, but also some tips on how Scholars can leverage their unique strengths to help balance those teams.

Keep in mind: We’ve only mentioned four Team Types throughout this course, but there are actually nine in total. You’ve already learned the different types of team work styles based on the four quadrants, plus some tips on how to flex for each. Based on what you know about Scholars, are there other ways you can stretch to accommodate the additional work styles? What team style do you think you’re a part of?

Next, we’ll cover how Scholars will act as leaders and share ways to maximize their effectiveness.

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