Working Style Snapshot
This snapshot gives you a useful read on your working style — the patterns you default to when you’re collaborating, making decisions, and showing up in professional relationships. It surfaces your dominant style, your secondary style, and what the blend tends to bring to the people you work with.
- You’ll rate 24 short statements on how much you agree or disagree.
- There are no right or wrong answers — go with your gut.
- Your results will appear on screen and be emailed to you.
Tell us where to send your results
Read each statement and choose how much you agree or disagree.
Calculating your snapshot…
Here’s your snapshot
Rooted in nearly a century of work on human behavior
This snapshot draws on the DISC framework, a model of human behavior introduced by psychologist William Moulton Marston in his 1928 book Emotions of Normal People. Marston proposed that people express themselves along four dimensions — Dominance, Influence, Steadiness, and Conscientiousness — shaped by whether they lean more toward tasks or people, and whether they tend to be outgoing or reserved.
Marston never built an assessment himself, and the framework has remained in the public domain ever since. In the decades since, thousands of practitioners — coaches, leaders, psychologists, and organizations — have used DISC to help people understand how they show up and how they prefer to work.
Here’s the important part: we all have a little of each style in us. This isn’t a box you fit in. It’s a map of tendencies. Most of us lean toward one or two styles more often than the others, and recognizing those defaults — in ourselves and the people around us — lets us adapt, meet others where they are, and build stronger working relationships.
What follows is a short read of where your energy tends to concentrate.
How the four styles map
The four styles arrange along two axes: task-oriented vs. people-oriented, and outgoing vs. reserved. Every style brings real strengths and real blind spots.
How You Show Up
This is your style at a glance. Everyone has a little bit of all four quadrants, but one or two tend to be dominant. This is how you show up.