ENTJ
Extraverted Thinking with Intuition
ENTJ people use their thinking to run as much of the world as may be theirs
to run. They enjoy executive action and long-range planning. Reliance on
thinking makes them logical, analytical, objectively critical, and not
likely to be convinced by anything but reasoning. They tend to focus on
the ideas, not the person behind the ideas.
They like to think ahead, organize. plans, situations,
and operations related to a project, and make a systematic effort to reach
their objectives on schedule. They have little patience with confusion
or inefficiency, and can be tough when the situation calls for toughness.
They think conduct should be ruled by logic, and
govern their own behavior accordingly They live by a definite set of rules
that embody their basic judgments about the world. Any change in their
ways requires a deliberate change in their rules.
They are mainly interested in seeing the possibilities
beyond what is present, obvious, or known. Intuition heightens their intellectual
interest, curiosity for new ideas, tolerance for theory, and taste for
complex problems.
ENTJs are seldom content in jobs that make no demand
upon their intuition. They are stimulated by problems and are often found
in executive jobs where they can find and implement new solutions. Because
their interest is in the big picture, they may overlook the importance
of certain details. Since ENTJs tend to team up with like-minded intuitives
who may also underestimate the realities of a situation, they usually need
a person around with good common sense to bring up overloóked facts
and take care of important details.
Like the other decisive types, ENTJs run the risk
of deciding too quickly before they have fully examined the situation.
They need to stop and listen to the other person's viewpoint, especially
with people who are not in a position to talk back. This is seldom easy
for them, but if they do not take time to understand, they may judge
too quickly, without enough facts or enough regard for what other people
think or feel.
ENTJs may need to work at taking feeling
values into account. Relying so much on their logical approach, they may
overlook feeling values-what they care about and what other people care
about. If feeling values are ignored too much, they may build up pressure
and find expression in inappropriate ways. Although ENTJs are naturally
good at seeing what is illogical and inconsistent, they may need to develop
the art of appreciation. One positive way to exercise their feeling is
through appreciation of other people's merits and ideas. ENTJs who learn
to make it a rule to mention what they like, not merely what needs correcting,
find the results worthwhile both in their work and in their private lives.