Personality Perfect Test
Best for: Learning how others perceive you or how they might misinterpret your behaviors, and finding out what you value most.
Similar to 16 Personalities, Personality Perfect is also based on Jung’s and Myers-Briggs’ personality theories, and uses four broad categories — extraversion vs. introversion, sensing and intuition, thinking and feeling, and judging and perceiving — to compile a four-letter abbreviation of your personality type (like “INFP”).
The test offers a broad overview of how you connect with others, how you behave, and, perhaps most surprising, how you’re likely seen by others.
Pros: Once you know your four-letter personality abbreviation, you can apply that label to various situations, like work and love, and figure out how others perceive your behaviors in those settings.
Cons: Tests that are based on Jungian personality theories are typically considered rough tendencies, and not strict classifications — and many researchers say Myers-Briggs tests are unscientific due to the different results you might get if you take the test twice.”
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