The Psychology of Money - An Investment Manager\'s Guide to Beating the Market

(Grace) #1
60 THE INVESTOR

Another group of tests, conducted by various psychologists,
linked personality traits with the Myers-Briggs preferences. The
results showed that “sensing-judging” types (lions) were good at
finance and creating order. But their counterparts, the “iNtuitive-
perceiving” types, excelled at creativity, playfulness, flexibility,
autonomy, and (comfort with) complexity.
Still another piece of research, conducted by Gough, established
a formula that could be used to rank individuals on the basis of
their creativity. The formula is:

3SN + JP – EI – .5TF

The letters represent the “continuous” score that is generated when
one takes the MBTI (i.e., the “long” form of the test). Below are
some professions ranked by this formula:

Profession Score
Architects 366
Playwrights 340
Research scientists 321
Medical school students 276
Engineering students 275
Inventors 258
ISTJ portfolio managers 247
Business executives 221

Note that the STJ (sensing-thinking-judging) portfolio managers
ranked in the bottom quarter, along with business execs, indicat-
ing a disadvantage if the world is calling for more creative money
management. (All studies cited from Myers and McCaulley, Manual:
A Guide to the Development and Use of the Myers-Briggs Type
Indicator, Consulting Psychologist Press 1985). In Chapter 8, we’ll
look at what can be done by individuals or firms that want to
enhance their creativity.

07 ware 60 1/19/01, 1:09 PM

Free download pdf