RIASEC (Holland Codes) and the Big Five are two of the most research-backed tools in career psychology — but they measure different dimensions of who you are. RIASEC captures what work you want to do, by mapping your vocational interests to six environment types. The Big Five captures who you are, by measuring your personality across five stable trait dimensions.
Think of it this way: RIASEC tells you which career path fits your interests; the Big Five tells you how you will perform and behave once you are on that path. Neither answer is complete without the other.
This guide breaks down what each test measures, how they compare scientifically, and when to use each. Both are free on JobCannon.
| Feature | RIASEC | Big Five |
|---|---|---|
| What it measures | Vocational interests | Core personality traits |
| Created by | John Holland (1959) | Multiple researchers (1980s) |
| Dimensions | 6 interest types (R, I, A, S, E, C) | 5 traits (OCEAN) |
| Output format | Categorical (3-letter code) | Continuous (trait spectrums) |
| Questions | 60 questions | 50 questions |
| Time to complete | ~15 minutes | ~10 minutes |
| Scientific validity | Moderate — strong for career prediction | Gold standard in personality research |
| Primary use | Career exploration & job matching | Personality profiling, hiring, research |
| Best for | Choosing what work to do | Understanding who you are |
RIASEC classifies people and work environments into six types: Realistic (hands-on, technical), Investigative (analytical, scientific), Artistic (creative, expressive), Social (helping, teaching), Enterprising (leading, selling), and Conventional (organizing, systematic). Your three-letter code — derived from your top three interest types — maps directly to occupations in the U.S. Department of Labor’s O*NET database.
The theory, developed by John Holland, holds that job satisfaction is highest when your interest profile matches your work environment. With over 900 occupations coded in O*NET by Holland type, RIASEC gives you the most direct path from “who am I interested in being at work?” to specific career options.
The Big Five — also called OCEAN — measures five broad personality dimensions: Openness to experience (curiosity and creativity), Conscientiousness (organization and reliability), Extraversion (sociability and assertiveness), Agreeableness (cooperation and empathy), and Neuroticism (emotional volatility). Unlike categorical tests, the Big Five places you on a continuous spectrum for each trait.
Developed through decades of factor analysis research, the Big Five is the dominant model in academic personality psychology. It predicts job performance, relationship satisfaction, health outcomes, and longevity better than any other personality framework. High Conscientiousness, for example, is one of the strongest individual predictors of career success across all fields.
RIASEC measures what activities and environments you find engaging — your motivational pull toward certain kinds of work. The Big Five measures stable behavioral tendencies — how you actually act across contexts regardless of interest. A person with high Openness might score Artistic or Investigative on RIASEC, but not necessarily. Interests and traits correlate loosely but are genuinely distinct constructs.
RIASEC gives you a category — a code that places you in a recognizable group. This is intuitive and easy to apply to career matching. The Big Five gives you a score on each of five dimensions, capturing the nuance that most people are not extreme on any trait. You might be moderately extraverted, highly conscientious, and low on neuroticism — a profile that is both unique and meaningful for predicting how you will behave at work.
RIASEC predicts job satisfaction and person-environment fit. Research consistently shows that matching your Holland code to your occupation’s code reduces turnover and increases fulfillment. The Big Five predicts job performance and adaptability. Conscientiousness in particular is a robust predictor of productivity across careers. For a complete career picture, you want both: fit (RIASEC) and performance potential (Big Five).
The Big Five is increasingly used in pre-employment assessments because its trait scores predict performance across roles. RIASEC is used primarily in career counseling, not hiring, because it measures fit rather than performance. If you are preparing for a job assessment, Big Five knowledge is more directly applicable. If you are choosing a career path, RIASEC is more useful.
Yes — and together they tell a much more complete story. RIASEC points you toward the right type of work; the Big Five tells you how you will perform and what challenges to expect in that work. A person with a Social-Enterprising-Artistic (SEA) RIASEC profile who scores high on Extraversion and Agreeableness but low on Conscientiousness knows they are wired for dynamic, people-oriented creative work — but will need to actively build structure into how they operate.
This combination is especially powerful for career planning: RIASEC narrows the field, and the Big Five tells you what to optimize once you are in it.