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RIASEC Career Model: Holland Codes Explained and How to Find Your Type

JC
JobCannon Team
|April 4, 2026|9 min read

What Is the RIASEC Model?

The RIASEC model — also known as Holland Codes or Holland's Theory of Career Choice — is the most widely used and empirically validated career interest framework in psychology. Developed by psychologist John Holland beginning in the 1950s, it organizes both people's occupational interests and work environments into six types: Realistic, Investigative, Artistic, Social, Enterprising, and Conventional.

Holland's foundational insight was elegantly simple: career satisfaction is highest when your personal interest type matches the interest type of your work environment. When a Social type works in a Social environment, or an Investigative type works in an Investigative environment, they report higher satisfaction, perform better, and stay longer. When there's a mismatch — a Realistic type forced into a Conventional environment, or an Artistic type in an Enterprising one — dissatisfaction, underperformance, and turnover follow predictably. Take the free RIASEC career assessment to discover your Holland Code.

The Six RIASEC Types Explained

R — Realistic: The Doers

Realistic types are practical, mechanical, and physically oriented. They prefer working with tools, machines, plants, animals, and physical materials rather than with people or ideas. They tend to be frank, persistent, and pragmatic, and they value concrete outcomes they can see and touch.

Core traits: hands-on, direct, physically capable, mechanically inclined, nature-loving

Preferred activities: building, repairing, operating machinery, working outdoors, athletic and physical challenges

Career matches: engineering, construction, agriculture, military, transportation, skilled trades, veterinary medicine, athletics, forestry

Work environment preferences: physical workspaces, clear concrete tasks, practical problem-solving, minimal bureaucracy

I — Investigative: The Thinkers

Investigative types are analytical, intellectual, and scientifically oriented. They prefer working with ideas, data, and complex intellectual problems. They are curious, precise, and independently minded, valuing understanding over application and theory over practice.

Core traits: analytical, curious, methodical, independent, intellectually ambitious

Preferred activities: research, experimentation, data analysis, problem-solving, reading, theorizing

Career matches: science and research, medicine, data analysis, software engineering, academia, economics, psychology, technical consulting

Work environment preferences: intellectual freedom, independent work, complex problems, continuous learning requirements

A — Artistic: The Creators

Artistic types are creative, expressive, and original. They prefer working with ideas, art forms, and self-expression over structured systems and routine. They value aesthetic quality, personal authenticity, and the freedom to experiment.

Core traits: imaginative, expressive, unconventional, aesthetically sensitive, independent-minded

Preferred activities: creating art, writing, performing, designing, crafting original work

Career matches: visual arts, music, writing, graphic design, architecture, film, fashion, interior design, photography, creative direction

Work environment preferences: creative autonomy, unstructured time, aesthetic context, minimal routine, original output valued

S — Social: The Helpers

Social types are people-oriented, warm, and service-motivated. They prefer working directly with people — teaching, counseling, informing, and helping. They are empathetic, cooperative, and derive deep satisfaction from making a positive difference in others' lives.

Core traits: empathetic, helpful, patient, cooperative, community-oriented

Preferred activities: teaching, counseling, coaching, community organizing, healthcare, social advocacy

Career matches: education, healthcare, social work, counseling, human resources, nonprofit management, religious ministry, public health

Work environment preferences: human interaction, service mission, collaborative team, visible individual impact

E — Enterprising: The Persuaders

Enterprising types are assertive, ambitious, and persuasion-oriented. They prefer working with people in roles of influence and leadership — selling, managing, negotiating, and leading organizations toward goals. They are confident, energetic, and motivated by status, power, and financial achievement.

Core traits: confident, persuasive, ambitious, leadership-oriented, risk-tolerant

Preferred activities: selling, leading, negotiating, presenting, building businesses, influencing others

Career matches: sales, management, entrepreneurship, law, marketing, real estate, politics, business development, investment

Work environment preferences: competitive, opportunity-rich, visible achievement, autonomy, financial incentive structures

C — Conventional: The Organizers

Conventional types are organized, detail-oriented, and procedure-focused. They prefer working with data and systems in structured environments with clear rules. They are precise, reliable, and value accuracy, order, and institutional stability.

Core traits: organized, precise, systematic, reliable, rule-respecting

Preferred activities: record-keeping, data processing, financial management, compliance review, administrative coordination

Career matches: accounting, financial analysis, administration, compliance, logistics, database management, law (transactional), quality assurance

Work environment preferences: clear procedures, stable hierarchy, accuracy-rewarding, predictable routine

How Holland Codes Work: The Hexagon Model

Holland arranged the six types in a hexagon, with types that are adjacent on the hexagon sharing more characteristics, and types that are opposite sharing the least. This spatial arrangement predicts both internal consistency (adjacent codes are more compatible) and work environment fit:

TypeAdjacent (compatible)Opposite (most different)
Realistic (R)Investigative, ConventionalSocial
Investigative (I)Realistic, ArtisticEnterprising
Artistic (A)Investigative, SocialConventional
Social (S)Artistic, EnterprisingRealistic
Enterprising (E)Social, ConventionalInvestigative
Conventional (C)Enterprising, RealisticArtistic

A person with an RIA code (Realistic-Investigative-Artistic) has three adjacent types — a highly consistent profile. A person with an RSE code has non-adjacent types — a more diverse interest profile that may point toward boundary-spanning roles like medical education (R+S) or design management (A+E).

Most Common Three-Letter Holland Code Profiles

Research on large population samples reveals characteristic three-letter code profiles and their career implications:

  • RIE (Realistic-Investigative-Enterprising) — technical leadership: engineers who become engineering managers, technical founders, applied scientists
  • IAS (Investigative-Artistic-Social) — research and creative helping: academic psychologists, UX researchers, design researchers
  • SAE (Social-Artistic-Enterprising) — creative community leadership: nonprofit founders, educational innovators, creative directors
  • ESC (Enterprising-Social-Conventional) — organized leadership: business managers, HR executives, operations directors
  • CRI (Conventional-Realistic-Investigative) — technical precision: accountants with engineering knowledge, quality engineers, technical auditors

RIASEC vs MBTI vs Big Five: Which to Use?

These three frameworks measure different constructs and are best used together:

  • RIASEC measures occupational interests — what activities and environments you're naturally drawn to and find intrinsically rewarding. It's the best predictor of career direction and initial job satisfaction.
  • MBTI measures cognitive style — how you process information and make decisions. It's the best predictor of how you work, communicate, and relate to colleagues.
  • Big Five measures stable personality traits — enduring behavioral tendencies that predict long-term job performance, stress response, and career trajectory.

A complete career assessment uses all three: RIASEC identifies what you want to do; MBTI identifies how you prefer to work; Big Five identifies what environments you'll sustain performance in. Together they produce far more precise career guidance than any single framework alone.

How Congruence Predicts Career Outcomes

Holland's congruence hypothesis — that person-environment type match predicts satisfaction — has been tested in hundreds of studies since 1959. Meta-analytic findings (Hansen, 1984):

  • Congruence predicts job satisfaction (r ≈ 0.20) across occupational groups
  • Congruence predicts career stability — incongruent workers change jobs and careers more frequently
  • High congruence predicts higher performance ratings in studies controlling for ability
  • The effect is stronger for Investigative and Artistic types than for Realistic and Conventional types, suggesting that I and A environments are harder to substitute

The practical implication: if your Holland Code is SAE and you're working in a CRI environment, your dissatisfaction is not a personality problem or a work ethic problem — it's a structural mismatch between your interest type and your environment type. Identifying this mismatch precisely is the first step toward solving it.

Using Your Holland Code for Career Planning

Once you know your 3-letter Holland Code, the career planning process:

  1. Generate a career list: O*NET's database (the US Department of Labor's occupational database) classifies all 900+ standard occupations by their Holland Code. Your 3-letter code generates a prioritized list of environmentally congruent careers.
  2. Filter by Big Five fit: From the Holland-generated list, eliminate careers that require environmental conditions your Big Five profile won't sustain (e.g., high-pressure, high-ambiguity if you're high-Neuroticism; high social density if you're high-Introversion).
  3. Validate with informational interviews: For the 5–10 careers remaining, conduct 30-minute conversations with people currently in those roles to validate that the actual daily work matches your interest profile.

Take the free RIASEC assessment on JobCannon (approximately 15 minutes) to get your Holland Code with matched career recommendations and an explanation of how your specific code pattern relates to career satisfaction research. Pair it with the Big Five assessment for the complete person-environment fit picture.

Ready to discover your Holland Code?

Take the free test

References

  1. Holland, J.L. (1997). Making Vocational Choices: A Theory of Vocational Personalities and Work Environments
  2. Holland, J.L. (1994). The Self-Directed Search: A Guide to Educational and Vocational Planning
  3. Hansen, J.C. (1984). Vocational Interests: Their Meaning, Measurement, and Counseling Use

Take the Next Step

Put what you've learned into practice with these free assessments: