Psychology of
Personality profile, strengths, blind spots, and burnout patterns based on research data and the Social career type.
Chief People Officer professionals typically align with the Social (helping, teaching, empathetic) career type. On the Big Five personality model, they tend to score in the 75th percentile for Extraversion and the 44th percentile for Neuroticism. Common MBTI types include ESFJ, ENFJ, ISFJ, ENFP. Key strengths include empathy and active listening, team building, conflict resolution. Take the Big Five, MBTI, or RIASEC test to see how your personality compares.
Estimated trait distribution for Chief People Officer professionals
outgoing, energetic, talkative
cooperative, empathetic, trusting
curious, creative, open to new ideas
organized, disciplined, detail-oriented
calm, resilient, emotionally stable
Based on RIASEC-Big Five correlations (Larson, Rottinghaus & Borgen, 2002). Individual results vary.
Most overrepresented types among Chief People Officer professionals. Take the MBTI test to find yours.
Compassion fatigue, emotional labor, feeling unable to help everyone
Take the Burnout Risk Assessment to check your current level.
Make it personal
This page shows the general yourself and a fellow Chief People Officer match. Your actual compatibility depends on your unique scores — not just your type label.
See how your personality compares to the typical Chief People Officer profile.
Chief People Officer professionals typically score high on Extraversion (75th percentile) and their primary RIASEC code is Social (helping, teaching, empathetic). Common MBTI types include ESFJ, ENFJ, ISFJ.
Empathy and active listening. Team building. Conflict resolution. Teaching and mentoring.
Difficulty saying no or setting boundaries. May absorb others' stress (compassion fatigue). Can avoid necessary confrontation. May prioritize results over relationships.
Compassion fatigue, emotional labor, feeling unable to help everyone