Sunday, June 17, 2007

On the Couch

With a spate of corporate scandals, as well as top executives’ being pressured to reduce management turnover, corporate America is rethinking how it approaches hiring, training, and promoting its leaders, beginning with its C.E.O’s. In recent years, a vast industry has sprung up in support of that effort, offering everything from psychological profiles to real-world simulations aimed at weeding out managers who choke under pressure. Though there is no accurate measure of the industry’s size, according to some estimates there are currently as many as 2,500 such organizations of varying degrees of legitimacy, up from just a handful a little more than a decade ago.

Of course, performance, intelligence, and personality profiling isn’t exactly new. Roughly 3,000 years ago, China gave civil service candidates intelligence tests. During World War II, the U.S. Office of Strategic Services, which later morphed into the Central Intelligence Agency, subjected its agents to psychological screening. It wasn’t until the early 1990s, though, that psychologists finally reached a consensus on the traits that constitute personality. They termed them the Big Five: self-esteem, social potency (leadership), charm, integrity, and creativity (imagination).

Read the rest on the appeal of personality testing.

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