04 Reference Profiles
8m 18s
Everyone who takes the PI Behavioral Assessment automatically falls under one of our 17 reference profiles, which provide a shortcut for understanding behaviors and needs that drive your people. But how are reference profiles determined? What information can you get from knowing them? And why do these two patterns look similar, but have different reference profiles?
When the assessment was first developed, researchers needed a way to begin standardizing interpretations. They catalogued commonly observed results and came up with 47 patterns that covered most outcomes of the assessment. Each one got an ID, and some of the patterns were named, which helped people identify with them.
But the names were only discussed in training. There was no formal or systematic way to assign them to a person’s results. People just did it subjectively.
Because the patterns were so helpful, it became clear, over time, that a more standardized approach was needed. The idea for the 17 reference profiles was born. Some of them share the names or have similar names as old patterns, but they’re not the same! How can that be?
It all begins with the four factors, the foundation of PI’s methodology, and behavioral insights, which should always be reviewed in depth when applying PI and making decisions. You should always refer to a person’s unique behavioral pattern for insight.
Reference profiles provide a general idea of a person without having to know the specific amount of dominance, extraversion, patience, or formality they have.
You’ll use them to help build job targets, review candidates, identify top performers, see how two people work together, and more.
Reference profiles were created by taking the average scores from the pattern IDs that correspond to those named patterns and using them as coordinates for defining the reference profiles. People fall under whichever reference profile is closest.
The shape of the pattern doesn’t matter. What matters is the total distance of each factor from the coordinates of each reference profile.
When you ask someone from New York City where they live, they’ll name a neighborhood. This gives you some basic information about them.
When they invite you to their house, they’ll give you their address. Then, you’ll learn more specifically about them. Reference profiles are general neighborhoods and behavioral patterns are unique addresses.