Your results show you are a problem solving thinker<p>This means you like work where your main focus is on dealing with problems that you need to think about and find solutions for.
You might enjoy being a computer programmer or a mathematician.
I feel like an idiot whenever I take things like these. I never have a straightforward answer for anything. I always think: "I want to like doing [x] but I am bad at it so I guess I should choose like...but what if they mean would I choose doing that over something I am good at? In that case it should be a dislike, or maybe. Shit! I don't know!"<p>or when given this one:<p>>A sick person has some difficulty walking and needs to go up a flight of stairs. You help them do so.<p>"I think that would make me feel good to help someone, so I'll choose like. Although is that what I would want to do for a job? If so then I would definitely dislike that job. I guess I would maybe like to help someone up the stairs."<p>Gahh!
"Your results show you are a practical people person."<p>Fairly correct.<p>"This means you like hands-on work that is focused on dealing with other people and helping them out. On the job, you probably want to combine being social with being productive."<p>I could agree with this. I really enjoy helping new people out with programming problems in the office.<p>"You might like being a occupational therapist or an athletic trainer."<p>This doesn't feel right :(<p>Not really into the medical profession at all. Been a webdev since the late 90's. Learned and re-learned several times over. Never really shined, just got shit done. Lost the love many years ago but still love the tech and problem solving. Been looking for some kind of horizontal career move but am currently stumped.<p>I am not the kind of person that wants a start up but I think it would be great to help someone achieve something important and amazing (i.e. working for Elon Musk is way more attractive to me than being Elon Musk). I'd take a pay cut for that feeling again. To have the sense that my work has meaning.
Scored as an "Artistic Thinker", but there are no artistic endeavors listed! Here's a quote from the synopsis of my test: "You might enjoy coming up with original music lyrics - or with new mathematical theories." However there aren't any musical or mathematical kind of jobs listed - half of them have to do with psychology/psychiatry and another quarter have to deal with tutoring/therapy. About the closest thing to what I actually do for a living, software engineering, is Industrial Engineer - listed at the very bottom. I think you need a little more diversity in the career choices you pull especially for something qualitative like "artistic thinker."
I've been finding these tests are like a lot of "personality" tests where they're highly dependent upon mood and such, except for this it's moreso a function of "what do you like to do these days?" or rather "what would you rather be doing?" For some people this is pretty stable and for others it changes constantly. The ones that try to match your personality to your career may do a tad better but it's still only so accurate I'd presume. I do like how this isn't really a personality test at all though and just asks what you like to do. Most career recommenders are glorified Myers-Brigg topology tests I've found.<p>Got business thinker when I've been mostly a software engineer. What's interesting is that on the suggestions list they have technical and/or likely software centered careers like physicist, VC, quants, and actuary but nobody actually writing software or systems as their primary job. Not a single software developer type career listed but industrial engineer and geneticist are higher recommendations with economist at the top? I dunno if the results are telling me that I probably wouldn't enjoy writing code primarily or if this type of thinker shouldn't be writing code.<p>But really, none of this means you'd be any good at it. Maybe there needs to be more of an assessment of different skills instead of the usual self reporting to contrast with these types of tests.
Hah! I'm a big loser!<p><pre><code> Our in-depth psychological assessment shows that you
might like a career as a cheese taster, scuba diver
or professional TV show watcher.
</code></pre>
To be fair, it does list some alternatives. E.g., I could be a political scientist. But, then, I'd get fired and be downvoted into oblivion.<p>I could be a user experience designer or an online reputation manager [watch it!], but that sounds far more like a supplier than a job description.<p>I suppose I could be an epidemiologist. But I'm lazy, so that would only work for really interesting diseases. Gotta stay motivated, don't you know!<p>I could be an animal scientist or trainer. Maybe that would work if I could be as sensitive as another recently posted author (octopuses). But I seriously doubt it, I being a slacker!<p>I could be a cartoonist, except I can't draw worth shit. I could be a lyricist or a poet or writer. But that takes talent. Which I don't have.<p>I could be stonemason or a plasterer or a stucco mason. But, did I mention, I'm a slacker!<p>Baker. Getting warm. Bread being baked does smell nice. Yeah, that's promising. Except I'm too rich.
> Our in-depth psychological assessment shows that you might like a career as a cheese taster, scuba diver or professional TV show watcher.<p>Nicely done! :-)
Your results show you are a business interactor<p>This means you like interacting with other people, especially when it is in a professional work setting like in a company.<p><i></i><i></i><p>Been a coder, and now run a startup and look to have a BizDev guy join me so that I can focus more on the startup.<p>and yes I do like Biz interactions and talking to folks and poring over data bore me while I like to solve problems.
Well, the two that stuck out to me were "economist" (something I'm interested in but haven't devoted much time to studying), and software developer, which I happily do for a living. Pretty accurate.
"artistic thinker", what is that suppose to even mean?<p>That said, I'll bit, I'd love to know about more of the inner workings of the match. How many possible outcomes are there? How does the scoring working, are they questions weighted evenly? Are the jobs preset for a specific match, or are they dynamically selected based on the questions? How were the jobs profiled to meet the aforementioned criteria? What is psychological basis for the questions and their formations... give me the dets yo.
I majored in CS but was always intersted in psychology. "Your results show you are a focused people person<p>This means you enjoy dealing with other people while also being able to work hard and get things done.
A good career fit likely means a good amount of social interaction that has a goal and purpose, like being a nurse or a genetic counselor.<p>Psychiatrists
Healthcare Social Workers
Registered Nurses
Recreational Therapists
Audiologists"
This is somewhat similar to something I have been working on at, but which is focussed more on finding the right "next move" within the technology industry.<p>Essentially you rank your skills based around enjoyment and experience and it tells you what types of roles might be of interest to you.<p><a href="https://www.msgooroo.com/career/skills-editor" rel="nofollow">https://www.msgooroo.com/career/skills-editor</a>
Practical Thinker --- Engineer or Technologist. That's pretty appropriate. I've been told I would be an engineer since age two or so. For a while, I thought I was going to go into the humanities/arts. I'm now an entrepreneur and (applied) mathematician.
Thinking helper - But I have to say there's not a job there I would enjoy. I think I prefer a more mixing of being a programmer creating stuff that helps people.