Hogan Development Survey - SCALES AND INTERPRETATIONS
The Hogan Development Survey (HDS) is comprised of 11 scales measuring behavioral tendencies that impede success. The scales are interpreted in terms of risk-higher scores indicate greater potential for problems on the job. The following are the 11 scales with a brief description of the tendencies associated with higher scores.
- Excitable - moody, easily annoyed, hard to please, and emotionally volatile
- Skeptical - distrustful, cynical, sensitive to criticism, and focused on the negative
- Cautious - unassertive, resistant to change, risk-averse, and slow to make decisions
- Result: resistant to change
- Reserved - aloof, indifferent to the feelings of others, and uncommunicative
- Result: poor communicator
- Leisurely - overtly cooperative, but privately irritable, stubborn, and uncooperative
- Result: stubborn and uncooperative
- Bold - overly self-confident, arrogant, with inflated feelings of self-worth
- Result: unable to admit mistakes
- Mischievous - charming, risk-taking, limit-testing and excitement-seeking
- Result: trouble maintaining commitments
- Colorful - dramatic, attention-seeking, interruptive, and poor listening skills
- Result: preoccupied with being noticed
- Imaginative - creative, but thinking and acting in unusual or eccentric ways
- Result: creative but lacking judgment
- Diligent - perfectionistic, hard to please, and micromanaging
- Dutiful - eager to please and reluctant to act independently or against popular opinion
- Result: pleasant but won't speak up
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