DISC Profile
Gelene Domagsang
Your Signature Theme Report
SURVEY COMPLETION DATE:-
DON CLIFTON
Father of Strengths Psychology and
Inventor of CliftonStrengths
- (Gelene Domagsang)
Copyright © 2000,- Gallup, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Gelene Domagsang
SURVEY COMPLETION DATE:-
Many years of research conducted by The Gallup Organization suggest that the most effective people are
those who understand their strengths and behaviors. These people are best able to develop strategies to
meet and exceed the demands of their daily lives, their careers, and their families.
A review of the knowledge and skills you have acquired can provide a basic sense of your abilities, but an
awareness and understanding of your natural talents will provide true insight into the core reasons behind
your consistent successes.
Your Signature Themes report presents your five most dominant themes of talent, in the rank order
revealed by your responses to StrengthsFinder. Of the 34 themes measured, these are your "top five."
Your Signature Themes are very important in maximizing the talents that lead to your successes. By
focusing on your Signature Themes, separately and in combination, you can identify your talents, build
them into strengths, and enjoy personal and career success through consistent, near-perfect performance.
Achiever
Your Achiever theme helps explain your drive. Achiever describes a constant need for achievement. You
feel as if every day starts at zero. By the end of the day you must achieve something tangible in order to
feel good about yourself. And by “every day” you mean every single day—workdays, weekends, vacations.
No matter how much you may feel you deserve a day of rest, if the day passes without some form of
achievement, no matter how small, you will feel dissatisfied. You have an internal fire burning inside you. It
pushes you to do more, to achieve more. After each accomplishment is reached, the fire dwindles for a
moment, but very soon it rekindles itself, forcing you toward the next accomplishment. Your relentless need
for achievement might not be logical. It might not even be focused. But it will always be with you. As an
Achiever you must learn to live with this whisper of discontent. It does have its benefits. It brings you the
energy you need to work long hours without burning out. It is the jolt you can always count on to get you
started on new tasks, new challenges. It is the power supply that causes you to set the pace and define the
levels of productivity for your work group. It is the theme that keeps you moving.
Discipline
Your world needs to be predictable. It needs to be ordered and planned. So you instinctively impose
- (Gelene Domagsang)
Copyright © 2000,- Gallup, Inc. All rights reserved.
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structure on your world. You set up routines. You focus on timelines and deadlines. You break long-term
projects into a series of specific short-term plans, and you work through each plan diligently. You are not
necessarily neat and clean, but you do need precision. Faced with the inherent messiness of life, you want
to feel in control. The routines, the timelines, the structure, all of these help create this feeling of control.
Lacking this theme of Discipline, others may sometimes resent your need for order, but there need not be
conflict. You must understand that not everyone feels your urge for predictability; they have other ways of
getting things done. Likewise, you can help them understand and even appreciate your need for structure.
Your dislike of surprises, your impatience with errors, your routines, and your detail orientation don’t need
to be misinterpreted as controlling behaviors that box people in. Rather, these behaviors can be
understood as your instinctive method for maintaining your progress and your productivity in the face of
life’s many distractions.
Focus
“Where am I headed?” you ask yourself. You ask this question every day. Guided by this theme of Focus,
you need a clear destination. Lacking one, your life and your work can quickly become frustrating. And so
each year, each month, and even each week you set goals. These goals then serve as your compass,
helping you determine priorities and make the necessary corrections to get back on course. Your Focus is
powerful because it forces you to filter; you instinctively evaluate whether or not a particular action will help
you move toward your goal. Those that don’t are ignored. In the end, then, your Focus forces you to be
efficient. Naturally, the flip side of this is that it causes you to become impatient with delays, obstacles, and
even tangents, no matter how intriguing they appear to be. This makes you an extremely valuable team
member. When others start to wander down other avenues, you bring them back to the main road. Your
Focus reminds everyone that if something is not helping you move toward your destination, then it is not
important. And if it is not important, then it is not worth your time. You keep everyone on point.
Futuristic
“Wouldn’t it be great if . . .” You are the kind of person who loves to peer over the horizon. The future
fascinates you. As if it were projected on the wall, you see in detail what the future might hold, and this
detailed picture keeps pulling you forward, into tomorrow. While the exact content of the picture will depend
on your other strengths and interests—a better product, a better team, a better life, or a better world—it will
always be inspirational to you. You are a dreamer who sees visions of what could be and who cherishes
those visions. When the present proves too frustrating and the people around you too pragmatic, you
conjure up your visions of the future and they energize you. They can energize others, too. In fact, very
often people look to you to describe your visions of the future. They want a picture that can raise their
sights and thereby their spirits. You can paint it for them. Practice. Choose your words carefully. Make the- (Gelene Domagsang)
Copyright © 2000,- Gallup, Inc. All rights reserved.
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picture as vivid as possible. People will want to latch on to the hope you bring.
Maximizer
Excellence, not average, is your measure. Taking something from below average to slightly above average
takes a great deal of effort and in your opinion is not very rewarding. Transforming something strong into
something superb takes just as much effort but is much more thrilling. Strengths, whether yours or
someone else’s, fascinate you. Like a diver after pearls, you search them out, watching for the telltale signs
of a strength. A glimpse of untutored excellence, rapid learning, a skill mastered without recourse to
steps—all these are clues that a strength may be in play. And having found a strength, you feel compelled
to nurture it, refine it, and stretch it toward excellence. You polish the pearl until it shines. This natural
sorting of strengths means that others see you as discriminating. You choose to spend time with people
who appreciate your particular strengths. Likewise, you are attracted to others who seem to have found
and cultivated their own strengths. You tend to avoid those who want to fix you and make you well
rounded. You don’t want to spend your life bemoaning what you lack. Rather, you want to capitalize on the
gifts with which you are blessed. It’s more fun. It’s more productive. And, counterintuitively, it is more
demanding.
- (Gelene Domagsang)
Copyright © 2000,- Gallup, Inc. All rights reserved.
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