How personality types affect career choices

personality type and career choice

  1. Introduction

Personality is a characteristic way of an individual’s thinking, feeling and behaving. Personality involves mood, attitudes, interests and behaviours of the individual.  It includes behavioral characteristics, both inherent and acquired, that distinguish one person from another and that can be observed in people’s relations to the environment and to the social group.

Personality tests are carefully designed tools to systematically elicit information about a person’s interests, motivations, preferences, emotional make-up, work style and style of interacting with people and situations. Personality can be described using a combination of traits and dimensions. For example, people high in integrity may follow the rules and be easy to supervise but they may not be good at providing customer service because they are not outgoing, patient, and friendly.

  1. Overview of the personality tests

Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)

The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator is one of the most popular personality tests in the world. It was developed based on the Carl Jung’s work. The model uses a series of questions to categorise individuals into one of 16 types, these 16 personalities are developed based on 4 distinct dichotomies.

the big five personality type and career choice
Holland RAISEC model

The Holland Occupational Themes is a vocational and career personality theory. It is a theory that classifies individuals into six occupational types based on fit. The six types make up the acronym RIASEC, which is commonly used as a label for the theory. John L. Holland initially developed the theory. 

The typology has had profound impact on the career counseling profession and has been a component of most contemporary tests used in the profession. The RIASEC Markers from the Interest Item Pool were developed for research purposes in psychology and provide a publicly accessible alternative to the commercially implemented tests.

Holland RAISEC personality type and career choice

3. Understanding the differences between the personality tests

Feature / Model

MBTI

Big Five

RIASEC Model

Basic Idea

Categories people into 16 personality types based on 4 dimensions

Measures personality across 5 broad traits (Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness, Neuroticism)

Matches personality types with career environments using 6 categories

Purpose

Helps people in understanding their interests, influences and work style and behaviours

Helps in describing the

Connects personality types with job environments for better career satisfaction

Career Guidance Use

Suggests suitable career paths based on natural preferences (e.g., INTJ may enjoy strategic planning or research roles)

Helps identify work habits, team behaviour, and career traits like reliability, curiosity, or stress tolerance

Directly links personality type to job sectors (e.g., Artistic = design, Conventional = accounting)

How It Affects Career Choice

People tend to pick roles that match their thinking, decision-making, and interaction style

Influences job performance and preference (e.g., high conscientiousness → good for structured jobs)

Encourages choosing careers that align with personal interests and values

Common for Students?

Widely used in career counselling for students

Used in research and personality coaching, increasingly adopted in student career assessments

Often used in schools and career centres for easy career mapping

Strength

Easy to understand, promotes self-awareness, widely available

More scientific and reliable, captures personality depth

Simple match between personality and job type, easy for students to visualise paths

Weakness

Can oversimplify, lacks scientific support

May feel too abstract for direct career advice

Can limit exploration outside suggested types

Example Use Case

A student who is ENFP might be guided toward marketing, counselling, or public relations

A young professional with high openness and low neuroticism may thrive in innovative, high-pressure roles

A student identified as “Investigative” may be advised toward careers in science or tech

Best For

Understanding working styles and team fit

Understanding long-term behaviour and workplace potential

Choosing a career path based on interest areas

 

  1. MBTI personality test and its impact on career choice prospects

 The MBTI is based on the idea that our personality is made up of four dimensions, each has two opposites (dichotomies).

They are:

  • extraverted (E) or introverted (I)
  • sensitive (S) or intuitive (N)
  • thinking (T) or feeling (F)
  •     judgmental (J) or perceptive (P)

The MBTI test requires the individual to answer the questionnaire of about 93 questions to determine which of the two sides of the personality spectrum they lean into.

The test outcome helps in understanding their preferences, strengths, weaknesses and compatibility with others and can influence the career path they can choose moving forward.

Let’s take a look at these aspects.

Extraversion (E) – Introversion (I)
Extraversion is often referred to as the tendency to be sociable and energised by action and interactions with people While Intraversion refers to as the tendency to focus on thought-provoking ideas, deep conversations and fewer people interactions.

Perceiving: Sensing (S) – Intuition (N)
This dichotomy is about how do we perceive and make sense of the world around us. Sensing people would likely prefer concrete facts, established precedents, and specific details. Intuitive people would prefer to explore patterns, relationships, and possibilities through imagination.

Judging: Thinking (T) – Feeling (F)
This part of personality dichotomy is about how people perceive decisions on a day to day basis. Thinking people are more likely to be able to stay consistent, logical and objective during decision-making while feeling people are more likely to consider the emotions and the needs of other people during decision making.

Judging (J) – Perceiving (P)
This dimension of the personality test involves the individual’s preference for judging or perceiving the world around us. A judging individual will likely want things to be settled quickly and will exhibit either thinking or feeling styles in their decision-making, whereas a perceptive individual would likely be more open and flexible to views and less interested in coming up with conclusions.

5. Personality types and their possible career fits

MBTI Type

Key Traits

Career Choices

ISTJ

Organized and practical

Military, business administration, law enforcement

ISFJ

Caring and loyal

Accounting, legal, engineering

INFJ

Idealistic and insightful

Nursing, teaching, counseling

INTJ

Analytical

Healthcare, administration, social work

ISTP

Calm and logical

Sales, emergency services, entrepreneurship

ISFP

Perceptive, artistic, sensitive

Technical fields, mechanics, law enforcement

INFP

Imaginative

Performing arts, sales, hospitality

INTP

Curious and deep thinker

Arts, healthcare, therapy

ESTP

Energetic and bold

Teaching, counseling, leadership

ESFP

Outgoing and expressive

Counseling, creative arts, healthcare

ENFP

Enthusiastic

Creative fields, teaching, marketing

ENTP

Persuasive

Writing, counseling, activism

ESTJ

Structured, leadership-focused and organized

Executive roles, law, consulting

ESFJ

Calm, sympathique and helpful

Sciences, technology, strategy

ENFJ

Charismatic, and motivating

Entrepreneurship, law, media

ENTJ

Visionary

Sciences, research, technology

 

personality type and career choice

6. How to use your Myers-Briggs type to choose a career

When searching for a career, personality type is an important factor to consider. The personality test can help a choose a career path and job prospects that are better aligned with the nature and personality type of the individual. Therefore, here are the various ways to use the Myers-Briggs test results to choose your career:
               1. Study your personality type
               2. Research jobs that fit with your personality type
               3. Find your career passion
               4. Set SMART goals

1. Study your personality type

Once you receive the results of your personality test, take a look at the behaviours that align with your personality type. You may notice that it was either what you expected or contrary to your expectations. When you tie in the results of your personality type to you actions, you can get a feel for what career prospects may suit your nature well.

2. Research jobs that fit with your personality type

In finding out personality type, you may be able to determine the career you would like to work in. The other option is to use the jobs that align with your personality type as a roadmap to reaching your career goals

3. Find your career passion

It takes patience, time and awareness to understand what you’re passionate about. You will have to explore yourself on a day to day basis through many techniques that the researchers have suggested such as journaling, trying new things, exploring new ways of doing things or travelling.

4. Set SMART goals

Goal setting is an essential aspect reaching your desired career. Without a proper goal, it’ll be difficult to find a roadmap to advance your career. However, the SMART (Specific, Measurable, Actionable, Relevant and Time-based) framework will be helpful in clearly setting your objectives, and after that you can determine what line of work you would like to be in.

7. Conclusion

Knowledge of personality types is an important indicator of good career decisions. All personality models such as MBTI, the Big Five, and Holland’s RIASEC, each provide a different perspective to knowing one’s strengths, likes, and working styles. These can help guide students and novice professionals to choose a career consistent with their natural tendencies, emotional styles, and interaction styles. 

The MBTI personality test generally provides job fit recommendations for each type, while the Big Five helps in quantifying long-term fit for the compatible job requirements, and the RIASEC model helps in determining individuals in their interests and career environments.

By exploring personality type, individuals can do the research into compatible career options available for them, helps them understand their nature and interests and work type, and also helps in setting SMART goals for the future. Rather than creating chaos and confusion, personality information offers more open, and more personalized career options and Job opportunities to find work that truly fits who they are.

FAQs

1. How does personality testing aid professional development for you?

Personality tests enables the users to understand their influences, strengths, weakness, work style and influential characteristics. With that knowledge, they will be able to find the career options that best fit their innate nature, interests and personality

2. How does the MBTI test impact career choices?

Myers Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) sorts individuals into 16 types based on four basic dichotomies (e.g., Extraversion/Introversion). Each type implies personality style that lean towards decision making style, sociability, work ethics. This helps them choose the career that fits them best.

3.Big Five personality test and MBTI: how are they different?

In contrast to MBTI, where a person is typed, Big Five quantifies personality traits. It assesses Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness, and Neuroticism—giving a better understanding of behavioral tendencies that contribute to long-term career success.

4.How does the Holland RIASEC model correlate with personality and career?

The RIASEC model classifies individual characteristics and interests and maps them into six different work settings: Realistic, Investigative, Artistic, Social, Enterprising, and Conventional.

5. What do I do after I’ve determined my personality type?

After you have identified your type:
1. Know your personality traits in depth

2. Identify job chances that best fit your special personality traits.

3. Determine your interests through participating in different activities.

4. Set SMART goals

5. Find your career passion

References

1. Myers–Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI): Is it a useful measure of personality? Psychology Research and Behavior Management, 12, 187–198
[https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6671867/]

2. Trait and factor theories: Parsons and Williamson [PowerPoint slides]. Scribed. 

3. Holland’s theory. In Science Direct Topics. 

4. Holland’s theory of career choice and you. Career Key

5. Holland personality types. Career Key. 

6. Intelligence, personality, and interests: Evidence for overlapping traits. Personality and Individual Differences, 23(1), 147–163. 
[https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0191886997000044]

7. Autonomy as a moderator of the relationships between the Big Five personality dimensions and job performance. Personnel Psychology, 56(2), 365–393. 
[https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1744-6570.2003.tb00143.x]

8. MBTI vs Big Five personality traits. 

9. Is Big Five better than MBTI? Research Gate. 
The effects of trait-factor theory based career counselling sessions on the levels of career maturity and indecision of high school students. Research Gate. 

Penned by Abhinav Asthana
Edited by Sneha Seth, Research Analyst
For any feedback mail us at [email protected]

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