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Friday, February 28, 2014

February Blog Post

Hello, everyone. Cheers to yet another weekend. 

What I have for the monthly post is actually what I’m working on for the final presentation and independent component. My father/mentor recently attended a seminar for Unical Aviation Inc. titled ‘Strategic Planning & Objectives Workshop … Building an Even Stronger Team.’ What primarily caught my attention and related to my EQ and topic overall was a part of the seminar known as the Personal Values Inventory®. One critical part in particular was what motivates people.

The Personal Values Inventory® was developed by Elias H. Porter, Ph.D., founder and president of Personal Strengths Publishing, Inc. The PVI® is broken into context this way:

  • Personal — “The PVI offers people the chance to learn about their personal strengths and about how they use them with other people.”
  • Values — “Each of us has values that help us decide how to act. Our values affect what we pay attention to, what we do, and how we feel about things.”
  • Inventory — “The PVI is not a test where your answers are graded as either right or wrong. It is an inventory for taking stock of your motivational values—the basis for how you feel and act in different situations.”


What I’ve started doing thus far was created this template:


It’s based on this placard, which my mentor completed at the seminar:

The only difference with the one I'm designing is the triangle; the whole thing becomes a little more confusing with it present.

The red, green, and blue colors represent three different ways that we can related to other people; there is even a special group that are in-betweens—hubs. Each color and the hubs, have preferences of treatment, motivations, effective/ineffective environments, and even how to be the most effective boss for the person and how to be the most effective employee. (I will get around to explaining the colors and hubs in detail.)

The numerical values on the PVI® placard my mentor derive from the PVI® booklet. Inside are 1-20 items, each with statements such as “I enjoy things most when I am…” and followed by three different responses. Here, the surveyor distributes 10 points between each response. At the end, the numbers are then recorded at the bottom; for example, in one column of responses, it could total to 58—hence, the 58 on my mentor’s placard.


I enjoyed working on this because I now have a good idea of what I want to do for my presentation and what will make it engaging. My mentor mentions that the Personal Values Inventory® is something not many people have the opportunity to take part in, and having other students take part in it could be inspiring. I’d like to think so too.

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