A team personality assessment maps how your people naturally prefer to work, so you can balance their strengths and spot the gaps a group keeps overlooking. Instead of guessing why a project stalls, you get a clear picture of the different work styles in the room and how to combine them. Done well, it lifts collaboration, reduces friction and makes performance more predictable.
Last reviewed July 2026.
A team personality assessment looks past surface-level skills at how individuals prefer to interact, make decisions and solve problems. Two people with identical technical skills can approach the same task in completely different ways. One pushes for a bold new direction while another flags the risks in the detail. Neither is wrong. A group needs both, and it needs to know who brings what.
At Compono we frame this through work personality, built on more than a decade of research into how internal team interactions decide whether a group merely functions or genuinely excels.
High-performing teams cover eight distinct work actions, from pioneering new ideas to auditing the finer details. The eight work personality types are Doer, Auditor, Helper, Advisor, Pioneer, Campaigner, Evaluator and Coordinator. Each brings a different strength to how work gets started, checked, driven and finished.
A team does not need eight separate people. It needs those eight ways of working covered. When one is missing, important tasks get consistently overlooked. When one dominates, the team develops a blind spot it cannot see on its own. Mapping the collective picture shows leaders exactly where those gaps sit.
Once you can see the mix, day-to-day management gets easier. You can pair complementary styles on a project so the visionary and the detail-checker balance each other rather than clash. You can resolve conflict earlier by recognising it as a difference in approach, not a personality flaw. And you can adapt how you communicate so the same message lands for very different people.
This is where a structured assessment beats gut feel. Understanding a team's shape helps you build psychological safety and operational efficiency at the same time, because people feel understood and work flows to the right hands.
Keep it simple. Assess individuals, then look at the team picture as a whole. Talk about the results openly so people recognise themselves and each other. Use the gaps to inform who you hire next and how you share work now. The free Work Personality assessment takes about two minutes and gives each person their type as a starting point for that conversation.
Find your work personality in four questions and about two minutes, free.
Take the Free AssessmentIt is a way of mapping how each member of a team naturally prefers to work, then looking at the group as a whole. It reveals the mix of strengths present and the ways of working that might be missing.
The eight types are Doer, Auditor, Helper, Advisor, Pioneer, Campaigner, Evaluator and Coordinator. Each represents a different natural approach to how work gets started, checked, driven and completed.
No. A team needs the eight ways of working covered, not eight separate people. Small teams can cover multiple styles across fewer members, as long as no critical way of working is missing.
The free Work Personality assessment is four questions and takes about two minutes. It gives each person their type as a starting point for a team conversation.