Gt local government executive accentuate the positive

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Accentuate The Positive Geoff Trickey, managing director at Psychological Consultancy, offers a psychometric analysis of personality in the public sector. In the approach to any general election, media coverage intensifies with commentary from political pundits about what they would do to improve public services. One recurring assertion is that the public sector should learn more from the private sector. To the millions of individuals working in thousands of different public service roles, these pronouncements and counterarguments must feel like the proverbial 'does he take sugar?' moment: others talking over their heads about their jobs. Of course, public scrutiny goes with the terrain and that, it seems to me, is very much the point. The contexts within which the two sectors operate are fundamentally different and any comparison must take this into account. PCL regularly surveys staff personality characteristics across sectors and we have reported on public /private sector differences in several studies. Our Decade of the Dark Side research report looked at the potentially derailing extremes of personality. The kinds of risk most frequently associated with the public sector reflect the prominence of personality characteristics that inhibit a dynamic response; being reserved, cautious, dutiful and anxious to ‘go by the book'. The implication is that the sector is typified by these characteristics, albeit at a more constructive level for the main part. This picture was reinforced by research into the risk profiles of public sector employees, portraying them as systematic, wanting to do things by the book and looking for approval before taking action; all characteristics towards the risk averse end of the spectrum. Our latest research project, Made to Measure, focused on the competencies within the public and private sectors that are most prevalent. The best supported public sector generalisations from this study highlight their team-orientation, systematic approach and commitment. The picture that emerges certainly supports a number of aspects of the public sector stereotype; of being less enterprising, less creative, more security conscious and perhaps more soft-hearted than the private sector. Public sector workers do


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Gt local government executive accentuate the positive by Psychological Consultancy Limited - Issuu