It is a cliché to ‘Know your strengths’.

We see it emblazoned across LinkedIn platforms, job advertisements, newsletters and other media. Leaders use it. Sports coaches scream, ‘Play to your strengths’, and we all smile and nod as though we know what they are talking about.

Most of us have some general awareness or belief about our strengths. But it’s not usually specific.

We might say, ‘Yes, I’m good at working with people’ or ‘I’m good with spreadsheets’, but is that enough?

What about you? Can you list your top five strengths?

Any informal approach to strengths identification is useful. However, a better way to understand how you and others tick is to understand your natural strengths through a scientifically validated assessment instrument. One that facilitates constructive conversations amongst team members and reduces tensions and conflicts that arise when feedback is delivered poorly.

There are many weakness-focused instruments designed to enhance self-awareness. While they may achieve this, they can have a significant negative impact. No one likes to hear they aren’t good at something. Covert tools such as the 360 can often yield cruel feedback that pulls the rug out from underneath wellmeaning leaders. One executive came to me for coaching when she was devastated by a scathing 360 assessment that completely blindsided her and left her doubting her abilities to the point of paralysis.

Instead, I have long used the Gallup Clifton Strengths 34 profile tool with individuals and teams, and it continues to impress with meaningful insights. Team maps can provide useful organisational data and assist in designing programs and interventions that bring out the best in the workforce.

‘What would happen if we studied what was right with people, versus what’s wrong with people?’

That powerful question was asked by Don Clifton, the American psychologist, educator and researcher. Clifton started his research at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln library. But he was struck that all the psychology books were about what is wrong with people. He couldn’t find a single one about what might be right. From 1949 until he died in 2003, Clifton researched and invented ways to help people maximise their potential. He was determined to help people understand who they are and who they could become. His work ultimately led to the development of the Clifton Strengths Assessment (formerly known as Clifton StrengthsFinder).

This evidence-based assessment tool is underpinned by 60 years of research. Over 31 million people worldwide have completed the assessment, including more than 90% of Fortune 500 companies. I have used this assessment in my work for years. It never fails to impress me and those who utilise it. The tool provides rich understanding of why interpersonal relationships may be tense or unproductive. 

We can also gain valuable organisational insights into strengths when working with teams and across organisations. At one organisation, I mapped the individual and collective strengths profiles of the CEO and executive team. The report showed that more than 75% of the group had a strength that required more 1:1 time and deeper connections. These individuals were geographically spread and remote from one another, and relationships were not as strong as they could have been. Through this and other identifying patterns, they understood their current state culture and designed activities to achieve their desired future state.

In another organisation, we profiled almost 80% of their leadership and identified that the natural strengths of the group signalled a higher risk of overwork and burnout. This group needed support to ensure they took appropriate breaks, and the executive team needed to monitor the levels of discretionary effort they contributed because of their innate strengths.

On a personal level, understanding my Strengths profile helped me understand why I love developing people but need to lock myself away and stay in my head for hours on end. That insight was totally revealing and gave me permission to do what is necessary to play to my strengths. It stopped me from feeling anti-social because I needed those moments of alone time.

“I always felt there was something wrong with me” were the relieved words one executive used after completing the instrument. Understanding the gifts of our strengths, means we recognise that they make us who we are.

These are science-backed answers, not some personality flaw. I’ve seen incredible transformations using this instrument for individuals, functional teams and broader leadership teams.

We all tick differently. We are all unique and beautiful and complex and sometimes annoying. Understanding yourself better allows you to work in ways that energise you and develop patterns and habits that bring out your best. Doing that helps your team do the same.

Clifton Strengths Programs

INCLUSIONS:
– 15 minute discovery call with Alex (on request)
– Strengths Assessment licence and instruction
– 1 x 60 minute personalised debriefing session
– 2 x additional personalised strengths reports
– A5 strengths card
– Individual Development Plan
Tanya Heeney Voogt logo
INCLUSIONS:
– Initial discussion with Team Leader on team context
– Team presentation on Strengths-Based Coaching, research, the program – 90 minutes
– Strengths Assessment licence and instruction
– 1 x 60 minute personalised debriefing session
– 2 x additional personalised strengths .reports
– A5 strengths card
– Individual Development Plan
– Team and individual reports compiled
– Team map reports provided to Team Leader
– Half-day Strengths Mapping Workshop; further individual reflective activities and blind spot action planning

Tanya Heaney-Voogt

Director & Principal Consultant
MBA, ICFACC, MAHRI, Dip Mgt, Dip Coaching, Prosci® Certified Change Practitioner
E: tanya@tanyaheaneyvoogt.com

Recent Blogs

Leaders Are Crying Out For Support

Leaders Are Crying Out For Support Only 48% of managers strongly agreeing that they currently have the skills needed to be exceptional at their jobs (Gallup). The work environment continues to shift and evolve with Leaders assuming more and more responsibility and...

What To Do If An Employee Tells You They’re “Stressed”

What To Do If An Employee Tells You They're "Stressed" I once had a frustrated leader bark at me "How am I supposed to know if my team member really is stressed or not?" It was in the middle of a workshop with 50 other leaders in the room. His frustration was...

New Data Reveals New Insights

Traditionally, data showed that people left leaders not workplaces. New data received this month shows that the most frequent reason for employees to leave their organisation is excessive workload. Sure, there's potentially a correlation if concerns aren't being...

The Real Cost of Interruptions

The Real Cost of Interruptions How long does it take to get back into the ‘zone’ after an interruption? By the “zone” I mean that sense of flow, where you are productive and totally absorbed in the task at hand.  Researchers at the University of California found it...

Navigating the Blind Spots of the ‘Empathy’ Clifton Strengths Talent

Sophie always knew she felt things more deeply than others.In meetings, she could sense tension before anyone spoke a word. When a team member was struggling, she was the first to notice. People gravitated to her when they needed someone to confide in. And as a...

Navigating the Blind Spots of the ‘Responsibility’ Clifton Strength

Victoria was the person everyone relied on at work. If a deadline was in jeopardy, she stepped in. If a team member was struggling, she picked up the slack. She prided herself on being dependable, always delivering on promises, and ensuring everything ran smoothly....

Bringing the Outside In – Using Nature in the Office to Boost Mood

There is no end of evidence that proves nature is good for our mental and physical wellbeing. What we have often felt has now been proven as fact, that sense of soul restoration, of mental clarity we get if we lose ourselves in a forest for a while for example. Or...

The Importance of Post-Incident Support for Minor OVA in the Workplace

Written By: Alexandra Heaney As a Mental Health Nurse who spent many years working in a large metropolitan public mental health facility, I have seen my fair share of OVA. It’s interesting when I reflect on some of the things that occurred in my time there, and I...

Struggling to Activate Your Psychosocial Safety Initiatives? Understand the WHY

I caught up with a legal colleague recently and we spent some time discussing how psychosocial safety initiatives still lack traction in many Australian workplaces. We mused over the fact that workplaces are change saturated, resource lean and struggling to CREATE...

Is Change Resistance Taking Up Space? How I finally embraced AI to create space

It’s 2025 and hasn’t the year has gotten off to a cracking pace? Those I was meeting with in mid-January were talking about the lack of "ease back in" time this year. Of course, in many ways we perpetuate this. It’s helpful to now and again stop and ask:  How might I...