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Open Comments: S3 - Mini Episode: Code Meets Color: Aligning Personalities with Tech Roles with Ash

The Open Group Season 3

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The Color Personality Quiz offers a practical framework for understanding diverse working styles in IT teams, helping reduce friction and improve collaboration among colleagues with different communication preferences and work approaches.

• Based on Don Lowry's 1970s True Colors personality system with four color-coded categories
• Blue personalities are empathetic, relationship-focused and value harmony
• Green personalities are analytical, logical and driven by competence
• Gold personalities are organized, detail-oriented and thrive on structure
• Orange personalities are energetic, spontaneous and seek variety
• Project kickoffs, code reviews and retrospectives reveal how different personality types approach work
• Match tasks to natural strengths: Golds for documentation, Greens for research, Oranges for creativity, Blues for stakeholder communication
• Use color preferences to recognize when conflicts stem from working style differences rather than substantive disagreements
• Leaders can adapt their approach based on team members' color preferences

Take the Color Personality Quiz here and consider starting a conversation with your team about how different working styles impact your collaboration.

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Introduction to Color Personality Quiz

Speaker 1

Hello and welcome back to Open Comments . In this mini episode , we'll be exploring the colour personality quiz . Now , before you dismiss it as another pop psychology trend , please hear me out . In a field driven by logic , process and data , understanding how people think , communicate and collaborate is more critical than ever , especially in IT , where cross-functional teams , tight deadlines and remote communication are the norm . So in this mini episode , we'll look at what the colour personality quiz is , how it maps to workplace behaviour and how IT professionals , developers , engineers , pms and tech leads can apply its insights to improve teamwork , reduce friction and lead more effectively . Let's

Four Color Personalities Explained

Speaker 1

begin , shall we ? The Color Personality Quiz is based on the True Colors personality system developed in the 1970s by Don Lowry . It distills personality traits into four color-coded categories , each representing a distinct set of motivations and behaviours . Here's a quick overview Blue compassionate , empathetic , relationship , focused values , harmony and emotional intelligence .

Speaker 1

Green analytical , logical , independent , driven by competence and understanding how things work . Gold organised , dependable , detail-orientated , motivated by structure , reliability and responsibility . Orange energetic , spontaneous , adaptable , seeks variety , action and opportunities to take initiative . Unlike some rigid typologies , this model is flexible . You might relate to multiple colors , but typically one will resonate most . So why does this matter in IT ? Because understanding your own preferences and those of your colleagues can reduce miscommunication , improve

Real-World IT Scenarios

Speaker 1

project execution and build healthier team dynamics . Let's put this into context with some fictional real-world scenarios .

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Scenario one the project kickoff meeting . You're launching a new software platform . The gold team lead begins by reviewing timelines , milestones and risk management protocols . The orange UX designer suggests exploring new design frameworks on the fly . The green backend developer asks detailed technical questions about the architecture and the blue scrum master brings up team well-being and psychological safety . Different priorities , all valid , but without a shared understanding these stars can create friction . The gold sees the orange as chaotic . The green sees a blue is too emotional . The orange feels stifled by too much structure . Scenario two code review and feedback . A green engineer gives very direct , fact-based feedback on a pull request . The blue developer receiving it feels demoralized . It wasn't just incorrect , it was their work . Meanwhile , the gold tech lead is frustrated that the comments weren't logged in the tracking system .

Speaker 1

Understanding each other's styles helps depersonalize the interaction . Greens aren't being cold , they're being precise . Blues aren't overreacting . They value encouragement . It's not about changing who we are . It's about adjusting our communication to match the context . Scenario 3 . Sprint retrospective . In a team retrospective , a blue facilitator invites open sharing . The orange team member dominates conversation with rapid fire suggestions , the gold quietly takes notes waiting for a clear action plan , and the green resists the emotional tone of the meeting . Knowing these dynamics allows leaders to set norms that make space for each type timed contributions , structured feedback and clear follow-up items .

Speaker 1

Here are a few ways you can apply this model within your team Project planning . Use color preferences to delegate work . For example , golds excel at documentation and deadlines , greens thrive in research-heavy tasks , oranges bring creativity to ideation , blues help with stakeholder communication . Conflict resolution when tension arises , ask is this a clash of personality styles or actual goals ? Often it's the former . As a leadership tool , managers can adapt their leadership style , being more directed with goals , collaborative with blues , flexible with oranges and autonomy focused with greens . Finally , how can you apply this in your own IT team ? Here are a few ways you can apply this model within your

Practical Applications for Tech Teams

Speaker 1

team . The first one is project planning . Use color preferences to delegate work , for example . Golds excel at documentation and deadlines , greens thrive in research-heavy tasks , oranges bring creativity to ideation , blues help stakeholder communication . The second one is conflict resolution . When tension arises , ask is this a clash of personality styles or actual goals ? Often it's a former , and the third one is a leadership tool . Managers can adapt their leadership style , being more directive with goals , collaborative with blues , flexible with oranges and autonomy focused with greens .

Speaker 1

Remember , the goal is not to box people in , but to make space for everyone's strengths and to adjust when necessary . In tech , we spend a lot of time learning how machines work , but the most successful teams also invest in learning how people work . The color personality quiz isn't a silver bullet , but it's a valuable starting point for deeper

Closing Thoughts and Resources

Speaker 1

understanding . Personality quiz isn't a silver bullet , but it's a valuable starting point for deeper understanding , better collaboration and more human-centered IT culture . Thanks for joining me on this mini episode . I'll include the quiz link in the show notes . Please take it if you'd like , reflect on it , maybe even start a conversation within your own team . Until next time , my name is Ash , reminding you the best systems are built by people who understand each other . We hope you enjoyed this mini open comments episode and we look forward to bringing more episodes just like this one into the fold very soon . Thank you , stay safe and happy listening .