
DISC Personalities
Understand the inner dynamics behind how you act, not labels
11 followers
Understand the inner dynamics behind how you act, not labels
11 followers
DISC Test helps you understand how you think, act, and interact — not by labeling you, but by explaining the psychology behind your behavior. Unlike traditional DISC tests that stop at “D, I, S, C” goes deeper by analysing the gap between your natural tendencies and how you adapt to your environment. This insight helps you: - Understand why certain situations drain or energize you - Recognize internal conflicts that lead to stress or burnout - Improve communication, work style, and relationships





Trailward
I guess this question comes up often, but how does it compare to MBTI? Curious to hear an expert opinion.
@stephanschulz
Great question — we get that comparison a lot.
MBTI focuses on type classification (who you are), while DISC is more about observable behavior (how you act in different contexts).
DISC, as we apply it, is more situational — it looks at how behavior shifts under pressure, expectations, and context. Many users who’ve tried MBTI before tell us the value here is seeing why they act differently at work than they expect to, not just what “type” they are.
Both can be useful — they just answer slightly different questions.
Curious — have you used MBTI more for self-reflection or in a work/team setting?
Trailward
@go_product I’ve always viewed MBTI as a sort of "internal operating system" for personal understanding, but I’ve definitely noticed its limits in a professional setting. I host an MBTI meetup here in Berlin, and while it’s a great tool for self-reflection and connecting with others, I’ve experienced that "situational shift" myself. The idea of DISC measuring that specific behavioral interface under pressure seems like a much more practical approach for team dynamics. Thanks for the breakdown!
@stephanschulz Really appreciate you sharing that perspective — the “internal operating system” analogy is a great way to put it.
What you described around situational shift is exactly the gap we’re trying to surface with DISC, especially in team contexts.
It’d be amazing to see DISC sessions run alongside MBTI meetups someday. If you’re ever interested in exploring that or collaborating in some way, feel free to reach out — we’d love to chat.