UNDERSTANDING YOUR
DESIGN TYPE
INTRINSIC MOTIVATIONAL DESIGN
UNDERSTANDING YOUR INTRINSIC MOTIVATIONAL DESIGN
EVERYONE IS DIFFERENT.
KNOWING YOUR DIFFERENCE CHANGES EVERYTHING.
The connection between who you are and what you can do is where our focus is.
Our thinking is centered on the intersection of human giftedness and human nature. Our objective is to empower people to live out their highest purpose. We want everyone to experience a life that is both meaningful and fulfilling. While “meaningful” and “fulfilled” may look different for each person, what unites us is the deep sense of joy and satisfaction that comes when we are free to be ourselves — when we are able to realize the deeper aspects of our design.
Work better.
Live better.
Relate better.
Grow better.
Rest better.
Everything is better when you understand yourself from the inside out!
WE START WITH YOUR INTRINSIC MOTIVATIONAL DRIVE.
In our quest to help you discover and develop your best self, we begin with your intrinsic motivational drive. This is the foundation of our approach for several important reasons. By beginning here, we create a solid foundation for your journey toward self-discovery, growth, and transformation. When you understand your intrinsic motivational drive, you gain insight into what truly matters to you—and the confidence to pursue it with purpose and joy:
Independent of External Influence
Unlike traits or behaviors shaped by culture, relationships, or circumstances, your intrinsic motivational drive is inherent. It reflects the essence of who you are—free from external pressures. This purity makes it a solid foundation for self-awareness.
Your Original Design:
This drive is part of who you were from the moment you were born. It wasn’t imposed by societal norms, cultural expectations, or familial pressures—it’s uniquely yours, untouched by external influences. This makes it a pure and unchanging aspect of your identity.
Deep insights about others.
Recognizing your own drives helps you understand others' motivations, fostering empathy and better communication. This alignment strengthens relationships through mutual respect and deeper connection.
Core of Your Identity:
Your intrinsic motivational drive defines the core of your identity. It shapes your personality, temperament, and how you think, feel, and act. Recognizing this core is key to developing an authentic and confident sense of self.
Tied to Your Potential:
Your intrinsic motivational drive is intimately connected to your innate strengths, tendencies, and motivations. It reveals your natural capacities and what energizes and fulfills you, offering a roadmap to realizing your potential.
A Baseline for Understanding:
Starting with your intrinsic motivational drive provides a clear baseline for exploring who you are. It allows us to guide you in embracing the aspects of yourself that will lead to authentic happiness and fulfillment. By aligning your life with your true nature, you can thrive in ways that resonate deeply with your core.
Understanding your intrinsic motivational design provides valuable insights that help you know yourself from the inside out.
You'll discover the reasons behind your actions and your feelings about the world around you. We start here because this is an innate aspect of who you are—something you were born with, not taught or given by anyone else. It is the core of your identity and a great starting point for discovering your true self.
WHAT IS INTRINSIC MOTIVATIONAL DESIGN?
Intrinsic Motivational Design is the unique way a person is naturally built to be motivated from the inside out. It refers to the innate factors that drive behavior and action, originating from within and shaped by one’s internal makeup. This design is the pattern of internal forces that shape how someone thinks, feels, and chooses to act — not because of outside rewards or pressure, but because of what deeply matters to them.
It forms a person’s natural way of engaging with the world, influencing the activities they enjoy, the goals they pursue, and the challenges they embrace. It also shapes their strengths, their approach to problem-solving, and the ways they find satisfaction and meaning in life.
Everyone has an intrinsic design that begins forming from birth and develops over time, becoming more noticeable through experiences and choices. By understanding their own design, a person gains insight into why they do what they do — empowering them to make better decisions, build healthier relationships, and live with greater purpose.
In short, Intrinsic Motivational Design is:
Internal (it comes from within),
Unique (each person’s design is different),
Lasting (it stays with you through life),
And purposeful (it’s meant to guide you toward meaningful action and fulfillment).
IT AFFECTS EVERY AREA OF YOUR LIFE.
Intrinsic motivational design sets your unique perspective, innate value system, way of relating to the world, and way of engaging with it. It shapes how you measure what is true and right for you. The drives of your design create an inner focus that steers you toward certain outcomes. Understanding these drives provides insights into why you do what you do and what you aim to accomplish. This understanding enables you to align your actions and choices with what optimizes your abilities and desires.
Knowing and understanding your design will exponentially increase your effectiveness in every area of your life.
Deep insights about why you do what you do
Knowing why you do what you do gives you the advantage of making decisions that yield the results you desire to see. You will be able to know and understand your processes for navigating through life and overcoming obstacles. This will result in an expertise of your personal processes and motivations.
Understand your unique way of seeing life
Understanding your unique way of seeing life allows you to understand your unique perspective and the ideas that govern your perspective and motivations. This will allow you to relate and interact with the world around you so that you can embrace your unique perspective and the results it produces. It will also enable you to see and understand other’s unique perspectives and what they produce.
Develop your personal skills, abilities, and talents
Knowing your design allows you to develop your specific skills, abilities, and talents. These specific skills, abilities, and talents will allow you to reach your goals and aspirations through a lifestyle of perfecting and refining them. You will know exactly what needs to be done to yield specific results in your daily life.
Increase Self Confidence
Knowing your unique motivational design will increase your self-confidence exponentially. It will make you more aware of your unique abilities and what makes you special. You will fall in love with who you are as you learn and embrace your design. This confidence will allow you to venture out and do more of the things that fulfill you.
Understand how you relate to others
Knowing how you relate to others allows you to understand what you give to them and what you take from them. Understanding this will help you rightly relate to those around you. It also gives you the opportunity to make key connections based on the unique relationships you build with those around you.
Discover how you change the world
Everyone has a unique set of contributions they can make toward the world being a better place. This is due in part to our different makeups. We see different problems that need to be solved because we have different abilities to address those problems. Growing our awareness of those abilities will open the door to more opportunities to make the world better.
9 KEY AREAS COVERED IN YOUR PROFILE
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Your design shapes your sense of self — what feels natural, meaningful, and true to who you are. Your strongest motivational drive becomes a lens through which you understand yourself.
It influences your values, emotional patterns, and sense of “home” within yourself.
When you're aligned with your design, you feel centered, confident, and authentic.
When you ignore or suppress your design, you may feel confused, lost, or like you’re living someone else’s life.
Your design doesn’t tell you who to become — it reminds you who you’ve always been.
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Each motivational drive brings a different way of seeing:
Awareness sees with insight.
Discovery sees with curiosity.
Progress sees with direction.
Support sees with sensitivity.
And so on.
Your design filters how you interpret people, problems, and possibilities. That perspective:
Shapes how you make decisions.
Determines what grabs your attention.
Affects how you respond to situations.
Two people can see the same situation and feel totally different — because their motivational designs highlight different truths.
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Motivational design clarifies your “why.”
Your design reveals:
The kinds of impact you’re wired to make.
The needs in the world you naturally want to meet.
The direction your passion tends to point.
When you align your life purpose with your design, you feel more fulfilled, energized, and resilient — even when the work is hard.
Purpose isn’t just about what you do — it’s about why it matters to you.
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Each drive gives you principle strengths — the natural abilities that come easiest to you and produce the greatest value.
These strengths can look like:
The way you solve problems.
How you build or lead.
How you support, understand, or create.
When you develop these strengths, you not only grow personally, but you become a source of life and goodness to others.
Your strengths are not just for you — they’re your gift to the world.
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Every strength has a shadow — and every motivational drive has a principle fault that emerges when you live selfishly or reactively.
Your pitfalls often show up when:
You’re trying to control outcomes.
You’re acting out of fear or pride.
You’re disconnected from love, purpose, or rest.
If these patterns continue, they can form a stronghold — a repeated, self-sabotaging habit that holds you back from the fullness of who you are.
The pitfall is not your identity — it’s just what happens when you misuse your strength.
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Your motivational design also affects how you rest and reset:
Some designs recharge through solitude or reflection.
Others feel rested by accomplishment or connection.
Rest is not just about physical stillness — it’s about returning to your natural rhythm.
If you’re trying to rest in a way that doesn’t fit your design, you might feel more frustrated or drained afterward.
True rest reconnects you with your design, not just your comfort.
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Design impacts how you work:
What roles you naturally thrive in.
How you solve problems.
What kinds of environments and expectations energize (or drain) you.
Working with your design leads to:
Better focus
More flow
Sustainable success
Working against your design leads to:
Stress, burnout, and misalignment
You don’t just need the right job — you need the right fit for your design.
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Design shapes how you relate:
What kind of support you offer
How you express love or care
What you need in return
Conflict often happens when people assume others are motivated the same way they are. But understanding your design — and others’ — helps you:
Communicate better
Appreciate different strengths
Reduce judgment and comparison
Build deeper trust
Love gets stronger when we understand each other’s design.
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Ultimately, your motivational design influences your whole lifestyle:
What kind of rhythm and pace works for you
How you find beauty and fulfillment
What keeps you aligned with love, not fear
The more you live in tune with your design, the more joyful, focused, and generous your life becomes.
Your design is the canvas. Your choices are the brush.
YOUR DESIGN IS MADE UP OF SEVEN DRIVES
At the heart of Intrinsic Motivational Design are seven core motivational drives. These drives are not just personality traits or passing interests — they are deep, built-in forces that shape the way a person lives, grows, and contributes to the world.
Each motivational drive reflects three essential aspects of being human:
Human Needs – what we are naturally drawn to and what we must experience in order to feel alive, purposeful, and whole.
Human Abilities – what we are naturally good at doing and how we’re equipped to make a difference.
Human Giftedness – what we are designed to give to the world — the way we add value, create beauty, solve problems, or bring healing.
These drives influence how we see the world, how we relate to others, and how we find meaning in our choices and efforts. While every person has all seven of these drives to some degree, each person has a unique blend, with one or two that stand out as their strongest — shaping their core motivation and approach to life.
Here’s how they work:
When we operate from our strongest motivational drives, we feel more alive, focused, and effective. Life “clicks” into place, and we tend to bring out the best in ourselves and others.
Each drive offers a unique way of contributing, a different kind of energy, insight, and ability that enriches relationships, workplaces, and communities.
These drives also reveal what we need to grow, what challenges we are most likely to face, and what conditions help us thrive.
Together, the motivational drives form a complete map of our inner design — a personal blueprint that guides how we engage with the world from the inside out.
A CLOSER LOOK AT THOSE DRIVES
Each of these drives represents a core part of who we are and how we’re designed to live, grow, and contribute. Think of them as seven different “inner engines” — each built to power a unique kind of work and bring a specific kind of value to the world.
Motivational Drives
— we are made to live fully, act meaningfully, and give generously.
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Human Needs – what we are naturally drawn to and what we must experience in order to feel alive, purposeful, and whole.
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Human Abilities – what we are naturally good at doing and how we’re equipped to make a difference.
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Human Giftedness – what we are designed to give to the world — the way we add value, create beauty, solve problems, or bring healing.
Awareness
Awareness brings light — it helps people see things as they really are.
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Human Need: To understand what’s really going on — within ourselves, others, and the world.
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Human Ability: To observe, analyze, and see beneath the surface.
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Human Giftedness: The ability to reveal truth and insight — helping others understand motives, situations, and patterns clearly.
Support
Support is the foundation — it holds things up so they don’t fall apart.
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Human Need: To be needed, dependable, and part of something that continues and thrives.
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Human Ability: To stabilize, care for, and keep things functioning.
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Human Giftedness: The strength to uphold others and systems through steady, consistent effort.
Discovery
Discovery is the compass — it guides us to what hasn’t been found yet.
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Human Need: To explore, ask questions, and uncover how things work.
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Human Ability: To investigate, learn, and create new ways of thinking.
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Human Giftedness: The ability to pioneer new ideas and open doors to innovation.
Progress
Progress is the engine — it drives forward movement, momentum and growth.
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Human Need: To grow, improve, and move forward toward a goal.
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Human Ability: To take action, energize others, and make things happen.
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Human Giftedness: The drive to achieve, lead, and help people and projects advance.
Resource
Resource is the storehouse — it keeps everything supplied and prepared.
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Human Need: To feel secure and equipped to handle present and future needs.
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Human Ability: To manage, protect, and wisely use what has value.
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Human Giftedness: The insight to gather and supply what’s needed — whether it’s time, tools, money, or opportunities.
Order
Order is the blueprint — it gives shape, direction, and unity to what we build.
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Human Need: To bring clarity, structure, and connection to chaos.
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Human Ability: To arrange, plan, and bring people and ideas together effectively.
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Human Giftedness: The vision to build systems, create harmony, and unify people and parts into a working whole.
Fulfillment
Fulfillment is the spark — it lights up the soul and reminds us life is meant to be enjoyed.
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Human Need: To live in joy, freedom, and lasting meaning.
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Human Ability: To inspire, uplift, and bring beauty and life to others.
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Human Giftedness: The heart to create happiness, peace, and deep satisfaction in the world.
A Simple Metaphor: A Machine of Purpose
Imagine your life as a beautiful machine built for purpose.
Each motivational drive is like a gear inside the machine. You have all seven gears, but one or two of them are larger and stronger — these are your primary drives. They power most of your decisions, passions, and efforts.
When all your gears are running in balance and fueled by love, your life runs smoothly, you feel more alive, and you make the biggest impact.
MEET THE 7 DESIGNTYPES.
Each person’s intrinsic motivational design is built around a core motivational drive, which gives rise to a unique design type — shaping how they think, work, relate, and live.
Below are the seven design types, each with its corresponding drive and distinctive way of contributing to the world.
The Motivational Design
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Motivational Design is the internal framework that shapes how a person is driven to act, respond, and contribute to the world. It is the unique combination of intrinsic motivations that guide our desires, choices, and sense of purpose.
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The Motivational Design is the blueprint of a person’s inner drive — the way they are naturally inclined to think, feel, and act in pursuit of meaningful outcomes. It’s not about personality traits alone, but about the deep, enduring motivations that influence what fulfills a person, what frustrates them, and how they make sense of their role in the world.
The Enterprising Design
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Definition: A design fueled by momentum, achievement, and the pursuit of meaningful goals.
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The Enterprising Design is energized, goal-oriented, and action-focused. People with this design are naturally motivated to move things forward, whether in their own life or in helping others reach their potential. They are often seen as leaders, motivators, or problem-solvers who thrive on improvement, results, and progress. Their gift is helping others grow and accomplish what matters.
The Intuitive Design
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Definition: A design focused on understanding what is truly present, perceiving truth, and bringing clarity to people and situations.
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The Intuitive Design is thoughtful, observant, and deeply insightful. People with this design are driven to make sense of the world — to uncover hidden motives, patterns, or realities that others might overlook. They are truth-seekers and meaning-makers, drawn to what’s real, even when it’s uncomfortable. Their gift is helping others see clearly — both externally and internally — so change and growth can happen.
The Economical Design
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Definition: A design built around managing and preserving what has value in order to meet present needs and prepare for the future.
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The Economical Design is practical, thoughtful, and intentional. People with this design have a natural ability to assess value — time, money, energy, or opportunities — and make wise decisions with them. They are planners, protectors, and providers, often the ones who ensure that nothing is wasted and everything is used wisely. Their gift is stewardship — turning resources into sustainability.
The Industrious Design
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Definition: A design committed and skilled at providing service, strength, and sustainability that helps others and systems remain functional and healthy. -
The Industrious Design is steady, dependable, and deeply supportive. People with this design are the ones who hold things together — whether it’s a team, a household, or a mission. They notice practical needs and meet them with skill, patience, and diligence. Their fulfillment comes from being competent, helpful, and reliable. They want to be the people that others can always count on to keep things running and make sure its done.
The Synergistic Design
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Definition: A design that brings structure, connection, and harmony by arranging people and systems for greater purpose and efficiency.
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The Synergistic Design is organized, visionary, and collaborative. People with this design are natural system-builders — they see how parts fit together and work best when there's unity and alignment. They are often the ones who bring teams together, clarify purpose, and create order from chaos. Their gift is building systems where people and processes thrive in harmony.
The Conceptual Design
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Definition: A design that thrives on curiosity, learning, and uncovering how things work through exploration, science and understanding.
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The Conceptual Design is intellectually curious, thoughtful, and innovative. People with this design are natural learners and idea-generators. They love diving deep into how things work and enjoy solving problems through research, theory, and experimentation. Their gift is to uncover new insights, build new concepts, and as well as work toward understanding the underlying reasons for how the world works.
The Experiential Design
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Definition: A design that seeks joy, creativity, and meaningful experience for themselves and those around them.
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The Experiential Design is joyful, expressive, and emotionally aware. People with this design value beauty, connection, and experiences that feel rich and meaningful. They often light up rooms with their presence and help others reconnect with the joy of living. Their gift is bringing life, peace, and authenticity to relationships and environments through creativity, fun, and emotional depth.
KEY COMPONENTS OF INTRINSIC MOTIVATIONAL DRIVES
Innate Origin
These drives are part of a person’s intrinsic design, meaning they are hardwired into their nature from birth. They are not acquired or learned but form the foundation of an individual’s unique personality and preferences.
Fulfillment
Acting on intrinsic motivational drives leads to a sense of authenticity, joy, and fulfillment. People feel most “alive” and connected to themselves when pursuing goals or engaging in activities that resonate with these drives.
Autonomous
Intrinsic motivational drives operate independently of external rewards or punishments. Unlike extrinsic motivation (e.g., money, praise, or recognition), intrinsic drives push individuals toward actions that are inherently satisfying and meaningful.
Diversity
Each person has a unique set of intrinsic motivational drives that reflect their individual design and orientation to the world. These drives explain why one person thrives in creative endeavors, while another is energized by analytical problem-solving or collaborative teamwork.
Engagement
Because these drives are aligned with an individual’s core identity, they generate long-term energy and persistence. Activities that align with intrinsic drives are more likely to hold a person’s attention, fuel their passion, and sustain their effort over time.
Compass
Intrinsic drives serve as an internal compass, helping individuals prioritize their actions and align their choices with what feels meaningful and authentic.
YOUR MOTIVATIONAL DESIGN DRIVES DECISIONS & BEHAVIOR
Choice of Activities:
People naturally gravitate toward activities and opportunities that align with their intrinsic drives. For instance, a person with a strong exploration drive may seek out travel or new learning experiences, while someone with a creation drive may focus on artistic or entrepreneurial projects.
Persistence and Resilience:
When intrinsic drives are engaged, individuals are more likely to persevere through challenges and setbacks because they find the process itself rewarding.
Emotional Fulfillment:
Engaging in activities aligned with intrinsic drives produces feelings of satisfaction, joy, and authenticity. This fulfillment acts as its own reward, reinforcing continued engagement.
Shaping Goals and Aspirations:
Intrinsic motivational drives heavily influence long-term goals, helping individuals define what success and fulfillment look like for them.
Why This Matters
These seven factors reveal the dynamics of your intrinsic design and how it shapes your journey through life. By understanding your primary drive and its influence on your strengths, desires, and interactions, you gain the clarity to align your life with your core identity. This alignment leads to greater fulfillment, effectiveness, and the ability to contribute meaningfully to the world.
Applications of Intrinsic Motivational Drives
Career Development: Aligning work roles with intrinsic drives ensures greater job satisfaction and productivity.
Education: Tailoring learning approaches to align with intrinsic drives increases engagement and retention.
Leadership: Understanding intrinsic drives fosters more authentic and inspiring leadership.
Relationships: Recognizing and honoring others’ drives strengthens communication and connection.
Personal Growth: Leveraging intrinsic drives accelerates self-improvement and fulfillment.
Summary
Intrinsic motivational drives are the internal forces that propel individuals toward behaviors and goals that resonate deeply with their unique design. Rooted in authenticity, these drives are critical for aligning life choices with core values, sustaining engagement, and achieving long-term fulfillment. Understanding and leveraging your intrinsic drives enables you to live purposefully, thrive in various areas of life, and contribute meaningfully to the world around you.
COACH NOTES
When you know your intrinsic motivational drive, you stop living by trial and error and start living with precision. Instead of trying to be everything, you begin focusing on becoming more of who you already are, on purpose.
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Why it matters:
Self-awareness is the cornerstone of wise decision-making. When you understand your motivational design, you get a clearer sense of what actually works for you—how you process information, approach conflict, pursue goals, and recharge.Stat: Korn Ferry found that individuals with high self-awareness are 36% more likely to demonstrate superior performance, particularly in leadership roles.
Example:
A person with a Discovery drive needs intellectual freedom and exploratory space. Without understanding that, they may choose jobs that offer stability but no room for innovation. Over time, this leads to internal boredom, relational distance, and even burnout—because they’re not feeding what energizes them.Outcome:
With clear design awareness, you begin choosing roles, rhythms, and relationships that fit—leading to peace, alignment, and momentum. -
Why it matters:
Motivational misalignment is one of the biggest causes of disengagement. When you know what drives you, you intentionally pursue what energizes you—and stop pouring yourself into draining or fruitless efforts.Stat: Gallup research shows people who use their top strengths daily are 6x more engaged and 3x more likely to say they have an excellent quality of life.
Example:
Someone with a Progress drive thrives when there’s movement, goals, and measurable success. They come alive in roles where they can push forward, build momentum, and celebrate results. Place them in a maintenance or slow-moving environment, and they’ll feel unmotivated or even trapped.Outcome:
Understanding your drive lets you curate your environment to match your internal rhythm—fueling your energy instead of constantly draining it. -
Why it matters:
Your motivational drive shapes how you express love, receive support, and process conflict. When you understand your drive—and the drives of others—you dramatically reduce misunderstanding and increase connection.Stat: A Harvard study showed emotionally self-aware people are far more likely to build strong, lasting relationships.
Example:
Someone with a Support drive may not speak up when overwhelmed, hoping others notice their quiet faithfulness. If unrecognized, they may feel unappreciated or unseen. In contrast, someone with a Fulfillment drive thrives in expressive, emotionally rich interactions—and may feel distant from those who seem too pragmatic or detached.Outcome:
Self-awareness turns into relational fluency—you become better at articulating your needs and honoring the needs of others without judgment. -
Why it matters:
Your drive reveals how you naturally create value. When your work aligns with that value creation, it feels both effective and fulfilling. Misalignment, on the other hand, leads to frustration—even if you’re succeeding externally.Example:
A person with an Order drive brings clarity, collaboration, and systems thinking. They flourish when they can bring structure and alignment to chaos. Put them in a vague or unstructured job with no clear vision, and they’ll feel overwhelmed or underutilized.Outcome:
Clarity about your motivational design helps you position yourself where your strengths shine—so your work becomes sustainable, not sacrificial. -
Why it matters:
Most people try to grow by focusing on what's wrong with them. But real transformation comes from building on what's right. Your motivational design offers a foundation for personal development that feels natural, not forced.Stat: The VIA Institute found that people who consistently use their core strengths experience higher life satisfaction and lower stress.
Example:
An Awareness person needs time for reflection, emotional clarity, and understanding motives. If they’re forced into reactive action or superficial interactions, they’ll retreat or burn out. Giving them space to reflect isn’t indulgent—it’s essential for their growth.Outcome:
Growth stops being a grind. It becomes a process of returning to your design, refining your strengths, and moving forward with authenticity.
5 Additional Transformational Benefits of Understanding Your Motivational Design
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Why it matters:
Most people define themselves by preferences (“I like order,” “I love new ideas”) or traits (“I’m quiet,” “I’m outgoing”). But these are surface expressions.
Your design reveals the deep structure behind your personality—why you think, feel, and engage with the world the way you do.Each drive forms a type of design:
Awareness → Intuitive Design: Reflective, perceptive, and emotionally deep
Support → Industrious Design: Steady, loyal, and dependable
Discovery → Conceptual Design: Inquisitive, analytical, and mentally driven
Progress → Enterprising Design: Forward-moving, competitive, and visionary
Resource → Economical Design: Responsible, practical, and security-focused
Order → Synergistic Design: Strategic, systems-minded, and collaborative
Fulfillment → Experiential Design: Expressive, joyful, and relational
Your design helps explain how your primary drive uses the others, shaping your unique outlook and behavioral patterns.
Outcome:
You move from vague self-understanding to precise identity clarity. You can finally articulate, with depth, how you're wired—and why it matters. -
Why it matters:
Design isn’t just an internal experience—it’s an active force shaping how you engage with everything: work, family, leadership, rest, relationships, creativity, and growth.
Understanding your design gives you a predictive framework for how you operate when healthy—and what happens when you’re out of alignment.Example:
An Economical Design (Resource-driven) doesn’t just like to save money—they instinctively manage and safeguard value in all areas. That includes time, relationships, energy, and trust. When overwhelmed, they may shut down, over-control, or avoid risk.An Experiential Design (Fulfillment-driven) naturally pursues joy and creativity—but needs freedom and emotional connection to stay alive inside. If life becomes rigid or task-driven, they check out emotionally or chase distraction.
Outcome:
You begin to see your life patterns before they happen. You gain power to anticipate your needs, your reactions, and your best strategies for health and engagement. -
Why it matters:
The design is formed by the dominant influence of your primary drive, but it doesn’t cancel out the other six—it channels and shapes how you use them.For example:
Someone with an Enterprising Design (Progress) will use Awareness to assess threats or opportunities for growth.
Someone with an Intuitive Design (Awareness) will use Progress to evaluate what needs to change emotionally or relationally—not just logistically.
A Conceptual Design (Discovery) may value structure—but only if it enhances mental clarity or exploration.
This means two people can score high in the same drives but use them in totally different ways—because their design directs their approach.
Outcome:
You stop misreading your strengths. You begin to understand not just what you use—but how and why you use it the way you do. -
Why it matters:
Every design has a principle strength (its gift to the world), a principle fault (how it behaves when selfish), an element(how it contributes in love), and a stronghold (what happens when it stays selfish).Understanding your design helps you:
Recognize how your strengths can become liabilities
Spot your unique fault patterns before they sabotage your goals
Return to your element—the state where you’re giving from love, not fear
Develop habits, boundaries, and rhythms that guard your design’s energy and impact
Example:
An Industrious Design (Support) brings reliability and strength to others—but can slip into resentment, over-responsibility, or enabling if not honored or balanced.
A Synergistic Design (Order) creates systems and unity—but may drift into control, perfectionism, or people-pleasing under stress.Outcome:
You stop repeating the same cycles of burnout or frustration—and start living with emotional agility and mature leadership.5. You Learn How to Integrate, Harmonize, and Lead From Your Whole Self
Why it matters:
Most people live fragmented—bouncing between their preferences, feelings, and fears.
Your motivational design gives you a center—a cohesive, integrated way to lead yourself and others.You begin to:
Harmonize all seven drives under the leadership of your design
Build life rhythms that energize, not exhaust
Identify where you're misaligned and restore your direction
Design your relationships, work, and rest with long-term sustainability in mind
Example:
An Enterprising Design learns to slow down when their internal pace becomes destructive.
A Conceptual Design builds tangible routines to ground their thinking and create real-world value.
An Experiential Design sets emotional boundaries that protect their joy and creativity from overuse.Outcome:
You don’t just live more successfully—you live more whole.
You become the kind of person who leads with clarity, contributes with authenticity, and thrives with intention.
Impact on your work, life and relationships
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Work becomes transformative when it honors your motivational makeup—not when it just pays the bills or checks boxes.
Choose projects aligned with your drive
If you’re driven by Discovery, look for work that lets you research, test, and innovate. If you’re Progress, you need projects with clear milestones and momentum. Stop choosing roles just because you can do them—choose them because they feed you.Communicate how you work best to supervisors or teammates
Let people know how you show up best:“I do my best work when I have time to reflect.” (Awareness)
“I thrive when we’re working toward a clear goal.” (Progress)
“I need space to create and connect emotionally.” (Fulfillment)
Don’t wait to be understood—lead with understanding.Make decisions that align with your drive’s long-term economy
Every motivational drive has an internal economy—resources it needs to function well. Progress needs movement. Resource needs security. Order needs structure. Don’t just ask “Does this job pay well?”—ask “Does this role feed what keeps me alive inside?”
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When you understand your motivational drive, you begin to own your emotional blueprint—which improves everything from boundaries to intimacy.
Explain your emotional wiring and why it matters
Start saying things like:“I’m wired for stability and follow-through, so unpredictability can be draining.” (Support)
“I tend to see things others don’t, so I process deeply before I act.” (Awareness)
This opens the door for empathy, not misunderstanding.Set boundaries that protect your design
Not every conflict is about bad intent—it’s often about poor fit. You’re not being dramatic for needing structure, space, solitude, or stimulation. Honor your design without apology—and teach others how to honor it too.Help others discover and honor their own drives
Turn your curiosity outward. Start noticing patterns in others. Ask, “What kind of environments make you come alive?” or “What do you need more of to thrive right now?”
The best relationships happen when mutual understanding replaces silent expectations.
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Knowing your drive empowers you to craft a lifestyle that supports your strength and sustains your energy—not just organizes your time.
Create daily habits that support your design
Your daily routine should be your design's playground—not its prison. For example:Awareness may need journaling or quiet time.
Fulfillment may need art, beauty, or laughter.
Resource may need financial tracking or practical routines.
Build in what makes you you—not just what needs to be done.
Make rest and recovery intentional, based on how your drive recharges
Rest isn’t one-size-fits-all.Progress rests by finishing something.
Support rests in routine and reliability.
Discovery rests by changing the scenery.
Understand that true rest = restoration of your design, not just absence of work.
Design a vision for your life that matches your wiring
What does a fulfilling life look like for your design? Write it out.What does your environment feel like?
Who are you working with?
What does your daily rhythm include?
Let this be your compass—not just for dreams, but for decisions.
Coaching Pro Tips for Using Your Drive Effectively
Knowing your drive is powerful—but using it with intention is transformational. These coaching tips will help you move from awareness to activation.
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Why it matters:
When you clearly name your drive and begin to verbalize it, you’re not just describing yourself—you’re stepping into your design identity. Speaking it aloud affirms who you are and invites others to understand, support, and partner with you.Action Step: Learn to say, “I’m designed to…”, followed by the verb and purpose of your drive.
Examples:
“I’m designed to bring progress to ideas, people, and teams.”
“I’m wired to uncover truth and illuminate clarity.”
“I naturally cultivate joy and bring peace where I go.”
“I’m here to organize people and systems toward greater purpose.”
Outcome:
You gain clarity and confidence—and others know what to expect and appreciate about you. -
Why it matters:
Your motivational drive isn’t static—it’s active every day, whether it’s empowered or blocked. Reflecting on when it’s flowing or frustrated helps you calibrate and make meaningful adjustments.Weekly Questions to Reflect On:
When did I feel most energized this week?
(What was I doing? Who was I with?)When did I feel off—and was it because my drive was ignored, stifled, or misapplied?
Where can I create space next week for my drive to breathe more freely?
Outcome:
This habit builds intuitive awareness, helping you recognize real-time misalignment and actively restore connection to your element. -
Why it matters:
Every motivational strength has a shadow—the way it operates when disconnected from love, humility, and purpose. This is your principle fault, and it shows up when you’re operating from fear, ego, or control rather than your element.Examples of Drive-Based Fault Patterns:
Progress: Becomes impatient, forceful, or over-controlling when movement slows.
Awareness: Can drift into judgment, cynicism, or disengaged passivity.
Fulfillment: May avoid responsibility and chase shallow pleasures to escape discomfort.
Resource: Can become overly cautious, withholding, or transactional.
Support: Might enable dysfunction or become resentful when unacknowledged.
Discovery: Can detach emotionally or get lost in theory over impact.
Order: Might impose control or rigid expectations on others.
Self-Coaching Practice: Ask yourself weekly:
“Did I see signs of my fault this week?”
“What triggered it?”
“What does it look like to return to my element?”
Outcome:
You become emotionally agile—able to identify when your strength is being misused and quickly restore its healthiest, most effective expression. -
Why it matters:
Your life rhythm either supports your motivational design—or slowly erodes it. Building routines, work rhythms, and rest patterns that mirror your drive’s internal economy helps your strength stay active, refreshed, and fully expressed.Here’s what each drive needs in rhythm:
Support: Stable routines, meaningful connection, and consistent responsibilities.
Build in time for relationships and contribution that makes others’ lives better.Discovery: Intellectual freedom, time for experimentation, and mental stimulation.
Include “white space” in your week for curiosity-driven exploration.Resource: Clarity about priorities, order in finances, and visible progress toward practical goals.
Plan check-ins for resource stewardship and long-term value creation.Order: Clear vision, collaborative planning, and time to align systems or people.
Protect space for big-picture thinking and strategy sessions.Awareness: Reflection time, quiet observation, and opportunities to speak truth.
Create a rhythm for journaling, listening, or deep conversation.Progress: Fast-moving challenges, measurable wins, and future-focused goals.
Build momentum points into your week—quick wins, forward motion, checkpoints.Fulfillment: Creative expression, joy-filled connection, and emotional nourishment.
Schedule in moments of fun, beauty, and expressive release (not just leisure).
✨ Optimization Tip: Start with your mornings or weekends. Ask:
“What rhythm energizes me—and what needs to shift to reflect my design?”Outcome:
Your days start to reflect your design—not just your obligations. And that creates resilience, clarity, and joy. -
Ask:
“What does a life fully aligned with my design actually look and feel like?”
What kind of relationships am I cultivating?
How does my daily rhythm support my wiring?
What kind of work environment helps me thrive long-term?
What boundaries protect my design from burnout or misuse?
✨ Coaching Exercise: Write your “Ideal Day by Design”—a short vision of how your ideal rhythm, work, connection, and contribution would look if your design was honored fully.
Final Thoughts: Your Drive Is Your Design’s Core Engine
When you know what drives you, you stop drifting and start directing. You:
Understand your purpose
Communicate with power
Make better decisions
Build a life that feels right
Your primary drive is your starting point, but it's also your anchor. It’s how you were designed to bring value to the world—and feel deeply alive doing it.
Your Design Is the Path to Whole-Person Alignment
Your drive is your "why."
Your design is your how—the full expression of your unique way of being and contributing to the world.
When you live in alignment with your design, you don’t just feel better. You:
Make wise, self-aware decisions
Show up with clarity and presence
Build stronger, healthier relationships
Thrive in work that reflects your actual value
Grow sustainably and authentically
You stop managing life—and start designing it.
Final Thought:
Your drive tells you what moves you.
Your design tells you how you’re meant to move through the world.
When you understand your motivational design, you stop comparing yourself to others.
You stop trying to change your wiring—and start optimizing it.
You lead with intention.
You grow with precision.
You live by design—not bydefault.
