Predictive Index
Predictive Index
Predictive Index
How can the business benefit from using the Predictive Index?
The information obtained from the PI can be applied to improve many areas of business,
including:
Recruitment/Selection Many candidates. One job. PI can help make sure the right
decision is made, reducing costly turnover.
Teamwork A successful business depends on strong overall teams, but getting people to
work as a team is a tremendous challenge. The PI can be used to help you put together
balanced teams and make sure each player has the skills and training needed to contribute
to team success.
Leadership In todays business environment, leaders need to articulate a clear vision
and inspire others to follow this course. The PI can help identify and develop leaders,
enhancing leadership styles and improving communication.
Management The best managers are made, not born. With the PI, managers are better
equipped with the insight they need to communicate with employees to get results.
Job Satisfaction Since job satisfaction and customer satisfaction are closely entwined, it
is more important than ever to have the right person in the right job. PI can help make sure
that employee morale and commitment stay high.
Productivity Time is money and the company that works most efficiently stands to grow
most profitably. With PI, managers know more about the way people work and how to
maximize productivity.
Strategic Planning Where is the company headed? How will you get there? Who will
drive the initiatives? PI can show you how to match individual behavioral skills and future
company need.
PREDICITVE INDEX
Selected managers are trained by PI Europe to interpret results of the PI in an executive training
workshop conducted by an experienced consultant. Participants are taught how to read and
analyze the information provided by the PI to understand and manage their companies more
effectively. PI Worldwide offers continuing support and consultation to managers trained in the
use of the PI.
Those managers who have direct responsibility for hiring, developing, motivating and coaching
people at all levels of the organization would benefit greatly by using PI. The PI information
provides input to those managers that can be used in every decision they make regarding job and
organization design, and in the selection, development, coaching, and promoting of individuals.
In addition, the Human Resource professionals who work most closely with the line managers in
these decisions would also benefit from the PI information. In this way, those professionals are
better able to partner with and support the managers in making those critical decisions. Having
both the line managers and HR professionals reading from the same page greatly enhances the
effectiveness and productivity of the recruitment, selection and development processes.
PREDICITVE INDEX
Factor A (Dominance) measures the drive to exert ones influence over people and events.
Factor B (Extroversion) measures the drive for social interaction with other people.
Factor C (Patience) measures the intensity of a persons pace.
Factor D (Formality) measures the drive to conform to formal rules and structure.
Factor M is a measure of a persons stamina.
Factor E measures the extent to which the individual is either subjective or objective with
respect to judgment and decision-making.
These factors are then investigated within the context of three elements: the Self, the SelfConcept, and the Synthesis. The Self is a measure of an individuals basic pattern of drives and
behaviora measure of those drives that are most motivating and those behaviors that are most
natural for that individual. The Self-Concept measures the environmental expectations or
demands that a person feels, which may or may not fit with his or her natural tendencies. The
Synthesis, a mathematical combination of the Self and Self-Concept scores, is designed to
measure how that person is actually behaving in the current environment.
What is the reading level of the PI? What if someone cannot read at that level?
The PI has an eighth-grade reading level. The reading level of an individual taking the PI should
affect the PI in only one way (the M Factor), and in a way expected and predicted by the theory
behind the PI. The PI checklist may be understood as a symbolic environment composed of 172
varied, symbolic stimuli, responses to which provide information about behavior and motivation in
the real environment. If someone selects fewer words from the checklist, either due to not
knowing what some words mean or thinking that those words do not describe him or her or what
is expected of him or her, the person is simply reacting to the PI environment as he or she would
react in the actual workplace environment. Furthermore, it is important to remember that the PI
measures natural drives and behaviors not education level, not intelligence, and not socioeconomic status.
PREDICITVE INDEX
What about the EEOC guidelines on the use of selection procedure is the PI safe?
The United States governments Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) has
published and vigorously upheld "Uniform Guidelines for Employee Selection Procedures." These
guidelines, which all U.S. businesses are required to meet, address the conduct of criterionrelated validity studies. They were designed to protect individuals belonging to "protected
classes" from discriminatory employment decisions based on arbitrary methods. Because of
these guidelines, many U.S. employers are understandably wary of products that can help them
make employment decisions, such as the PI. Our nearly three thousand clients, however, are
comforted by these facts:
(1) As demonstrated by our criterion-related validity studies, the PIs results are not arbitrary.
(2) In over 40 years, use of the PI has never been successfully challenged in court.
(3) At any time, as part of the service contract, a client can commission us to perform, free of
charge, a criterion-related validity study that uses their own employees and performance
measures.
What support will you offer if we face litigation attacking our use of PI and its validity?
In response to challenges attacking the validity or reliability of Predictive Index, PI Worldwide will
provide copies of its research reports on the validity and reliability of PI, and, if necessary, will
provide access to its research staff to answer any questions or challenges.
PREDICITVE INDEX
What do reliability and validity mean, and is the PI reliable and valid?
These words have very specific and specialized meanings in psychometrics, the branch of
psychology that deals with testing and assessment. In plain English, "reliability" and "validity" are
two approaches to judging the usefulness of a psychological measure like the PI. They can be
defined in this way:
Reliability: This refers to the consistency or stability of a measure. If the concept being
measured is assumed to be consistent, such as a personality trait, then the measure should yield
similar results if the same person responds to it a number of times. If the concept being measured
is assumed to be inconsistent, such as mood, then the measure should yield dissimilar results if a
person completes it several times.
One way to estimate reliability is by computing the measures "test-retest reliability". This is
accomplished by giving the same people the same measure at two different times and statistically
comparing the two scores. An independent study by Dr. J. Christopher Perry and Dr. Philip W.
Lavori describes the excellent test-retest reliability of the PI, especially of the Self factors, as
would be expected since these measure natural behaviors.
A second way to estimate reliability is by computing the measures "internal consistency
reliability". This is accomplished by determining whether items that measure the same concept
are statistically related. If, for example, the Self A factor represents one construct, then the words
that are counted and scored on that factor concept should be related. For example, one would
ask, are the 17 words on the PI that measure the Self A factor statistically related to each other?
There are two general ways to compute internal consistency reliability, and the PI has
impressively demonstrated such reliability using both methods. Split-half reliability was
investigated in the Perry and Lavori study mentioned above, and Cronbachs alpha was
investigated in a study by Dr. Richard Wolman and James Pratt ("A Normative Reliability
Investigation of the Predictive Index Organization Survey Checklist"). Both studies demonstrated
that the PI possesses strong internal consistency reliability.
Validity: While reliability refers to the consistency of a measure, validity refers to the accuracy of
a measure. A measure is valid if it actually measures what it purports to measure. The Predictive
Index clearly does.
PREDICITVE INDEX
For additional questions about the PI and its applications, please contact your
PI Europe associate.