Starting in 2001, one of my MBTI® Qualifying Program/InterStrength® Method Certification graduates founded a software development company. He decided to integrate temperament, Interaction Styles, and Cognitive Dynamics into the fabric of his new company. I worked with them while they went from 4 employees to about 20. I conducted self-discovery workshops for the new employees and many times, those who had been there a while came as well to learn more. At each visit, I did some more applications workshops, team coaching and individual coaching sessions for those who wanted them. During one visit, I saw my name on the company calendar with a huge happy face! It was a joy to work with all of them and I count that work as one of the high points of my career. They really used the models for their own growth, for working with clients, dealing with conflict, and improving relationships. The temperament and Interaction Style names became a language they used on a daily basis. In 2009, I invited Brian Robertson to be a part of my panel on applications of type in organizations at the Association for Psychological Type International. To prepare for this panel, I asked him to write up the story of how the InterStrength method was used in the software company he founded and later in the development of his new venture HolacracyOne. The following is what Brian wrote up.
Ternary Software: Built Around Type
by Brian J Robertson, Founder & CEO-emeritus
Ternary's Story
In early 2001, amidst the worst economy for technology companies in decades, two colleagues and I launched Ternary Software. Although the business vision we pursued was common enough, we launched the company with an uncommon question. Our prior experience in modern organizations was profoundly unfulfiling, and we had a deep driving sense that there must be a better way. We wanted to know: “How can we live and work together in a more full, more embracing, more powerful way?” We weren’t looking for another incremental improvement within existing models and structures; we sought a new tier of organization, one which rewrote the most basic rules of human engagement.