All skills
Skillintermediate

patterns archetypes

<overview>

Claude Code Knowledge Pack7/10/2026

Overview

<overview>

Culture Index identifies 19 distinct behavioral patterns based on the configuration of A, B, C, D traits. The interaction between traits reveals more than individual positions.

</overview>

<common_archetypes>

ArchetypePatternDescriptionTypical Roles
Visionary/ArchitectHigh A, Low C, Low DBig-picture, fast-paced, dislikes details. Best system builders when also high D.CEO, Entrepreneur, Founder
Rainmaker/PersuaderHigh A, High B, Low CAggressive, charming, fast. Closes deals, builds relationships.Sales Hunter, BD, Account Executive
Scholar/SpecialistLow B, High C, High DIntroverted, patient, detail-oriented. Deep expertise.Engineer, CFO, Analyst
AccommodatorLow A, High B, High CTeam player, patient, people-focused. Service orientation.HR, Customer Success
InfluencerLow A, High B, Low C, Low DOpen, optimistic, people-oriented. Avoids confrontation, easily distracted.Customer Service, Retail, Event Hosting, Telemarketing
DebaterMid A, Mid-High B, Low C, High DSocial, non-conforming, intuition-driven. Persuasive storyteller.Sales (relationship), Creative
Technical ExpertLow A, Low B, High C, Low DAccuracy-driven specialists. Private, skeptical, deep expertise.Security, QC, Ops
CraftsmanLow A, Low B, High C, High DPatient, precise executors. Expert taskmasters.Finance, Compliance
SocializerLow A, High B, Low C, Low DSocially flamboyant, people-oriented. Persuasive, charismatic, poor follow-through.Support, HR
PhilosopherLow A, Low B, High C, Low DCerebral, idea-driven non-conformist. Inward thinker, independent.Strategy, Research
AdministratorHigh A, High B, Low C, Mid DProactive, outgoing, organized. Natural follow-through with people skills.Operations, General Management

</common_archetypes>

<trait_combinations>

Notable combinations and their implications:

CombinationNameBehavior
High A + Low DGreatest Risk TakersAggressive risk-taker without brakes. Gas pedal only. Most independent people (two types of independence combined).
Low A + High DMost Risk AverseConservative, careful, will never cut corners. Bottom-line protectors.
Low A + High BCollaborative LeaderServant leadership, great team builder, may avoid necessary conflict
Low B + High C"Leave Me Alone x2"Strongly prefers solitary, focused work. Double introversion signal.
High B + Low CVerbal SprayerTalks fast, often, many topics. Processing out loud rapidly.
High A + Low BResults DriverDrives results without regard for feelings. May seem low EQ.
High D + Low APerfectionist FollowerExecutes exactly as instructed, never cuts corners. Good at optimizing existing processes.
High A + High DProcess BuilderForward-thinking AND detail-oriented. Can build NEW systems and processes. (Architects, Scholars, Technical Experts)
Low C + Low DDouble Error RiskMoving fast (Low C) + not checking work (Low D) = high error rate. Needs systems to catch mistakes.
Low C + High DWound TightImpatient AND perfectionist. High strung, worrisome, feels everything is urgent and must be perfect.

</trait_combinations>

<task_vs_people>

A vs B determines task vs people orientation:

PatternMeaning
A > BValues tasks over people; will push through to get results
B > AValues people over tasks; prioritizes harmony and relationships

</task_vs_people>

<strategic_cross>

Low C + Low D = "Maverick" or "Change Agent"

  • Fast-moving (Low C) and unconcerned with rules (Low D)
  • Natural agents of change and innovation
  • May cause disruption
  • Good for turnarounds, startups, transformations

</strategic_cross>

<technical_stack>

High C + High D = "Specialist" or "Operator"

  • Patient (High C) and precise (High D)
  • Will ensure work is done correctly, won't rush
  • May resist change
  • Good for compliance, quality, operations

</technical_stack>

<chameleon_pattern>

All four primary dots near the arrow = "Chameleon"

  • Statistically average across all traits
  • Unpublished pattern making up less than 0.57% of population
  • Maximum flexibility but may lack strong, predictable drivers
  • Hard to pin down - adapts to situations

</chameleon_pattern>

<pattern_width>

The spread between traits matters as much as individual positions.

Wide pattern (traits spread far apart):

  • More extreme, predictable behaviors
  • Stronger drivers
  • Easier to predict day-to-day behavior

Narrow pattern (traits clustered):

  • More moderate, flexible behaviors
  • Less predictable
  • Can adapt to situations

Two people can have identical A positions but vastly different overall patterns due to B/C/D spread.

</pattern_width>

<pattern_fit_warning>

Flight risk signal: When someone's Job behaviors show the opposite of their Survey traits.

Example: Architect pattern (High A, Low C, Low D) → Socializer in job (Low A, High B, High C, Low D)

  • All dots flipped to opposite side
  • This is imminent flight risk
  • Something must change or they will leave

</pattern_fit_warning>

<role_fit_questions>

When determining what pattern fits a role, ask:

QuestionLeft AnswerRight AnswerRelevant Trait
Is this role more macro or micro?Micro (details, execution)Macro (big picture, strategy)A trait
Is this position more about people skills or problem solving?Problem solvingPeople skillsB trait
How much repetition is in this role?Low repetition, chaos, varietyHigh repetition, stability, predictableC trait

Use these to match patterns:

  • Macro + people + variety = High A, High B, Low C (Rainmaker/Persuader)
  • Micro + problem solving + stability = Low A, Low B, High C, High D (Craftsman/Specialist)
  • Macro + problem solving + stability = High A, Low B, High C, High D (Scholar/Architect)

</role_fit_questions>

<identifying_pattern>

Quick interpretation method:

  1. Find the farthest dot from the normative line (highest deviation)
  2. Identify which range it falls into:
    • ±2 centiles = "somewhat" or "very" (one standard deviation)
    • ±4 centiles = "extremely" (entering six-sigma territory)
  3. Use word descriptors from the appropriate column

Example: D trait is 4.5 centiles right of the norm = "extremely conforming perfectionist, precise, cautious, accurate."

For dots on or near the line (±0.5): "Situationally, depending on your level of comfort and experience, you might be [right-side words] or [left-side words]."

</identifying_pattern>