How is this different from personality tests?
Personality tests measure stable traits — who you are across situations. Truscope classifies your current operating state: how you are engaging with work right now, what your situation currently contains, and what is most in the way. The result is expected to change as your circumstances change. It is not a type. It is a position.
How accurate is this?
The classification is deterministic: identical answers always produce identical output. It is designed to identify your dominant current pattern across three dimensions. It is not a clinical or psychometric instrument, and it is not trying to predict your behaviour across all situations. Its value is whether the result accurately captures the situation you are actually in right now.
What do I actually get?
The free teaser shows your Operator type, Phase, and Primary Constraint with a two-line constraint insight. The full report adds: a detailed situation analysis written for your specific classification, three targeted actions (immediate, this week, longer term), your likely blind spot, and a curated reading list. One-time payment, delivered by email.
How long does it take?
Seven questions. Around three minutes. The result appears immediately after the final question — no waiting, no processing screen.
Do I need to create an account?
No. You complete the full diagnosis and see your teaser result without signing up for anything. If you purchase the full report, you provide an email address to receive it. No account is created and no password is required.
Is this based on research?
The OPC Model draws on situational leadership frameworks, occupational psychology, and published behavioural research. It is not a clinical instrument and has not been formally validated against external criteria. Its design principles — present-state classification, three independent dimensions, strict determinism — are described in full in the
whitepaper on the Research page.
Can my result change over time?
Yes, and that is by design. Phase and Primary Constraint are explicitly situational — they describe a context and a bottleneck, both expected to shift as circumstances change. If you run the diagnostic again after a significant change in your situation, you may receive a different classification. It does not define you permanently.
Can I take it more than once?
Yes. Because the diagnostic classifies your current state rather than a fixed trait, it makes sense to run it again after a significant shift — a new role, a change in pressure, a transition that has resolved or deepened. Each session is independent. Your result the second time may be the same or different, depending on where you actually are.
Who is this for?
People actively navigating something — decisions, pressure, transitions, or a period where things are not moving the way they should. It is most useful when you already sense that something is structurally off and want to identify what it is. It is not designed for casual curiosity or entertainment.
What do I do with the report once I have it?
Use it. The immediate action is designed to create the biggest available shift given your constraint. Most people use the report to reorient a decision, clarify a priority, or structure the next few weeks of work. It is not meant to be filed and revisited — it is meant to be acted on.