Beneath every yes and every no is a filter — shaped by everything you’ve learned to value, fear, and trust. FACES™ makes that filter visible. Not so you can change it. So the people closest to you can finally understand it.
For couples, friends, siblings, business partners — FACES™ gives you the language for a conversation you’ve never been able to have about why you keep reaching different conclusions from the same information.
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This report describes how you evaluate — which signals you check first, what confirms that something is worth your time and money, and what quietly disqualifies an option before you've consciously considered it.
Every time you commit resources — money, time, attention, emotional energy — you perform an invisible calculation. You weigh cost against payoff to decide if it's worth it. But "worth it" is never universal.
What follows is a map of that calculation. Your drivers — the signals that point you toward a "Yes." Your triggers — the signals that make it a "No."
While we carry all five FACES™ traits to varying degrees, there is typically one Dominant Mechanism — occasionally accompanied by a Lean Modifier that activates under pressure or uncertainty.
As you read, notice the moments where you think: "That's exactly what I do — and I've never been able to explain it."
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The pattern you live with:
The sentence that might bridge the gap:
Your filter reveals itself in small moments.
Now that you've seen your architecture, these questions will help you notice it in real time.
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