S1 Self-esteem
You usually keep a steady sense of self-worth even when life gets noisy.
SBTI Type
The Leader · 领导者
If someone needs to take the wheel, you usually already have it.
BOSS types are decisive, structured, and relentlessly upward-moving. You like direction, responsibility, and the feeling that something is getting done under your watch.

Each normal type is defined by a 15-dimension pattern. The cards below show the baseline temperament behind this result.
You usually keep a steady sense of self-worth even when life gets noisy.
You have a clear read on your motives, limits, and desires.
You are easily driven by growth, conviction, or a personal mission.
You usually trust the bond itself instead of panicking at every wobble.
You can invest deeply, but you still keep one hand on the brake.
Personal space stays important even when feelings are real.
You are neither naive nor fully cynical; you observe first.
You can follow systems, but you will bend them when needed.
You like knowing what direction your life is heading in.
Progress, gain, and momentum tend to light you up.
You tend to choose quickly and do not love dragging decisions out.
Unfinished tasks bother you, so you push things forward naturally.
Starting social contact usually costs you a noticeable amount of energy.
Your boundary line is real, and people usually feel it.
You are usually straightforward about what you think and feel.
The most common questions people search for about the SBTI BOSS type.
BOSS types are decisive, structured, and relentlessly upward-moving. You like direction, responsibility, and the feeling that something is getting done under your watch.
If someone needs to take the wheel, you usually already have it.
Take the free 31-question SBTI test on this site. The algorithm scores your answers across 15 behavioral dimensions and matches your profile against every named type. If BOSS is your closest match, it becomes your result.
SBTI does not publish official distribution data, so there is no verified answer on how rare BOSS is. What matters is that every named SBTI type — including BOSS — describes a real and distinct behavioral pattern. No result is objectively better, worse, or rarer than another.