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Discover why your children behave the way they do and how you can adjust your parenting style to create a more positive family life and home environment

Welcome to a more harmonious family

In most families, children are quite different from one another – and their parents. What works for one, doesn’t necessarily work for the other. Discovering a child’s behaviour profile can greatly assist you in becoming a better parent for that particular child.
HappyParentsHappyKids Behaviour Profile Reports will help you:

  • Create a more harmonious and rewarding partnership with your child
  • Reduce potential conflicts at home
  • Help children get along better with their siblings and friends
  • Identify your child’s natural skills
  • Recognise areas for motivation and growth
  • Improve your relationships and communication skills with your family members.

Know yourself first

We encourage parents to first complete their own behaviour profile report to gain a better understanding of why you behave the way you do. Each style may cause conflict and stress to other styles and your ability to understand, then adapt, is essential if you are to maintain harmony in the home.

Our children are not like us

For most parents their children are not like them. One of the common mistakes parents make is to assume their children are like them. For most parents this is not the case, their children do not share the same way of coping with conflict, managing time, setting priorities, forming relationships, career paths or the way they handle their emotions. These differences are the prime cause of conflict and disharmony in families. By understanding and accepting your child’s behaviour profile you will know how to motivate and communicate with them successfully. You will be able to help them learn more effectively and be able to guide them towards an appropriate career path.

Understanding your behaviour profile

Studies have shown that there are four basic behaviour styles. The various combinations of these basic styles defines how we think and act. Everyone has one dominant style. This style is constant throughout their lives and sets the basis for how they will form relationships with other people. Most people also have a secondary style and when combined with the dominant style creates their personality.

The four basic styles are:

ADVENTURERS
SOCIALISERS
HELPERS
THINKERS

How does it work?

Understanding your family is as easy as 1,2,3

Step 1
Complete Behaviour Profile Reports for all your family members.

Step 2
Study the individual reports. Learn how your family members prefer to think and behave. Identify how to communicate with and motivate them successfully. Understand how to resolve conflict with them and what career options are best for them.

Step 3
Read your Family Interaction Table (FIT) provided with your adult report and see how your style “fits” with the other behaviour styles in your family. Learn great strategies to improve your relationships with each family member and start applying them straightaway.

What does it cost?

Behaviour Profile Reports only cost $29.50 each. Adult Reports include detailed parenting strategies and your FREE F.I.T. report. A 10% discount applies to purchases of 3 or more Reports of any mix. ie $26.95 each

To complete a Behaviour Profile assessment you need to pre-purchase a Report Voucher Code. Voucher Codes are delivered immediately by email together with instructions on how to use them. You can purchase Voucher Codes for either Adult or Child/Career reports.

If you already have a voucher number, click here.

History of
Personality Types


Hippocrates
(400BC) characterised people by the fluids that ran through their body. He named these styles; Choleric, Sanguine, Phlegmatic and Melancholy.

Carl Gustav Jung in 1921 published “Psychological Types” which described four psychological functions of; Thinking, Feeling, Sensation and Intuition.

Dr William Moulton Marston was an expert in behavioural understanding. In 1928 he published “The Emotions of Normal People” which lead to the development of the DISC test with the four categories; Dominance, Influence, Steadiness and Compliance.

In 1958 Isabel Briggs-Myers and her mother Katherine Briggs devised an instrument for measuring a person’s preferences using four basic scales; Introversion/Extraversion, Sensate/Intuitive, Thinking/Feeling and
Judging/Perceiving.

In 2000 Dr Ilan Kogus PhD developed the four family behaviour preferences called Adventurer, Socialiser, Helper and Thinker. These assessments are very easy to use and the reports give you great understanding of how your family members think and why they behave the way they do.




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