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Free Career, Work & Money Tests

Find the work that fits.

Career tests have a long tradition (Holland Codes, Strong Inventory, the original Myers-Briggs at-work versions) — but most of them are slow, paid, and over-optimized for "what job title fits you." The tests here are faster and pointed at the more useful question: what kind of work would let your wiring run, instead of fighting it?

This category includes 15 tests across three buckets: career fit (Career Personality, Ideal Job, Builder/Manager/Strategist, Workplace Personality), style (Leadership Style, Productivity Style, Boss Personality, Remote Work Fit, Professional Strength), and money & risk (Money Personality, Financial Risk, Entrepreneur, Side Hustle, Business Mindset, Ready to Quit Your Job).

Useful at career inflection points (about to job-hop, considering a side business, deciding whether to manage people) and quietly useful for everyday self-management. All free, no signup, ~4–5 min each.

Frequently asked questions

Are these career tests reliable?

They're self-report, which is honest only if you are. They're inspired by validated frameworks (Holland, Big Five, leadership-style research) but condensed for speed. Use them as conversation starters with yourself, not as a final career verdict.

What's the difference between the Career Personality Test and the Ideal Job Test?

Career Personality is about your wiring (Builder, Strategist, Creator, Connector). Ideal Job is about the kind of day that makes you happy at work (Maker, Helper, Leader, Analyst). Take both — they triangulate a clearer picture together than either does alone.

I'm thinking about quitting my job. Where should I start?

Take the "Ready to Quit Your Job Test" first — it sorts whether you're actually ready or just restless. Then "Ideal Job" or "Career Personality" to clarify the next move. If money is the question, the "Money Personality" and "Financial Risk" tests help calibrate how much runway you actually have appetite for.

Are these for entrepreneurs or employees?

Both. The Entrepreneur Test and Business Mindset Test are explicitly for the founder question. The Leadership Style and Boss Personality tests are useful whether you manage people now or might later. Most of the rest apply equally to either path.

How accurate is the Money Personality Test?

Surprisingly accurate as a starting point — Saver/Spender/Investor/Avoider archetypes show up consistently in financial-behavior research. The test won't tell you what to do with your 401k, but it will name the script that's been quietly running your financial life.

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