Too few jobseekers, perhaps, stop to consider what field might best fit their personality.
If you know your Myers-Briggs personality type, a report from Resume Genius might have just the job for you. If not, we'll help you figure it out.
Myers-Briggs offers four “preference pairs” that reflect facets of human personality. To paraphrase the Myers-Briggs website, personalities are characterized by "extraversion" (E) or "introversion" (I), receiving information by "sensing" (S) or "intuition" (N), reaching conclusions by "thinking" (T) or "feeling" (F), and approaching the world through "judging" (J) or "perceiving" (P).
Combine any four preferences, and you get one of 16 distinct personality types: ESTJ, for example, or INFP.
The jobseeker website searched Labor Department data to find the highest-paying jobs for each personality type.








