How to Get SBTI GOGO (The Doer) on the Test
Want to land the The Doer type on your SBTI result? Here's exactly which traits to lean into, what kinds of answers produce GOGO, and what to avoid. Works for anyone trying to get GOGO deliberately — or avoid it.
The Short Answer
To get GOGO, you likely answered questions favoring action over contemplation. You prioritized speed and efficiency, and probably leaned towards options that emphasized hands-on experience and immediate results.
Step 1: Emphasize these core traits
The SBTI test maps your answers across 15 dimensions. To get GOGO, your responses should consistently signal:
- 1Decisive
- 2Action-oriented
- 3Resourceful
- 4Impatient
- 5Energetic
- 6Pragmatic
Step 2: Answer patterns to aim for
✓ You're the one who always volunteers to start a project.
✓ You get restless during long meetings.
✓ You've been called 'impulsive' more than once.
✓ Your to-do list is a mile long, and you're already halfway through it.
✓ You prefer learning by doing rather than reading instructions.
✓ You get annoyed when people overthink simple decisions.
Step 3: What to avoid
If you keep ending up on THIN-K / ZZZZ instead of GOGO, your answers are tilting toward those archetypes. Specifically avoid:
- ✗ Over-emphasizing rushing into things
- ✗ Over-emphasizing overlooking details
- ✗ Over-emphasizing impatient with slower thinkers
- ✗ Over-emphasizing difficulty delegating
- ✗ Over-emphasizing ignoring potential risks
- ✗ Over-emphasizing becoming easily frustrated
Already Got GOGO? Here's What It Means
Less talk, more *chong chong chong*! — the The Doer type is defined by action first, decisive movement, bias toward doing over discussing. Read the full profile to see your traits, strengths, weaknesses, and compatible matches.
Read SBTI GOGO full profileIs it OK to game the SBTI test?
SBTI is entertainment, not a clinical assessment. Plenty of people retake it to see different results, unlock the hidden DRUNK type, or land the label their friends got. There's no ethical issue with steering your answers — the test makers built it as a meme, not a diagnostic. Just remember: the most interesting result is usually the one you get when you answer honestly first time.