What the Assessment Measures
The Entry Point Assessment evaluates how you respond to social pressure across seven dimensions. Each dimension corresponds to an Entry Point — a specific place where psychological pressure enters your conversations.
Your results identify your primary Entry Point: the default reaction pattern that others are most likely to use — consciously or not — to influence your decisions.
The Seven Entry Points
The Explainer — Pressure enters through your compulsion to re-explain and justify. You keep clarifying until your certainty erodes.
The Nice One — Pressure enters through your discomfort with being perceived as selfish. You say yes before you've finished thinking.
The Fixer — Pressure enters through your instinct to solve other people's problems. They describe; you absorb.
The Performer — Pressure enters through your need to prove competence when challenged. You perform instead of choosing.
The Avoider — Pressure enters through your discomfort with tension. You concede to end the discomfort, not because you agree.
The Loyal One — Pressure enters through your sense of obligation to shared history. Past investment overrides present judgment.
The Rationalizer — Pressure enters through your deference to confidence. Someone else's certainty makes you doubt your own read.
How It Works
The assessment presents 28 statements about how you respond in everyday conversations. There are no right or wrong answers — only patterns. Your responses are scored across all seven dimensions. The dimension where you score highest indicates your primary Entry Point.
Results also show your secondary tendencies and the specific manipulation tactics most likely to work on your profile. All responses are processed in your browser. Nothing is stored or shared.
What Your Results Include
Your primary Entry Point with a detailed explanation of how pressure enters through that pattern. Recognition examples from real conversations. A preview of the tactics most commonly used against your type. Clean responses that close the opening without escalation.
The complete breakdown of all 27 tactics — including which ones specifically target your Entry Point — is available in 27 Psychological Tricks People Use on You.