A full breakdown of each style's strengths, watch-outs, and how it shows up at work — written by iGROW's Chief Psychologist.
High drive, high responsibility, low recovery.
The Overloaded Achiever pattern shows up as someone who takes on responsibility readily, pushes through difficulty, and struggles to stop even when they should. This is one of the most common patterns among high performers and people in leadership or delivery-heavy roles.
The core risk is burnout that arrives suddenly rather than gradually, because this pattern is recovery-resistant — rest can feel like falling behind, even when it is exactly what's needed. Perfectionism and chronic over-commitment often accompany this style.
Typically the first to volunteer, the one who says "I'll just do it myself," and the person still online after everyone else has logged off. Saying no to additional work feels uncomfortable, even when the workload is already unsustainable.
Calm outside, carries stress privately.
The Quiet Resilient One pattern describes someone who stays composed under pressure — but the composure is often a mask, not the absence of strain. Stress gets processed internally rather than shared, which makes this pattern easy to miss from the outside.
Because stress stays hidden, it can accumulate undetected until it surfaces as a sudden breakdown rather than a gradual decline. This pattern also carries a higher risk of emotional numbness, since feelings are routinely suppressed rather than processed.
Colleagues often describe this person as "always fine," even during genuinely difficult periods. They rarely ask for help and tend to process difficulty alone, away from the team.
Supportive, relational, over-gives.
The Caring Giver pattern describes someone whose depletion comes specifically from giving too much to others — not from external circumstances. This is a key distinction from the Weary Soul pattern: a Caring Giver becomes depleted because they keep helping, even past their own capacity.
Boundaries are the central challenge — this pattern tends to give until depleted, with identity often fused to the role of "helper." When the Caring Giver pattern combines with low energy and low recovery, it can develop into what we call the Depleted Helper sub-pattern, which needs more urgent attention.
This is everyone's informal confidant — available for every colleague's problem, but rarely mentioning their own. They find it far easier to offer support than to receive it.
Growth-focused, mentally active, always optimising.
The Restless Improver pattern describes someone energised by change, learning, and forward momentum — but who finds genuine stillness difficult, even when stillness is what's actually needed.
Satisfaction is often short-lived, since this pattern tends to move to the next thing before fully processing the last. Racing thoughts and difficulty sitting still can tip into anxiety, particularly during enforced periods of stillness or stagnation.
Always scanning for gaps and suggesting new systems, this person brings restless energy into meetings and can struggle to simply be present without optimising something.
Values routine, harmony, predictability.
The Steady Stabiliser pattern describes someone who creates safety through consistency. This is generally the lowest-risk pattern of the six, with stress mostly emerging only when change or disruption is forced upon them.
Rigidity under sudden change is the main risk — this pattern can feel stuck when disruption arrives without warning, and tends to avoid conflict even when raising it would help.
Prefers clear processes over ambiguity, contributes steadily rather than dramatically, and is often the person a team doesn't notice is holding things together — until they're absent.
Running on empty, depleted, needs recovery and support.
The Weary Soul pattern describes someone whose depletion comes from being worn down by accumulated weight — work, life circumstances, or chronic stress — rather than from any single behaviour like over-giving. This is the pattern most in need of immediate, gentle support.
Energy and motivation are critically low, and the idea of recovery can feel distant or even impossible. Isolation is a real risk — withdrawal often deepens precisely when connection is most needed.
Present but flat, with low initiative — often following a period of crisis, loss, or sustained over-giving. This pattern needs permission to rest, not pressure to perform.
iGROW's PsyCapital model measures organisational psychological wellbeing across two dimensions: Protective Factors (the iGROW HoneyComb Measure — Realistic Optimism, Purpose in Life, Positive Emotions, Positive Relationships, Engagement, and Environmental Mastery) and Risk Factors (the iGROW Emotional Well-Being Indicator, screening for depression and anxiety). The Mental Fitness Style Quiz draws directly on this same protective-risk structure, translated into an individual, self-reflective format. PsyCapital has been deployed with corporate clients across the Asia Pacific region.
Costa, P. T., & McCrae, R. R. (1992). Revised NEO Personality Inventory (NEO-PI-R) and NEO Five-Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI) professional manual. Psychological Assessment Resources.
Informs the core trait patterns behind each of the 6 styles.
Maslach, C., & Jackson, S. E. (1981). The measurement of experienced burnout. Journal of Organizational Behavior, 2(2), 99-113.
Informs the Weary Soul pattern and the Depleted Helper sub-pattern.
Deci, E. L., & Ryan, R. M. (2000). The "what" and "why" of goal pursuits: Human needs and the self-determination of behavior. Psychological Inquiry, 11(4), 227-268.
Informs the 5-domain scoring model (Energy, Calm, Focus, Connection, Recovery).
Lazarus, R. S., & Folkman, S. (1984). Stress, Appraisal, and Coping. Springer Publishing Company.
Informs how each style responds differently under workplace pressure.
Kroenke, K., Spitzer, R. L., & Williams, J. B. (2003). The Patient Health Questionnaire-2: validity of a two-item depression screener. Medical Care, 41(11), 1284-1292.
The wellbeing check-in uses this exact, validated 2-item screening instrument, unmodified.
This is a self-reflection and psychoeducational tool. It is not a diagnostic instrument and does not replace assessment by a licensed mental health professional.