This page explains how Tabit analyzes teams as systems of interaction. We focus on stable structural patterns inside a group that shape decision-making, conflict dynamics, and a team’s ability to scale and operate under stress.
In real teams, key decisions, conflicts, and growth points emerge not from isolated personal traits, but from how people relate to one another - which roles they occupy, whose voice is amplified, and where tension or resonance appears.
Tabit is built on systemic and synergetic approaches in psychology, where group behavior is shaped through:
This allows the team to be analyzed as a coherent whole rather than a collection of personality types.
Classical questionnaires often capture socially desirable answers or conscious self-presentation. Tabit relies on indirect selection and comparison formats that:
This results in a more stable and reliable view of the team’s interaction structure.
Collected data is interpreted as a unified system across several interconnected levels:
The analysis identifies recurring patterns, zones of alignment and tension, and the balance between stabilizing and change-driving forces within the team.
The Tabit methodology draws on well-established areas of applied psychology, including:
These approaches are implemented in a standardized, scalable, and technology-driven format suitable for management and investment contexts.
The output of Tabit is an analytical signal about the state and dynamics of a team, not a psychological assessment of individual people.
It helps to:
Tabit is not a clinical or psychotherapeutic tool. Results are intended for analytical, managerial, and investment use and should be interpreted within a business context.