Average Extraversion (Ambivert)
Average Extraversion (sometimes called ambivert) means you're comfortable in both social and solo contexts, energised or drained by interaction depending on the situation. About half of adults score in this band — it's the typical pattern.
What it Means
Ambiverts can shift between extraverted and introverted modes depending on context. They're neither energised by all social interaction nor exhausted by it. The trait is associated with broad job-fit and adaptive social style.
Behavioural Patterns
Average Extraversion shows up as: enjoying both group activities and solo time; comfortable initiating but not compulsively social; meaningful but not constant friend networks; adapting social energy to context.
Implications
Average Extraversion is associated with broad social adaptability and surprising career advantages — some research suggests ambiverts outperform pure extraverts and introverts in sales and management roles because they read situations and adapt.
Career & Role Fit
Ambivert profiles fit a wide range of roles, particularly those requiring both interpersonal skill and individual focus: management, healthcare, education, mid-level sales, consulting, generalist roles.