Professional Bio
Leveraging the diversity of human ego-systems
Considered an international expert in the field of psychological type and its relationship to depth psychology, Danielle specializes in two fields: coaching executive teams and training professional type practitioners.
With the appropriate tools, processes and attitudes, diversity can be a team's greatest asset, the source of creativity and genius. Without them, diversity can be a source of distrust, confusion and tension. Harnessing the tension borne of diversity is the twentieth century's challenge, and its chief learning laboratory is the work team.
Professional Resumé
Introduced to psychological type in 1981, Danielle was involved with the publication of the French Canadian version of the MBTI © starting in 1989; she established the Canadian training department for the MBTI publisher and was responsible for delivering the APT qualifying workshop across the country in both French and English. She is still responsible for delivering the French qualifying program.
In the late nineties she produced the prototype for The Magnificent 16, raised the necessary capital for production, then scripted, produced and launched the first and only multimedia illustration of the sixteen psychological types in 2005, based on over 80 interviews and 100 + hours of videos. The Magnificent 16 has been presented in numerous international conferences in Europe, New Zealand and North America, it was chosen as the main event prior to the conferring of Isabel B. Myers' honorary degree (the Myers in the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator) at Hartwick College, NY, in 2001 and it won APTi’s Innovation Award in 2009.
Based in Montreal, Danielle regularly works at home and abroad, both with teams and with practitioners, encouraging individuals to apply knowledge of differences in constructive ways. Her approach is insightful, warm, inspiring and honest.
Clients
A versatile trainer, Danielle has worked with physicists, engineers, bankers, managers and front line employees, as well as psychologists, counsellors in women's shelters, people recovering from addictions, and homeless people in transition.
Her corporate clients include some of Canada's major banks, Cirque du Soleil, Canadian Institute of Mining, Hydro-Quebec, Novartis, and FTQ.
Selection of Past Conferences and Events
Portraits d'équipes, European Association for Psychological Type Annual Conference, Paris, France, May 2013
Type, Psyche and the Journey Towards Wholeness, Keynote presentation at the British Association for Psychological Type, London, UK, March 2012
Understandable Jung, Pre-conference workshop APTi's Biannual Conference in San Francisco, USA, August 2011
Musical Portraits, MIT at APTi's Biannual Conference in San Francisco, USA, August 2011
Reeling in Projections, Australian Association of Psychological Type webinar, 2012
The Dance of Opposites, New Zealand APT conference, 2005, Belgium APT, 2007, Paris AFTP, 2007
The Magnificent 16, Oneonta, NY, Conferring of I. B. Myers' honorary degree.
Considered an international expert in the field of psychological type and its relationship to depth psychology, Danielle specializes in two fields: coaching executive teams and training professional type practitioners.
With the appropriate tools, processes and attitudes, diversity can be a team's greatest asset, the source of creativity and genius. Without them, diversity can be a source of distrust, confusion and tension. Harnessing the tension borne of diversity is the twentieth century's challenge, and its chief learning laboratory is the work team.
Professional Resumé
Introduced to psychological type in 1981, Danielle was involved with the publication of the French Canadian version of the MBTI © starting in 1989; she established the Canadian training department for the MBTI publisher and was responsible for delivering the APT qualifying workshop across the country in both French and English. She is still responsible for delivering the French qualifying program.
In the late nineties she produced the prototype for The Magnificent 16, raised the necessary capital for production, then scripted, produced and launched the first and only multimedia illustration of the sixteen psychological types in 2005, based on over 80 interviews and 100 + hours of videos. The Magnificent 16 has been presented in numerous international conferences in Europe, New Zealand and North America, it was chosen as the main event prior to the conferring of Isabel B. Myers' honorary degree (the Myers in the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator) at Hartwick College, NY, in 2001 and it won APTi’s Innovation Award in 2009.
Based in Montreal, Danielle regularly works at home and abroad, both with teams and with practitioners, encouraging individuals to apply knowledge of differences in constructive ways. Her approach is insightful, warm, inspiring and honest.
Clients
A versatile trainer, Danielle has worked with physicists, engineers, bankers, managers and front line employees, as well as psychologists, counsellors in women's shelters, people recovering from addictions, and homeless people in transition.
Her corporate clients include some of Canada's major banks, Cirque du Soleil, Canadian Institute of Mining, Hydro-Quebec, Novartis, and FTQ.
Selection of Past Conferences and Events
Portraits d'équipes, European Association for Psychological Type Annual Conference, Paris, France, May 2013
Type, Psyche and the Journey Towards Wholeness, Keynote presentation at the British Association for Psychological Type, London, UK, March 2012
Understandable Jung, Pre-conference workshop APTi's Biannual Conference in San Francisco, USA, August 2011
Musical Portraits, MIT at APTi's Biannual Conference in San Francisco, USA, August 2011
Reeling in Projections, Australian Association of Psychological Type webinar, 2012
The Dance of Opposites, New Zealand APT conference, 2005, Belgium APT, 2007, Paris AFTP, 2007
The Magnificent 16, Oneonta, NY, Conferring of I. B. Myers' honorary degree.