Why add your personality type? When you share your MBTI and/or Enneagram, your analysis is filtered through a lens specific to your cognitive style. You'll see how your natural strengths as a thinker and creator show up in your writing — and where your personality-specific blind spots might be holding your script back.
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI): Describes how you perceive the world and make decisions. Your analysis will reflect your type's natural storytelling tendencies — for example, whether you lean toward big-picture ideation or detailed scene construction.
Enneagram: Reveals your core motivations, fears, and growth paths. Your feedback will highlight how these inner drives shape your characters, conflicts, and emotional arcs.
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What is this?
When you add your personality type (MBTI & Enneagram), every scene in your script gets an extra analysis tab called "The Writer's Lens." It identifies how your personality shapes your writing β your natural strengths, recurring blind spots, and specific edits ranked by growth impact. Below is a real example from a 9w8 INTP writer's confrontation scene.
The scene's core strength lies in its originality, drawing from the writer's 9w8 INTP profile to create Clive's quirky, unconventional intervention that adds a unique flavor to the confrontation. However, this strength overshadows a pattern of conflict avoidance and passive character dynamics, resulting in Heidi's limited agency and a lack of sustained emotional depth that diminishes the scene's impact in this high-stakes family showdown. The highest-leverage shift is to enhance protagonist agency and emotional expression, which would make Heidi's journey more compelling.
Option A: Have Heidi physically intervene by pushing her father away before Clive acts. Option B: Let Heidi verbally assert herself by demanding her father explain his intentions.
Why: Option A produces a more active protagonist but risks feeling contrived or overly physical. Option B adds depth through dialogue but may not shift the power dynamic as effectively.Option A: Escalate the father's aggression with a direct threat or physical advance before Clive intervenes. Option B: Introduce a brief standoff where Clive hesitates, allowing tension to build.
Why: Option A increases dramatic intensity and urgency but risks melodrama if not grounded. Option B creates psychological depth and suspense but may dilute immediate action.Option A: Show Heidi's fear and anger through physical reactions like trembling or clenched fists during the confrontation. Option B: Add a moment where Heidi vocalizes her emotions in a raw, unfiltered way to her father.
Why: Option A makes emotions more visceral and engaging but risks overstatement. Option B provides cathartic release and relatability but may feel expository or disrupt the flow.To: