What is the personality type of Dario Fabbri? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Dario Fabbri from News & Journalists and what is the personality traits.
Dario Fabbri personality type is INTJ, or the visionary and master planner type. They have a problem with one and the same thing: they can't see the forest for the trees. The difference between them is that INTJs tend to be slightly better planners. They have a lot of ideas and they are very good at giving them a structure, but they have trouble seeing the bigger picture, or even what's happening around them.
INTJ is the "What's in it for me?" type. They are very good at seeing which opportunities are worth taking and which ones are not.
The INTJ personality type has the ability to quickly read a situation, grasp the main points and make the necessary decisions for shaping the future of the group. They are able to see that their plans can work, but they need to do more than that. They are also very good at making their plans work, but they need to do more than that. It is only when they think about how their plans will work out in the larger scheme of things that they are able to see how their actions will affect the future of the group.
Geopolitical analyst and journalist, scientific advisor and coordinator for America for Limes, an Italian geopolitics magazine. He is also chief geopolitical analyst of Macrogeo, a geopolitical and macro-financial think tank. He is a member of the Italian Society of Military History. He is a lecturer of Middle Eastern geopolitics at the Training School of the Department for Security Information (DIS, Presidency of the Council) and of geopolitical narration at the Holden School of Turin. He writes about American geopolitics for Conflits, a French geopolitics magazine, and for Gnosis, an Italian intelligence magazine. In the past he has written geopolitical comments for Italy Daily, the Italian supplement of The International Herald Tribune. He holds seminars and conferences at numerous Italian and foreign universities.