5 - 19%
1 - 16%
3 - 12%
8 - 11%
6 - 10%
9 - 10%
2 - 7%
7 - 7%
4 - 7%
It was an interesting approach; I like how it stuck solidly to basic type theory. It seems cover all the bases, though at the cost of being general enough to be relatable. A downside I found is that in trying to nail different triads (I noticed rejection triad questions, then competency triad questions, etc) instead of specific triads, there were problems that arose from it due to trying to tack on a specific archetype to a type instead of the type in its full spectrum; for example: the questions I have identified to be 6 are very 'passive' and emphasized its attachment status (security seeking, external polling) and not much its compliant one (checking to see if they are doing right and fulfilling standards). This would steer an E6 that was less attachment (due to tritype combo, IV combo, and/or experience themselves, etc) to steer away from the E6 options and possibly mistype.
This is not necessarily a bad thing- there is only so much detail one can cram in when having 9 different end results, with each of those 9 results having a full spectrum within them on their own. It is a natural limitation of quizzes, that in itself aren't designed to be capable of going in-depth.
I can't comment on the 'pick the words that apply' section, because for better or worse, I don't know which word goes to which type(s). However, overall this works well as a 'starter to Enneagram' so to speak, and would nail folks who are in the midranges of their type and embody the archetype of their type very closely. A plus for focusing on triads is that one is likely to get their core type from this quiz, because there are many traits from the triads that apply to one's core type- this is a great test to figure out your core and what the components of that type are.