Emotional Intelligence Assessments for Writers

Assessments are the first step to understanding how you create emotional connection.

These assessments are designed for writers who want a clearer picture of how emotion operates in their creative work. They do not measure talent or predict publication. Instead, they offer structured ways to look at your habits, strengths, and growth edges around emotional craft.
At the moment, the Writer’s Emotional Compass is available. The Writer’s Emotional Map and MSCEIT-based services are in development and will open gradually.

Three Ways to Look at Emotion in Your Writing

Writer’s Emotional Compass (WEC)

A quadrant based assessment that maps how you naturally process emotion when you write. It highlights your default orientation along two key dimensions: systematic vs. experiential, and internal vs. external focus.

  • Shows how you tend to approach emotional material
  • Identifies your core quadrant and archetype family
  • Offers first steps for building on your natural strengths

Learn About (and Take) the WEC

Writer’s Emotional Map (WEM)

A more detailed look at how emotion shows up on the page across six creative dimensions such as intensity, range, resonance, and tone bias. The WEM is being built as a deeper companion to the WEC for writers who want a more granular profile.

  • Focuses on emotional craft, not only preference
  • Uses a mix of reflective and ability style tasks
  • Produces a six dimension radar style profile

Status: in development and planned for a small tester group in 2026.

Read About the WEM

MSCEIT Ability EI Assessment

The Mayer Salovey Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test is a performance based measure of emotional intelligence used in many professional settings. For writers, it offers an objective view of EI abilities that can sit alongside more creative, story focused tools like the WEC and WEM.

  • Measures how accurately you solve emotion based problems
  • Organized around perception, use, understanding, and management
  • Best suited for writers who want a formal EI baseline

Status: offered only in limited contexts while the broader Emote This ecosystem is being built.

Learn More About MSCEIT

How These Assessments Fit Together

Each tool looks at a different layer of emotional life in writing. The WEC focuses on orientation. The WEM focuses on applied craft. The MSCEIT focuses on core EI abilities outside of any one story. You do not need all three. The right choice depends on what you are curious about and how you like to work.

  • If you want a starting point. Begin with the Writer’s Emotional Compass. It is designed as an entry point for most writers.
  • If you want more detail about your pages. Keep an eye on the Writer’s Emotional Map. It will serve writers who want a more technical profile of emotional craft.
  • If you want a formal EI ability score. Explore the MSCEIT option once you are ready for a more clinical, performance based measure.

If you are not sure which path fits you, the overview page below will stay updated as the tools evolve.

Which Assessment Is Right for Me?

Stay Updated as New Tools Open

The assessment ecosystem is being built with care and will open in stages rather than all at once. If you would like to know when the WEM testing group opens or when new assessment options are added, the newsletter is the simplest way to stay informed.

You will hear about new tools, not constant promotions.

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