Viewing a teammate's profile
Viewing a teammate's profile
Every user in MonsterOps has a public profile page that shows their working style, recent activity, and contribution history. Use it to get context on who you're working with — what their DISC style is, how active they've been, and what they've been doing lately.
How to open a user profile
User profiles can be opened from several places in MonsterOps:
- From Organization Team Members — clicking a user from the list opens their profile.
- From any team's Team Members — same as the Organization-level list.
- By clicking a user directly anywhere they appear — for example, on the Organization Dashboard's Top active users list, or in a Rock's owner field. Most places where a user's name or avatar appears are clickable.
No matter where you click from, the profile's breadcrumb always reads MonsterOps > Team members > [user]. The path you arrived from doesn't change how the profile is displayed.
The profile is public to other teammates in the same Organization, so anything visible there is intended for shared visibility.
What's on a user profile
The profile page is split into a header summary, a contribution graph, and a recent activity feed.
Header summary
At the top of the profile, you'll see:
- The user's profile picture and level (the level number sits as a badge on the avatar)
- Their name and email (with a copy button next to the email)
- Their user level with a named tier — for example, Level 4 (Crawler) — and a progress bar showing accumulated XP toward the next level (e.g., 838 / 1,000)
- Their DISC style as a two-letter code, with the underlying percentages displayed below (e.g., DISC style: Id — D 25% · I 31% · S 23% · C 22%)
DISC style codes preserve the order of the dominant traits. DI is different from ID — the first letter is the user's highest-scoring dimension, and the second letter is the next highest. This makes the style a quick read on which trait leads someone's working style.
Achievements
A space for user achievements. This feature is currently labeled Coming soon.
Contribution graph
Activity captured for [date range].
A heatmap-style graph showing the user's activity over the past quarter. Each cell represents a day, with darker shading indicating more activity on that day.
Above the graph, you'll see:
- The date range the graph covers
- The total contributions count (top right)
Below the graph, a count of total activities for the current year (e.g., 401 activities in 2025) appears alongside a legend showing the Less → More color scale.
Recent activities
Latest actions recorded for this teammate in the organization.
A table showing the user's most recent activity, with three columns:
- When — the date and time the action was recorded
- Team — the team the action took place in
- Action — the type of action (for example,
update_todoorstop_meeting)
Actions are recorded automatically as the user works in MonsterOps, so this gives a live picture of what they've been doing without anyone having to log it manually.
What you can learn from a profile
User profiles work best as a quick orientation tool:
- Before pairing with someone — check their DISC style to see how they prefer to work and communicate.
- Before reaching out about a stalled item — check the recent activities to see if they've been active in the relevant team lately.
- To recognize contribution — the contribution graph shows whose work has been driving activity over time.
- When onboarding a new teammate — your own profile gives others context on you, so taking the DISC assessment early helps the rest of the team work with you better.
Things to keep in mind
- The user profile is public to other teammates in the Organization. Anything you see on someone else's profile is also visible on yours.
- The DISC style is editable — the user controls their own profile by adjusting their DISC scores in User settings. The order of letters in the style reflects their highest and second-highest scores, so DI and ID are distinct.
- The user level here is the XP-based activity indicator, not the permission level (Owner / Admin / Member). High user levels don't grant additional access.
- Achievements is not yet available — the section displays Coming soon.
- The Recent activities table shows actions by their internal name (for example,
update_todo). The team and timestamp give context for what the user was doing.
Related articles
- Managing your user account
- Organization Team Members
- The Organization Dashboard
- Navigating the MonsterOps interface