What the type is built from
Your couple type emerges from the intersection of two things: how your individual communication orientations compare across 10 dimensions, and how you each described your relationship as a unit in Part 2 of the exercise.
It's not a personality test output. It's a derived description of your actual dynamic, the pattern that shows up when your two sets of answers sit next to each other.
What it tells you
Your type tells you something about your structural dynamic: how you tend to complement each other, where the predictable friction lives, and what the specific patterns are that show up under stress and under ease.
The most useful part isn't the name. It's the three specific things to know, the patterns that are most likely to either serve you or create problems if they go unnamed.
Worth noting
Your type can shift over time as your circumstances change, as you grow, or as you do the exercises again after a meaningful period. It's a current description, not a permanent one.
What it doesn't tell you
Your type doesn't tell you how compatible you are. There's no ranking of types from most to least suited for each other. Any type can build something excellent, and any type can drift, it depends almost entirely on whether the patterns get named and worked with.
It also doesn't tell you what's wrong. The things flagged as worth knowing are areas of attention, not diagnoses.
How to use it
Read the three things to know slowly. For each one: does it ring true? Does your partner recognize it? Is there something there you've felt but never named?
The most useful conversation to have after seeing your type is a simple one: "Of these three things, which one do you most want to pay attention to?" Let the answer be different for each of you. Then compare.