Webinar Recording: How to Use Emotional Intelligence to Enhance Your Leadership Performance

February 9, 2011

‘How to Use Emotional Intelligence to Enhance Your Leadership Performance’
with Roger Pearman

I want to share a learning opportunity with you – our first live webinar of the year. ‘How to Use Emotional Intelligence to Enhance Your Leadership Performance’ is presented by esteemed EI expert, Roger Pearman. It focuses on marketing emotional intelligence successfully for leadership applications with case studies, and even a SWOT analysis that demonstrates client results.

Some organizations and clients do not an understanding or even awareness of the importance of emotional intelligence. As such, there are several steps in the process of instilling the value of emotional intelligence to help achieve greatness in leadership in the workplace.

These steps are outlined in the interactive, one hour webinar, and you will learn:

• Why and how does emotional intelligence make a difference in leadership?
• How do you initiate emotional intelligence training in your organization?
• How do you create an action plan for implementing emotional intelligence?
• How emotional intelligence will work for you, not against you.
• Solid tips and tools for using emotional intelligence to enhance leadership in your organization.

Listen to this webinar as hosted by Training Industry here.


The Leading Edge: Using Emotional Intelligence to Enhance Performance

February 9, 2011

Article by Roger Pearman

Leadership dimensions are plentiful: visioning, communicating, planning, inspiring, and much more.  One thing all leaders have in common is followers—those who help the leader make things happen.  As such, relationships are the lifeblood of leadership achievement and there is no better way to both understand and enrich those relationships than through the lens of emotional intelligence (EI).  Individuals like coaches or consultants, and organizations using EI as a frame or perspective will find that their communication is clearer, implementation is achieved, and overall engagement and satisfaction have greatly improved.

Why and how does EI make a difference in leadership?

Leaders who utilize relationship, empathy, and problem-solving behaviors are likely to have both a clear understanding of what is needed in a situation and how to communicate information in a way that it can really be heard. Further, can there be any doubt that optimistic leaders are more satisfying to work with and for?  As noted above, these are the kinds of behaviors that emotionally intelligent leaders demonstrate—and fortunately, all of these behaviors are learnable.  The path for learning more about these behaviors begins with assessing how a leader currently displays and uses them.  The EQ-i assessment provides an excellent way to tap into fifteen emotional and social skills that give leaders the edge for strengthening their organizations at all levels.

Recently, John Ellis, the President of a company with 4,000 employees, puzzled over an internal survey of employees showing uneven employee satisfaction, distrust of managers, and a general attitude of little commitment to the work and/or organization.  His human resource and training director pointed out in a cover memo to the report that employee turnover numbers were high and expensive.  Wisely, an article on EI was also attached to the report.  John reflected on what seemed to be a sorry state of affairs and he wanted a way to approach these complex issues.  He asked for more explanation of how EI could help, and he offered to take the EQ-i assessment in the spirit of learning “more about this stuff.”

When the interpretation of the EQ-i was completed, John Ellis realized that his own behaviors around showing interest in others, engaging interpersonally, being adaptable, showing calm, and generally communicating an optimistic perspective were merely cascading down through the organization.  It was transparently clear to him that these behaviors do matter; there was one thing he was absolutely sure about. The current behavior from the leaders in the organization was not going to make the culture shift that he felt was needed.  He concluded, leaders in his organization needed to become more emotionally intelligent and he needed to start with himself.

How do you initiate EI training in your organization?

Your first task is to link organizational goals to EI skills so you can determine which of the extensively researched assessments—EQ-i, EQ 360, or MSCEIT—will help reach the awareness needed to foster development inside the organization.  So to make the case for enhancing EI behaviors through training, you need to do some homework to show the explicit link between EI along with the following:

  • the leadership principles or values of the organization, and
  • the developmental climate in the organization.

You are now ready to position EI as a value-add.  Decision makers want to know “what is in this for me?”—or “us”?  Be prepared to show thorough examples (and data if you have it) of how becoming more emotionally intelligent within teams, customer service or sales reps, or daily associate interactions can help the organization be focused and healthy.  Provide some examples which illustrate the following when individuals are using or enhancing their EI-related behaviors, for example:

Situation EI Advantage Highlights
Employee is unmotivated Getting at underlying needs that are not being met by using empathetic discussions Exploring stress-coping strategies to build capabilities
Customers are unhappy Listening with an empathetic ear, taking initiative to constructively—optimistically—engage the individual, and using problem solving skills will produce better customer satisfaction
Team leader is ineffective Learning how to build interpersonal skills, develop greater flexibility, and pragmatic reality-tested strategies with confidence will boost team leader effectiveness
Change initiatives need to be implemented Leaders who are emotionally self-aware, assertive toward attending empathetically to the concerns of others, show tolerance for the stress embedded in the situation, and optimistic about the future, will be more likely to lead change effectively

No doubt you will find that EI is competing with other ideas within the organization.  For example, there are others who will argue that EI is “too conceptual” while communication training is more pragmatic.  You need to have a candid Strengths—Weaknesses—Opportunities—Threats analysis on what EI brings the organization over competing models of development.  Be sure to articulate how EI facilitates not just communication effectiveness (or other competing training topics) but also an increase in individual performance that affects all levels of the organization.  For example, you might illustrate the value of EI by this analysis:

Strengths 

  • EI addresses proven performance-related effectiveness
  • EI provides a focused pathway for development
Weaknesses 

  • EI assessment or training might not be a simple or one-time event
  • EI facilitation requires high-end facilitation expertise—not just anyone can do it
Opportunities 

  • EI training addresses a whole range of development needs
  • EI enhancement can impact associate health and customer satisfaction
Threats 

  • The term “emotional intelligence” scares people off from exploring the topic
  • EI may seem invasive and more personal rather than professionally focused

You can address the weaknesses and threats with a couple of important reminders.  EI assessments like the EQ-i are thoroughly researched and comprehensive which means getting the most out of the learning event.  Though the assessments and concepts are complex, the long-term value for the organization is worth the effort.  As for threats, an effective facilitator can help audiences understand that grasping how emotions enhance performance throughout one’s life elevates opportunities for achieving your personal and professional goals.  Further, it is vital that everyone understand who is associated with an EI learning event, and that reports are confidential and belong only to the individual who took the assessment.  The individual has to embrace their results and make the commitment to enhance specific behaviors.

Facilitate getting your next opportunity to make EI a part of organization life and to provide leaders with the performance edge they seek by:

  • knowing your “buyers” in the organization—their needs, expectations, hopes
  • knowing the benefits of EI tools and the EI training you want to provide
  • aligning individual and organizational goals with EI learning event outcomes

Create an action plan

There are specific actions you can take to promote the awareness and potential use of EI frameworks in your organization.  As a quick summary, use this checklist as a reference to create opportunities and increase the chances of your success:

  • Define your EI services, products, and experiences
  • Identify the products or services that align with organizational goals
  • Identify your target decision makers, end users, and how they can use the training to enhance effectiveness
  • Establish a clear link between using EI insights to satisfy organizational and developmental needs
  • Determine how EI will be a developmental experience relevant to everyone, regardless of their roles
  • Describe the unique characteristics and benefits of your EI products, or services that distinguish them from the competition such as the science supporting EI frameworks or the immediate usability of EI concepts to work (and personal) challenges
  • Define how “costs” (assessments, materials, time, fees etc.) compare with other training or coaching services
  • Identify how you will use EI assessments and learning experiences, and how these will be available to the end users
  • Describe the unique characteristic of EI products or services such as how EI covers a whole range of development needs from leadership development to being associated with health and well-being
  • Share any research that supports development activities that are unique to EI such as the linkage of intrapersonal, interpersonal, stress management, adaptability, and general mood
  • Describe how enhancing EI competencies will facilitate talent management throughout the organization

Give yourself and your organization the leadership edge—make EI behaviors commonplace in everyday organizational life!

About Roger

Roger’s professional career extends from serving on the faculty and staff of Wake Forest University, senior executive of operations in a financial service organization, and now the entrepreneurial role of company founder.  In all of these positions he has had a keen interest in developing others and enhancing their effectiveness.  Beginning in the mid 1990s, he began researching and writing about emotional intelligence and leadership.  His most popular publications include: Introduction to Type and Emotional Intelligence, YOU: Being More Effective in Your MBTI® Type, I’m Not Crazy, I’m Just Not You, Leadership and Emotions, and Emotions and Health.


Leadership and the New EQ-i 2.0

February 3, 2011

Written by Researcher & OD Consultant Katie Ziemer, MOrgPsych

You often hear people remark, “I know a good leader when I see one,” because in many cases the success of a leader is observable yet not always easy to define. With the success of leadership development efforts often tied to a measureable competency model, what role can Emotional Intelligence (EI) play in building remarkable leaders?

Take a look at any well-developed competency model and you will likely see a mix of competencies that are either emotion-based such as Motivating Others (classically defined as “soft-skills”) or technically-based such as Business Acumen.  Here is where EI comes into play, as many of these emotion-based competencies have underpinning emotional and social skills, that when developed, help a leader execute on the broader competency. For example, developing the broader competency Motivating Others may seem vague and daunting to tackle, but by identifying the precise, underlying EI skills (e.g., interpersonal relationships, assertiveness, and empathy) leaders are able to refine their development plans and focus on skills that can often apply across an entire competency model. Can EI provide a bigger ‘bang’ for your development efforts? We say yes it can.

The EQ-i 2.0 is more relevant to leadership than ever before. Successful leaders are often seen encouraging and engaging their team to reach performance levels that exceed expectations. They facilitate and empower personal transformation in their people, but are also able to determine when situations call for a more operational approach. With new business-relevant items, EQ-i 2.0 results are related to these leadership behaviors making clear empirical and theoretical links to leadership competency models in today’s organizations.

Linking EI to leadership competency models just makes sense. It’s intuitive and holds a lot of weight with stakeholders. When validated measurements of EI are used (e.g., EQ-i 2.0), EI can provide a measureable roadmap for helping leaders reach their fullest potential.


Upcoming Webcast: The Stress Effect – Why Resilience is the New Key Competency for Leadership & How to Build It

November 17, 2010

Presented by Henry (Dick) Thompson

Webcast Details:
Date: December 14th, 2010
Time: 3:00PM ET

REGISTER HERE

View the webcast presented by Dick ThompsonThis highly relevant and insightful webcast reveals in plain terms the connection between leader success and stress, why a leader’s capacity for resilience is the NEW key competency for leadership in the 21st Century, and how to build resilience in your organization by better understanding the components of a Stress Resilient System™.

Webcast presenter and award-winning Organizational Psychologist Henry L. (Dick) Thompson, Ph.D., also shares other key findings from his groundbreaking new resource for developing leaders: The Stress Effect: Why Smart Leaders Make Dumb Decisions – and What to Do About It.

You will learn how stress impacts the brain’s Cognitive and Emotional Intelligences—the two essential qualities needed in high performance decision making—and how to build the three components of a Stress Resilient System™ using the seven best practices.

Discover next steps for integrating training and applying techniques to build resiliency for yourself and your organization. The Stress Effect offers a solid prescription for building a “stress resilient system” and arms leaders with best practices for managing specific the stressors that take the biggest toll on decision making.

This special encore presentation will be LIVE, and it was lauded by professionals in the consulting, coaching and HR professional arenas.

  • @eiconnection Good for you! @HPS_CEO knows his stuff! #eq
  • Very thought provoking—enjoyed (it)!
  • Excellent and timely presentation. Common sense things that are good to reinforce. Great quick and easy reminders to keep the focus.
  • A good session on learning the concept of stress and its management for effective performance.
  • There was a lot that I learned that I will be putting into use. To get started, I would definitely like to put in practice the stress & Emotional Intelligence test because of what we do (staffing).

Help… My Client is Brilliant! Coaching People with High IQs

September 16, 2010

 

Written by Wendy Gordon
Based on an interview with Researcher & OD Consultant Katie Ziemer, MOrgPsych
Contributing Editor: Diana Durek, M.S. Senior Advisor
 

It’s happened to nearly every coach: the moment when, just after meeting a new client, you realize this person has an incredible brain. Vocabulary, experience, expertise—perhaps even arrogance —it’s all there. And then comes the sinking feeling that you’re not sure how to work with this person.

It’s not that he’s far too successful or perfect (on the contrary, he may already be setting off your interpersonal alarm bells); it’s the gut feeling you have that you are about to put a concerted effort into this relationship, and he will stonewall every effort you make. So why the emotional wall? And more importantly, what can you do to engage this person in an effective relationship?

[Read the full article...]


From “Performance Problem” to VP: How EI Coaching Saved a Career

September 15, 2010

 

As part of our Partnership Program, we asked expert coaches about their experiences in applying the EQ-i in their coaching practices. This featured article showcases the expertise of MHS partner, Kelley Marko.

An Article by Kelley Marko, MBA, MA

A Vice President of a service organization approached me several years ago about one of his senior managers I’ll call Jim (his real name has been protected).  In my initial conversation with the VP, I was advised that Jim already had “one foot out the door.” If his behavior did not soon change, there would be no other option but to let him go.  Further discussion revealed that Jim was incredibly smart; he was a brilliant strategic thinker and often had the right intention. However, he was prone to put people off with his abrasive nature and he frequently created a high-stress work environment for others.  Despite these challenges the VP was not yet willing to give up on Jim. Instead, the VP was intrigued by the opportunity of supporting Jim in developing his EI through executive coaching as a way to deal with this challenging problem.  Jim and I met, and we began a coaching relationship after several frank discussions.  Two years later, Jim has not only kept his job, but was subsequently promoted to a Vice President position based on the significant turnaround in his leadership behavior that he credits in large part to the focused development of his EI. 

The following phases of development  were developed from my education and trial-and-error experiences as a professional executive coach that helped support Jim along his journey, and they may help others who are faced with a similar challenge.

Phase 1: Ensuring Suitability, Willingness and Proper Motivation for Coaching
The first step with Jim was to ensure that he actually wanted to be coached and was not doing this simply just to please his boss or as a quick fix to save his job.  Experience has taught me that if the coachee is not fully committed to the hard work, a natural part of personal development, then coaching will not be successful.  Also, focusing on the future and how things would be better for Jim and others  was more helpful than focusing strictlyon what he was doing wrong today.  Educating Jim about what coaching is and is not and what he could realistically expect to experience through a personal development process supported Jim in making his own decision on whether to proceed.  Establishing an environment of strict privacy and confidentiality between the two of us also allowed Jim to be vulnerable, more open and honest about balancing his wants and needs with those of the business through our upfront discussions and our ongoing coaching relationship. 

Phase 2:  Up Front Orientation, Assessment and Specific Goal Setting
Before we could begin our official coaching sessions we needed to establish where Jim was at day zero.  To find out, Jim spent the first month doing activities that included EQ-i and 360 assessments, a personality type assessment, and reflective questionnaires.  As we debriefed these assessments and questionnaires, Jim benefited from starting to see common data points from many different sources that he translated into common themes of both strength and development.  We acknowledged that it would be impossible for Jim to address all identified themes, so we then worked through a process to help him choose the three most meaningful and important objectives that he wanted for himself through coaching.   This approach ensured several things:

  • Jim was driving the process
  • It was in his own language
  • It was aligned with his motivations while still meeting organizational needs
  • We could continue to measure progress over time.   

Phase 3: Ongoing Coaching Plus Measurement Against Progress Over Time
Ongoing coaching with Jim consisted of no less than two sessions per month. Several things helped Jim be successful through the process of coaching and the hard work of personal development:

  • Committing to full engagement in the process by authentically wanting to be coached to develop his EI
  • Focusing on the future and how things would be better for him and others helped anchor his willingness to proceed
  • Being realistic about the time required to achieve noticeable behavior change
  • Acknowledging that he was not engaging in easy work and giving himself permission to struggle as part of his development 
  • Balancing transparency with confidentiality by allowing Jim to determine what specific details he wanted to share about our sessions with others including his boss
  • Sharing his coaching objectives with his boss and other key identified stakeholders in his development so that they had a sense of what he was working on such that they were less likely to misinterpret his behavior as he tried new things
  • Teaching others in the workplace about some of the tools, techniques and frameworks that he was learning about through coaching
  • Asking “what worked well?” and “what would you do differently next time?” to reinforce his learning and development
  • Checking in on progress against his three specific goals and objectives on a regular basis and changing or augmenting these objectives when needed
  • Celebrating his successes and not letting him off the hook with his accountabilities and commitments in mind during coaching

Today, Jim is a successful executive who truly appreciates the value of emotional intelligence in his workplace.

ABOUT Kelley Marko MBA, MA, Consultant, EQ Coach and Learning Facilitator

Kelley is President of Marko Consulting Services Inc., a leading Canadian firm working with organizations worldwide in developing high-performance leaders and enabling sustainable and meaningful change. Kelley’s ultimate focus is to move his clients to strategic and informed action that impacts the bottom line.

Kelley draws on his prior experience as a professional management consultant with PriceWaterhouseCoopers and partnership with McKinsey in the area of organization and change strategy.

Kelley is also a Professional Executive Coach and a Master Trainer and Coach of Emotional Intelligence (EQ). He has had the pleasure of working with organizations in North America, Central America and Europe and has worked with hundreds of leaders across diverse industries to improve their skills and competencies and improve the success of change initiatives within their organizations.


Why Smart Leaders Make Dumb Decisions

July 12, 2010

 

New Book Links Emotional Intelligence to Stress and Decision Making

The Stress Effect: Why Smart Leaders Make Dumb Decisions—And What to Do About It (Jossey-Bass, May 2010) integrates the most powerful concepts that are shaping the future of leadership and business, such as stress, decision making, emotional intelligence, cognitive ability, and brain science. This book is endorsed by MHS president, Dr. Steven Stein and other well-respected EI practitioners, including Reuven Bar-On, Richard Boyatzis, David Caruso and Marcia Hughes. This latest addition to the EI literature is a must-read for all leaders.

In The Stress Effect, emotional intelligence and leadership expert Dr. Henry L. Thompson explores the powerful and undermining effects of stress on good decision making and what leaders can do to improve their decision-making effectiveness—especially when stressed. Dr. Thompson explains that when leaders’ stress levels become sufficiently elevated—whether in the boardroom, the classroom or on the front line of a manufacturing process—their ability to effectively use their emotional intelligence and cognitive ability in tandem to make wise decisions is significantly impaired. Until now, experts have argued that increasing your emotional intelligence will help you cope with and manage stress. The Stress Effect shows that stress actually blocks access to your emotional intelligence as well as your cognitive ability, two critical components in the decision-making process.

The Stress Effect shows leaders how to build resilience to stress and explores a variety of decision-making techniques as well as performance aids to improve decision making under stress. The book includes a free assessment of the seven best practices (ARSENAL) for building Stress Resilience to evaluate your stress hardiness.

Book reviewer Michelle K. Malsbury has this to say about The Stress Effect:

“This was one of the best books on leadership and stress that I have ever had the pleasure to read and review. I would suggest it as a text for all leadership, management, and business courses at the Masters level and above in universities around the world.”

For more information, visit www.thestresseffect.com.


May’s Quick Poll Results:

June 1, 2010

 


Join our HCI Webcast: Leadership and Emotional Intelligence

January 29, 2009

This year we will again be sponsoring the Human Capital Institute’s Emotional Intelligence and Human Capital learning track. To kick off 2009, on Wednesday March 11 renowned leadership expert Jim Kouzes will present a webcast entitled “Leadership Is a Relationship: How Emotional Intelligence Is a Prerequisite to Exemplary Leadership.” Jim Kouzes is the co-author of the internationally award-winning and best-selling book, The Leadership Challenge with Barry Posner. Those of you who joined us at ICEI 2008 will recognize Jim from the memorable keynote address that he delivered at the conference, and those of you who were not fortunate enough to see him at the conference should definitely not miss this opportunity to hear Jim speak. Register now  for the webcast.

Though it is free to participate in live HCI webcasts like Jim’s, only professional members of HCI can view recorded webcasts after the fact and access other HCI features like whitepapers and human capital research. Normally individuals seeking to access these additional materials would have to pay a membership fee, but as an HCI sponsor, MHS makes available a certain number of free memberships every year. If you are interested in a free HCI membership, please contact Diana Durek .


HCI Webcast: Richard Boyatzis on Effective Leadership

November 28, 2008

Join us for the next installment in our ongoing series of EI webcasts with the Human Capital Institute on Tuesday December 2. The presenter for this webcast is Dr. Richard Boyatzis, a professor of Organizational Behavior and Psychology at Case Western Reserve University. He is the author of more than 125 articles on behavior change, leadership, competencies, and Emotional Intelligence, as well as several books including international best-seller Primal Leadership: Realizing the Power of Emotional Intelligence, which he co-authored with Daniel Goleman and Annie McKee.

Dr. Boyatzis’ topic,  How Effective Leaders Coach with Compassion (vs. Coach for Compliance) , will highlight the deep, resonant emotional connections that leaders develop with those around them. He will discuss the role of Emotional Intelligence in creating and nurturing these resonant relationships through mindfulness, hope and compassion. Those attending the webcast will take away an understanding of the following:

  • The central role of compassion in reasonant leadership 
  • Why coaching with compassion (vs. coaching for compliance) is effective in helping people sustain change 
  • Why compassion is crucial to the sustainability of the leader-coach 
  • How to coach others to develop EI and resonant leadership

The webcast will take place Tuesday December 2nd, 2008 from 2:00 to 3:00 pm Eastern Time, and you can register now for the live event. Registration is free, even if you are not currently an HCI member, so we hope to have many of our EI Insider readers register. For more information on the webcast, visit the HCI site.


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