We can apply many of these negotiation concepts to conflict negotiation, which we will study in Unit 4 – a key predictor of poor leadership is the lack of emotional intelligence, self-awareness, and self-control. Emotional intelligence skills can improve business outcomes by helping managers make decisions more quickly with value-based results and solutions. This helps businesses run more smoothly and keeps leadership and management connected to front-line staff, customers, and vendors.
British politician, Andrew
Mitchell is clearly a highly intelligent man. He's well-educated, good
at his job and was once tipped for the political heights. But his
behaviour that came to light as a result of the "Plebgate" saga showed
him to lack another ingredient which is increasingly being seen as vital
in an effective leader: emotional intelligence.
Emotional
intelligence has been touted to matter as much as IQ. The concept
started to gain popularity in the 1990s and has been the subject of much
debate within academic circles, as well as organisations, over what it
constitutes and its significance. Research has tended to focus on
showing the value of high emotional intelligence to leaders and
organisations. My research also considers the relationship between a
lack of emotional intelligence and leadership failures.
Defining
the concept of emotional intelligence is an issue in itself. Is it about
traits? Is it about competency? Is it really an “intelligence" or is it
about ability? If it is about traits or competencies, which traits and
competencies comprise our emotional intelligence? If it's about the way
you relate to other people, then isn't it more to do with social
intelligence than emotional intelligence? There does tend to be
agreement, however, that both self-awareness and an ability to regulate
how you act on your emotions are crucial components of emotional
intelligence.
Beyond the Soft and Fluffy
Within organisations, debate is
often more centred on how something that sounds so soft and fluffy can
really contribute to leadership success. For those organisations where
strategic thinking, rational decision making and financial results are
prized above all else, emotional intelligence can sound a bit too
woolly.
The research suggesting that it does contribute is
compelling and is typified by a study of more than 300 managers, which
found superior performers scored higher in all emotional intelligence
attributes including self-awareness and self-management. The Consortium
for Research on Emotional Intelligence in Organisations summarises much
of the early research into emotional intelligence, making a clear link
between emotional intelligence and an organisation's ability to meet its
bottom line.
Learning From Low Emotional Intelligence
Interestingly the focus of much of the research is on demonstrating the relationship between high emotional intelligence and leadership success. We can however learn as much, if not more, about the importance of emotional intelligence to leadership success through observing those that fail to demonstrate it. Lack of emotional intelligence – in particular lack of self awareness and self control – are key leadership derailers.
Andrew Mitchell, former government chief whip.
Andrew Mitchell's fall from grace
is far from the only example of a politician derailed through
momentarily lapses of emotional intelligence or an overall lack of it –
and in the past year we've seen other high-profile cases, including the
demise of Paul Flowers, former chairman of Co-op Bank, largely as a
result of dysfunctional behaviours. There is a harsh reality to lack of
emotional intelligence in leaders.
Losing Self Control
In leadership development and
talent management the predominant focus on strengths and positive traits
or attributes leads to an overall lack of understanding of the causes
of derailment. For many leaders, it is their response to difficult,
challenging or stressful events that is the significant contributor.
When under stress, both our self-awareness and our emotional
self-control are challenged.
In stressful situations our brain's
primitive fight-or-flight reflex, our amygdala, is triggered. In the
grip of our emotional reaction we can lose perspective – particularly,
an awareness of how our emotions are directing our behaviour – and lack
the self-control to step back, evaluate and regroup. It's in these
situations we say and do things we regret later when we're calm. We've
probably all been through this at some point in our lives. For leaders
however, poor self-awareness, losing perspective and lack of
self-control can have significant consequences.
It Starts with Self Awareness
For leaders, self-awareness is
crucial to developing emotional intelligence and preventing derailment.
Simply knowing our own values, attitudes, beliefs and motivators goes
some way to helping us to understand our own behaviour and, in
particular, how we respond when these values feel compromised.
Recognising what triggers our stress response and pre-empting this
before we're in the grip helps us to maintain composure and control.
With
clear evidence linking high emotional intelligence to high performance
in leaders, and regular illustrations of high-profile leaders derailing
due to the lack of emotional intelligence, there is a compelling case
for leaders to focus attention on developing emotional intelligence in
order to sustain leadership success.
Source: Suzanne Ross, https://theconversation.com/explainer-what-is-emotional-intelligence-and-why-do-you-need-it-36437 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.