Emotional Intelligence: Use Cases
Emotional Intelligence: Use Cases
Emotional
balance can assist maintain our health and wellbeing, but poisonous emotions
can put our physical health at danger in the same way that chain smoking does.
These concepts are discussed in the article "Emotional intelligence for
on-the-job success” (Goleman, D. 2001)
Managers
and HR specialists need to take into account the general factors that affect
how people behave at work, emotional intelligence in a variety of ways in daily
life. Various techniques for developing emotional intelligence include: (Armstrong,
2014).
·
Accepting
responsibility and criticism,
·
being
able to move on after making a mistake,
·
and
being able to refuse requests, when necessary,
·
Having
empathy for other people,
·
communicating
your sentiments to others,
·
and
being able to find solutions to challenges that benefit everyone
·
Knowing
why you act the way you do,
·
having
excellent listening skills,
·
and
refraining from passing judgment on others.
Effective
interpersonal communication requires emotional intelligence. According to some
experts, this talent plays a larger role in determining success in life than IQ
alone. You can, thankfully, take steps to improve your own social and emotional
intelligence (Goleman, 2004)
Understanding
emotions may hold the key to more satisfying connections, increased wellbeing,
and greater communication, Managers and team leaders have the primary duty for
maximizing employee performance through effective leadership, they should also be
aware of the following more specific factors that influence behavior and
therefore performance: (Armstrong, 2014).
●
Motivation – the strength and direction of behavior and the factors that
influence people to behave in certain ways.
● Commitment – the strength of an individual’s
identification with, and involvement in, an organization.
● Engagement – a situation in which people are
committed to their work and the organization and are motivated to achieve high
levels of performance
The
performance of a work team is just as important to an organization's success as
the performance of an individual. Working in a team can occasionally be very
difficult because it involves disagreements among group members, a lack of
engagement, the sharing of resources and ideas, etc. Each of these problems
tends to reduce the efficacy of the team (Deepesh R, 2021).
References
Armstrong, M., 2014. ARMSTRONG’S Handbook of human
resource management practice. 13 ed. united kingdom: s.n.
Deepesh, R., 2021.
Emotional intelligence in the workplace. Indian Journal of Positive
Psychology, pp. 162-165.
Goleman, D. (2001). THE EMOTIONALLY
INTELLIGENT WORKPLACE How to Select for, Measure, and Improve Emotional Intelligence
in Individuals, Groups, and Organizations.Jossey-Bass.
Goleman, D., 2004. What Makes a Leader?. Harvard Bussiness Review.
Good concept and content Ameen. In addition, the ability to keep track of one's own and others' emotions, to distinguish between them, and to utilize that knowledge to inform one's decisions and behavior is known as emotional intelligence (Salovey & Mayer, 1990).
ReplyDeleteThank you Kandeepan for your valuable input, Emotional commitment has four times the ability to influence performance as its more practical counterpart because it develops when employees respect, enjoy, and believe in the work they accomplish (Wellins and Concelman, 2005)
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