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The Emotionally Intelligent Director Emotions drive people – people drive performance

The Emotionally Intelligent Director Emotions drive people – people drive performance .

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The Emotionally Intelligent Director Emotions drive people – people drive performance

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  1. The Emotionally Intelligent DirectorEmotions drive people – people drive performance “In the fields I have studied, emotional intelligence is much more powerful than IQ in determining who emerges as a leader. IQ is a threshold competence. You need it, but it doesn't make you a star. Emotional Intelligence can.” Warren Bennis leadership pioneer, author and researcher.

  2. What exactly is EQ? Emotions- the feelings, reactions a person often has, in response to a real or imagined relationship. Intelligence- the ability to reason with, or about, something. Emotional Intelligence - a scientifically validated function of the human brain to process and utilize emotional information. Being smart with feelings Howard Gardiner’s - Multiple Intelligences Mathematical Intelligence helps us solve mathematical problems Emotional Intelligence helps us solve people challenges

  3. Neurobiology - emotions as data Emotional intelligence : Not an abstract notion – grounded in neurobiology.  Emotions are: • Neural hormones • Long chains of amino acids – hippocampus, pituitary, blood • Brain but also heart, gut, spine • Into the blood stream via capillaries and carry ‘keys’ • Feedback loops • Feedback in the body and between bodies

  4. Amygdala Hijack

  5. ‘E-motions’ - energy in motion Key emotions 1. Anger 4. Fear 2. Disgust 5. Sadness 3. Surprise 6. Happiness Characterised by – • High intensity • Short duration • Highly conscious of content • Situation specific

  6. Darwinian - adaptive • Fear motivates protection. • Anger motivates attack. • Joy motivates connection. • Disgust motivates rejection. • Trust motivates stepping forward. • Sorrow motivates withdrawing. • Surprise motivates stopping to assess. • Anticipation motivates looking forward. There are myriad combinations of these expressed in thousands of words for feelings.

  7. Various Models – MSCEIT MSCEIT/EQ – “The capacity to reason with emotions and emotional signals and to the capacity of emotion to enhance thought” Mayor, Salovey and Caruso suggest - • Emotions contain valuable information and are sophisticated • People think with emotions and about emotions • There is a skill and knowledge involved in emotion • People differ in these skills • These differences appear to have some impact

  8. MSCEIT – Assessment Task The Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test (MSCEIT) is an ability-based test designed to measure the four branches of the EI model of Mayer and Salovey. R U U M • Recognising • Understanding • Using • Managing

  9. MSCEIT – Recognising Emotions • The ability to perceive emotions in oneself and others • The ability to perceive emotions in objects, art, stories, music, and other stimuli. • Ability to express emotions accurately

  10. MSCEIT – Using Emotions The ability to generate, use, and feel emotion as necessary to communicate feelings or employ them in other cognitive processes • Generate emotions to solve problems • Emotions prioritise thinking • Emotions direct a person’s attention • Moods impact on reasoning

  11. MSCEIT – Understanding Emotions The ability to generate, use, and feel emotion as necessary to communicate feelings or employ them in other cognitive processes • Labelling emotions • Understanding emotions and emotional relationships of various intensity and similarity • Understanding complex feelings • Understanding transitions between emotions

  12. MSCEIT – Managing Emotions The ability to understand emotional information, to understand how emotions combine and progress through relationship transitions, and to appreciate such emotional meanings. • Effective regulation of emotions • Open to feeling • Engaging and detaching at appropriate times • Appropriate mood • Not exaggerating or minimising emotions • Regulate moods – process • Manage emotions in oneself and others

  13. Goleman et al – EQ Broad Brush Emotional literacy is the capacity to – • accurately access, name, and understand feelings. • interpret core drivers of behaviour. • managing reactive behaviour • drive decision making

  14. 1. Self Awareness Competencies - • Read how you feel and how your emotions/actions have consequences • Know your strengths and weaknesses • Humble Improvement strategies - • Keep a journal • Slow down – and choose how you react to it. • Be open to feedback • Meditation

  15. 2. Self Regulation – at cause not effect Competencies - • Rarely:verbally attack others, make rushed or emotional decisions, stereotype people, compromise personal values, • Usually:flexible and committed to personal accountability Improvement Strategies - • Know your values, review your code of ethics • Be accountable – admit mistakes and face the consequences • Practice calm – be aware of how you act under pressure • Practice meditation, breathing, • Write down all of the negative things you want to say + and -

  16. 3. Self Motivation “The level of your energy is directly proportional to the clarity of your purpose” Competency: • Goal oriented and very high standards Improvementstrategy: • Review goals • Check they resonate with your values • Work on self efficacy

  17. 4. Social Skills Competencies - • Communicate • Manage change • Resolve conflicts diplomatically • Management by walking • Consequential thinking Improvement Strategies - • Open to feedback and open to adult education • Manage stress

  18. If you can’t manage your emotions you can’t manage the markets’ “A leader's intelligence has to have a strong emotional component. They has to have high levels of self-awareness, maturity and self-control. They must be able to withstand the heat, handle setbacks and when those lucky momentsarise, enjoy success with equal parts of joy and humility. No doubt emotional intelligence is more rare than book smarts, but my experience says it is actually more important in the making of a leader. You just can't ignore it.” Jack Welch Chairman of General Electric (Wall Street Journal)

  19. Business case “Leaders are learning that emotional intelligence isn’t just a new label for sales techniques or a repackaging of feel-good aphorism — they’re coming to recognize emotional intelligence as a core skill-set, grounded in science, that underlies performance, and they’re committing to bring these assets on board.” AICD: Top tips for Non-Executive Directors - Number One - Understand Yourself (WA Dir. Issue 45)

  20. Board Accord “Aligning aspiration and outcome for profit, people and planet” Robert Gordon BEd M Coun GAICD Director of Programs 0405 541 510 robert@boardaccord.com.au www.boardaccord.com.au

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