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June 22nd. Course Administration LPA CPIA Video - EI In Action Emotional Intelligence Lecture BREAK Group Exercise .
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June 22nd • Course Administration • LPA • CPIA • Video - EI In Action • Emotional Intelligence Lecture • BREAK • Group Exercise
Most job-hunters who fail to master the job-hunt or find their dream job, fail not because they lack information about the job market, but because they lack information about themselves. -Richard Nelson Bolles Let’s Self-Discover!
CPIA Assignment Point Breakdown • Completion of Linked In Profile – 50 points • Completion of Panel Interview – 25 points • Resume – 25 points • Behavioral Interviewing -25 points • Career Awareness Worksheet – 25 points • Job Position Ad – 25 points • Peer Evaluation – 25 points • Total Points – 200 points • Page 12-Syllabus
Weekly Book Recommendation Morton Meyerson, CEO of Perot Systems wrote an article entitled, “Everything I thought I knew about leadership was wrong, my first job as a leader was to create a new understanding of myself.” p.62 Goleman, D. (1998). Working with emotional intelligence. New York: Bantam Books.
Weekly Book Recommendation “It’s one reason emotionally intelligent leaders attract talented people – for the pleasure of working in their presence. Conversely, leaders who emit the negative register – who are irritable, touchy, domineering, cold repel people. No one wants to work for a grouch. Research has proven it: Optimistic, enthusiastic leaders more easily retain their people, compared with those bosses who tend toward negative moods.” p.12 Goleman, D., Boyatzis, R. & McKee, A. (2002). Primal Leadership: Learning to Lead with Emotional Intelligence
EI Competencies • Self-Awareness • Self-Management • Social Awareness • Relationship Management EI (from Primal Leadership Goleman, Boyatzis and McKee 2002)
AN OVERVIEW OF EMOTIONAL COMPETENCIES Daniel Goleman
Self-AwarenessKnowing one’s internal states, preferences, resources and intuitions • Emotional Self-Awareness • Accurate Self-Assessment • Realistic Self-Confidence
Knowing one’s internal states, preferences, resources and intuitions • Emotional Self-Awareness – Recognize your own inner signals, note how decisions and values match • Accurate Self-Assessment – Know your real limits and strengths, be graceful in learning, know when to ask for help • Realistic Self-Confidence – Be willing and able to play to your strengths, admit you have them!
Social AwarenessAwareness of other’s feelings, needs, concerns and the currents, networks and politics of the organization • Empathy • Organizational Awareness • Service Orientation
Awareness of other’s feelings, needs, concerns and the currents, networks and politics of the organization • Empathy – Listen, attune, grasp other’s perspectives • Organizational Awareness –Understanding organization politics being able to be politicallyastute, know the values and unspoken rules • External Awareness – Being aware of others around you and how you effect them.
Awareness of one’s effect on others, ability to work effectively and efficiently with others • Inspirational – Embody what you ask of others • Influence – Be persuasive and engaging • Developing Others – Cultivate people’s abilities • Change Catalyst – Recognize the need for change, challenge the status quo • Conflict Management – acknowledge and redirect • Building Bonds – Cultivate the web of relationships • Teamwork & Collaboration – Be a model of respect, helpfulness and cooperation
What does it mean to “manage” oneself?TURN TO YOUR NEIGHBOR AND SHARE AN EXAMPLEOF SELF-MANAGEMENT:1) WHEN YOU DID 2) WHEN YOU DIDN’T
SELF MANAGEMENT • Emotional self-control: keeping disruptive emotions and impulses under control • Transparency: Displaying honesty and integrity; trustworthiness • Adaptability: flexibility in adapting to changing situations or overcoming obstacles • Achievement: The drive to improve performance to meet inner standards of excellence. • Initiative: Readiness to act and seize opportunities • Optimism: Seeing the upside in events
Managing one’s internal states, impulses and resources Emotional Self-Control –Manage your own disturbing emotions, stay calm and clear-headed Transparency –Live your values, admit mistakes, never turn a blind eye Optimism – Roll with the punches, expect the best of everyone. Adaptability – Flexible, nimble, fluid, comfortable with ambiguity Innovation – Seize opportunities, or create them Achievement – Continually learning – and teaching– ways to do things better
Do you have self-management? Would others say you have it?
Relationship Management • Inspirational • Influence • Developing Others • Change Catalyst • Conflict Management • Building Bonds • Teamwork & Collaboration Awareness of one’s effect on others, ability to work effectively and efficiently with others
RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT • Inspirational leadership: Guiding and motivating with a compelling vision • Influence: Wielding a range of tactics for persuasion • Developing others: Bolstering others’ abilities through feedback and guidance. • Change catalyst: Initiating, managing, and leading in a new direction • Conflict management: resolving disagreements • Building bonds: Cultivating and maintaining a web of relationships • Teamwork and collaboration: cooperation and team building.
Relationship ManagementWhy is it important? • Co-workers • Customers • Family • Friends
Group Exercise • Discuss whether or not you believe EI is more important than IQ, why or why not? • Share your highest EI score and share why you think you scored so well in this area. • Share your lowest EI score and share why you think you scored so low in this area. • How do you think you can increase these scores?
Industry Groups • Select a team lead • Exchange each other’s contact information • Write down the name of your group and list everyone who is in your group and turn in before you leave tonight.