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What Makes a Leader?

2015-11-17 09:13:43

Daniel Goleman

Every businessperson knows a story about a highly intelligent, highly skilled

executive who was promoted into a leadership position only to fail at the job.

And they also know a story about someone with solid but not extraordinary

intellectual abilities and technical skills who was promoted into a similar

position and then soared.

Such anecdotes support the widespread belief that identifying individuals with

the right stuff to be leaders is more art than science. After all, the

personal styles of superb leaders vary: Some leaders are subdued and

analytical; others shout their manifestos from the mountaintops. And just as

important, different situations call for different types of leadership. Most

mergers need a sensitive negotiator at the helm, whereas many turnarounds

require a more forceful authority.

I have found, however, that the most effective leaders are alike in one crucial

way: They all have a high degree of what has come to be known as emotional

intelligence. It s not that IQ and technical skills are irrelevant. They do

matter, but mainly as threshold capabilities ; that is, they are the

entry-level requirements for executive positions. But my research, along with

other recent studies, clearly shows that emotional intelligence is the sine qua

non of leadership. Without it, a person can have the best training in the

world, an incisive, analytical mind, and an endless supply of smart ideas, but

he still won t make a great leader.

In the course of the past year, my colleagues and I have focused on how

emotional intelligence operates at work. We have examined the relationship

between emotional intelligence and effective performance, especially in

leaders. And we have observed how emotional intelligence shows itself on the

job. How can you tell if someone has high emotional intelligence, for example,

and how can you recognize it in yourself? In the following pages, we ll explore

these questions, taking each of the components of emotional intelligence

self-awareness, self-regulation, motivation, empathy, and social skill in turn.

Evaluating Emotional Intelligence

Most large companies today have employed trained psychologists to develop what

are known as competency models to aid them in identifying, training, and

promoting likely stars in the leadership firmament. The psychologists have also

developed such models for lower-level positions. And in recent years, I have

analyzed competency models from 188 companies, most of which were large and

global and included the likes of Lucent Technologies, British Airways, and

Credit Suisse.

In carrying out this work, my objective was to determine which personal

capabilities drove outstanding performance within these organizations, and to

what degree they did so. I grouped capabilities into three categories: purely

technical skills like accounting and business planning; cognitive abilities

like analytical reasoning; and competencies demonstrating emotional

intelligence, such as the ability to work with others and effectiveness in

leading change.

To create some of the competency models, psychologists asked senior managers at

the companies to identify the capabilities that typified the organization s

most outstanding leaders. To create other models, the psychologists used

objective criteria, such as a division s profitability, to differentiate the

star performers at senior levels within their organizations from the average

ones. Those individuals were then extensively interviewed and tested, and their

capabilities were compared. This process resulted in the creation of lists of

ingredients for highly effective leaders. The lists ranged in length from seven

to 15 items and included such ingredients as initiative and strategic vision.

When I analyzed all this data, I found dramatic results. To be sure, intellect

was a driver of outstanding performance. Cognitive skills such as big-picture

thinking and long-term vision were particularly important. But when I

calculated the ratio of technical skills, IQ, and emotional intelligence as

ingredients of excellent performance, emotional intelligence proved to be twice

as important as the others for jobs at all levels.

Moreover, my analysis showed that emotional intelligence played an increasingly

important role at the highest levels of the company, where differences in

technical skills are of negligible importance. In other words, the higher the

rank of a person considered to be a star performer, the more emotional

intelligence capabilities showed up as the reason for his or her effectiveness.

When I compared star performers with average ones in senior leadership

positions, nearly 90% of the difference in their profiles was attributable to

emotional intelligence factors rather than cognitive abilities.

Other researchers have confirmed that emotional intelligence not only

distinguishes outstanding leaders but can also be linked to strong performance.

The findings of the late David McClelland, the renowned researcher in human and

organizational behavior, are a good example. In a 1996 study of a global food

and beverage company, McClelland found that when senior managers had a critical

mass of emotional intelligence capabilities, their divisions outperformed

yearly earnings goals by 20%. Meanwhile, division leaders without that critical

mass underperformed by almost the same amount. McClelland s findings,

interestingly, held as true in the company s U.S. divisions as in its divisions

in Asia and Europe.

In short, the numbers are beginning to tell us a persuasive story about the

link between a company s success and the emotional intelligence of its leaders.

And just as important, research is also demonstrating that people can, if they

take the right approach, develop their emotional intelligence. (See the sidebar

Can Emotional Intelligence Be Learned? )

Self-Awareness

Self-awareness is the first component of emotional intelligence which makes

sense when one considers that the Delphic oracle gave the advice to know

thyself thousands of years ago. Self-awareness means having a deep

understanding of one s emotions, strengths, weaknesses, needs, and drives.

People with strong self-awareness are neither overly critical nor

unrealistically hopeful. Rather, they are honest with themselves and with

others.

People who have a high degree of self-awareness recognize how their feelings

affect them, other people, and their job performance. Thus, a self-aware person

who knows that tight deadlines bring out the worst in him plans his time

carefully and gets his work done well in advance. Another person with high

self-awareness will be able to work with a demanding client. She will

understand the client s impact on her moods and the deeper reasons for her

frustration. Their trivial demands take us away from the real work that needs

to be done, she might explain. And she will go one step further and turn her

anger into something constructive.

Self-awareness extends to a person s understanding of his or her values and

goals. Someone who is highly self-aware knows where he is headed and why; so,

for example, he will be able to be firm in turning down a job offer that is

tempting financially but does not fit with his principles or long-term goals. A

person who lacks self-awareness is apt to make decisions that bring on inner

turmoil by treading on buried values. The money looked good so I signed on,

someone might say two years into a job, but the work means so little to me

that I m constantly bored. The decisions of self-aware people mesh with their

values; consequently, they often find work to be energizing.

How can one recognize self-awareness? First and foremost, it shows itself as

candor and an ability to assess oneself realistically. People with high

self-awareness are able to speak accurately and openly although not necessarily

effusively or confessionally about their emotions and the impact they have on

their work. For instance, one manager I know of was skeptical about a new

personal-shopper service that her company, a major department-store chain, was

about to introduce. Without prompting from her team or her boss, she offered

them an explanation: It s hard for me to get behind the rollout of this

service, she admitted, because I really wanted to run the project, but I wasn

t selected. Bear with me while I deal with that. The manager did indeed

examine her feelings; a week later, she was supporting the project fully.

Such self-knowledge often shows itself in the hiring process. Ask a candidate

to describe a time he got carried away by his feelings and did something he

later regretted. Self-aware candidates will be frank in admitting to failure

and will often tell their tales with a smile. One of the hallmarks of

self-awareness is a self-deprecating sense of humor.

Self-awareness can also be identified during performance reviews. Self-aware

people know and are comfortable talking about their limitations and strengths,

and they often demonstrate a thirst for constructive criticism. By contrast,

people with low self-awareness interpret the message that they need to improve

as a threat or a sign of failure.

Self-aware people can also be recognized by their self-confidence. They have a

firm grasp of their capabilities and are less likely to set themselves up to

fail by, for example, overstretching on assignments. They know, too, when to

ask for help. And the risks they take on the job are calculated. They won t ask

for a challenge that they know they can t handle alone. They ll play to their

strengths.

Consider the actions of a midlevel employee who was invited to sit in on a

strategy meeting with her company s top executives. Although she was the most

junior person in the room, she did not sit there quietly, listening in

awestruck or fearful silence. She knew she had a head for clear logic and the

skill to present ideas persuasively, and she offered cogent suggestions about

the company s strategy. At the same time, her self-awareness stopped her from

wandering into territory where she knew she was weak.

Despite the value of having self-aware people in the workplace, my research

indicates that senior executives don t often give self-awareness the credit it

deserves when they look for potential leaders. Many executives mistake candor

about feelings for wimpiness and fail to give due respect to employees who

openly acknowledge their shortcomings. Such people are too readily dismissed as

not tough enough to lead others.

In fact, the opposite is true. In the first place, people generally admire and

respect candor. Furthermore, leaders are constantly required to make judgment

calls that require a candid assessment of capabilities their own and those of

others. Do we have the management expertise to acquire a competitor? Can we

launch a new product within six months? People who assess themselves honestly

that is, self-aware people are well suited to do the same for the organizations

they run.

Self-Regulation

Biological impulses drive our emotions. We cannot do away with them but we can

do much to manage them. Self-regulation, which is like an ongoing inner

conversation, is the component of emotional intelligence that frees us from

being prisoners of our feelings. People engaged in such a conversation feel bad

moods and emotional impulses just as everyone else does, but they find ways to

control them and even to channel them in useful ways.

Imagine an executive who has just watched a team of his employees present a

botched analysis to the company s board of directors. In the gloom that

follows, the executive might find himself tempted to pound on the table in

anger or kick over a chair. He could leap up and scream at the group. Or he

might maintain a grim silence, glaring at everyone before stalking off.

But if he had a gift for self-regulation, he would choose a different approach.

He would pick his words carefully, acknowledging the team s poor performance

without rushing to any hasty judgment. He would then step back to consider the

reasons for the failure. Are they personal a lack of effort? Are there any

mitigating factors? What was his role in the debacle? After considering these

questions, he would call the team together, lay out the incident s

consequences, and offer his feelings about it. He would then present his

analysis of the problem and a well-considered solution.

Why does self-regulation matter so much for leaders? First of all, people who

are in control of their feelings and impulses that is, people who are

reasonable are able to create an environment of trust and fairness. In such an

environment, politics and infighting are sharply reduced and productivity is

high. Talented people flock to the organization and aren t tempted to leave.

And self-regulation has a trickle-down effect. No one wants to be known as a

hothead when the boss is known for her calm approach. Fewer bad moods at the

top mean fewer throughout the organization.

Second, self-regulation is important for competitive reasons. Everyone knows

that business today is rife with ambiguity and change. Companies merge and

break apart regularly. Technology transforms work at a dizzying pace. People

who have mastered their emotions are able to roll with the changes. When a new

program is announced, they don t panic; instead, they are able to suspend

judgment, seek out information, and listen to the executives as they explain

the new program. As the initiative moves forward, these people are able to move

with it.

Sometimes they even lead the way. Consider the case of a manager at a large

manufacturing company. Like her colleagues, she had used a certain software

program for five years. The program drove how she collected and reported data

and how she thought about the company s strategy. One day, senior executives

announced that a new program was to be installed that would radically change

how information was gathered and assessed within the organization. While many

people in the company complained bitterly about how disruptive the change would

be, the manager mulled over the reasons for the new program and was convinced

of its potential to improve performance. She eagerly attended training sessions

some of her colleagues refused to do so and was eventually promoted to run

several divisions, in part because she used the new technology so effectively.

I want to push the importance of self-regulation to leadership even further and

make the case that it enhances integrity, which is not only a personal virtue

but also an organizational strength. Many of the bad things that happen in

companies are a function of impulsive behavior. People rarely plan to

exaggerate profits, pad expense accounts, dip into the till, or abuse power for

selfish ends. Instead, an opportunity presents itself, and people with low

impulse control just say yes.

By contrast, consider the behavior of the senior executive at a large food

company. The executive was scrupulously honest in his negotiations with local

distributors. He would routinely lay out his cost structure in detail, thereby

giving the distributors a realistic understanding of the company s pricing.

This approach meant the executive couldn t always drive a hard bargain. Now, on

occasion, he felt the urge to increase profits by withholding information about

the company s costs. But he challenged that impulse he saw that it made more

sense in the long run to counteract it. His emotional self-regulation paid off

in strong, lasting relationships with distributors that benefited the company

more than any short-term financial gains would have.

The signs of emotional self-regulation, therefore, are easy to see: a

propensity for reflection and thoughtfulness; comfort with ambiguity and

change; and integrity an ability to say no to impulsive urges.

Like self-awareness, self-regulation often does not get its due. People who can

master their emotions are sometimes seen as cold fish their considered

responses are taken as a lack of passion. People with fiery temperaments are

frequently thought of as classic leaders their outbursts are considered

hallmarks of charisma and power. But when such people make it to the top, their

impulsiveness often works against them. In my research, extreme displays of

negative emotion have never emerged as a driver of good leadership.

Motivation

If there is one trait that virtually all effective leaders have, it is

motivation. They are driven to achieve beyond expectations their own and

everyone else s. The key word here is achieve. Plenty of people are motivated

by external factors, such as a big salary or the status that comes from having

an impressive title or being part of a prestigious company. By contrast, those

with leadership potential are motivated by a deeply embedded desire to achieve

for the sake of achievement.

If you are looking for leaders, how can you identify people who are motivated

by the drive to achieve rather than by external rewards? The first sign is a

passion for the work itself such people seek out creative challenges, love to

learn, and take great pride in a job well done. They also display an unflagging

energy to do things better. People with such energy often seem restless with

the status quo. They are persistent with their questions about why things are

done one way rather than another; they are eager to explore new approaches to

their work.

A cosmetics company manager, for example, was frustrated that he had to wait

two weeks to get sales results from people in the field. He finally tracked

down an automated phone system that would beep each of his salespeople at 5 pm

every day. An automated message then prompted them to punch in their numbers

how many calls and sales they had made that day. The system shortened the

feedback time on sales results from weeks to hours.

That story illustrates two other common traits of people who are driven to

achieve. They are forever raising the performance bar, and they like to keep

score. Take the performance bar first. During performance reviews, people with

high levels of motivation might ask to be stretched by their superiors. Of

course, an employee who combines self-awareness with internal motivation will

recognize her limits but she won t settle for objectives that seem too easy to

fulfill.

And it follows naturally that people who are driven to do better also want a

way of tracking progress their own, their team s, and their company s. Whereas

people with low achievement motivation are often fuzzy about results, those

with high achievement motivation often keep score by tracking such hard

measures as profitability or market share. I know of a money manager who starts

and ends his day on the Internet, gauging the performance of his stock fund

against four industry-set benchmarks.

Interestingly, people with high motivation remain optimistic even when the

score is against them. In such cases, self-regulation combines with achievement

motivation to overcome the frustration and depression that come after a setback

or failure. Take the case of an another portfolio manager at a large investment

company. After several successful years, her fund tumbled for three consecutive

quarters, leading three large institutional clients to shift their business

elsewhere.

Some executives would have blamed the nosedive on circumstances outside their

control; others might have seen the setback as evidence of personal failure.

This portfolio manager, however, saw an opportunity to prove she could lead a

turnaround. Two years later, when she was promoted to a very senior level in

the company, she described the experience as the best thing that ever happened

to me; I learned so much from it.

Executives trying to recognize high levels of achievement motivation in their

people can look for one last piece of evidence: commitment to the organization.

When people love their jobs for the work itself, they often feel committed to

the organizations that make that work possible. Committed employees are likely

to stay with an organization even when they are pursued by headhunters waving

money.

It s not difficult to understand how and why a motivation to achieve translates

into strong leadership. If you set the performance bar high for yourself, you

will do the same for the organization when you are in a position to do so.

Likewise, a drive to surpass goals and an interest in keeping score can be

contagious. Leaders with these traits can often build a team of managers around

them with the same traits. And of course, optimism and organizational

commitment are fundamental to leadership just try to imagine running a company

without them.

Empathy

Of all the dimensions of emotional intelligence, empathy is the most easily

recognized. We have all felt the empathy of a sensitive teacher or friend; we

have all been struck by its absence in an unfeeling coach or boss. But when it

comes to business, we rarely hear people praised, let alone rewarded, for their

empathy. The very word seems unbusinesslike, out of place amid the tough

realities of the marketplace.

But empathy doesn t mean a kind of I m OK, you re OK mushiness. For a leader,

that is, it doesn t mean adopting other people s emotions as one s own and

trying to please everybody. That would be a nightmare it would make action

impossible. Rather, empathy means thoughtfully considering employees feelings

along with other factors in the process of making intelligent decisions.

For an example of empathy in action, consider what happened when two giant

brokerage companies merged, creating redundant jobs in all their divisions. One

division manager called his people together and gave a gloomy speech that

emphasized the number of people who would soon be fired. The manager of another

division gave his people a different kind of speech. He was up-front about his

own worry and confusion, and he promised to keep people informed and to treat

everyone fairly.

The difference between these two managers was empathy. The first manager was

too worried about his own fate to consider the feelings of his anxiety-stricken

colleagues. The second knew intuitively what his people were feeling, and he

acknowledged their fears with his words. Is it any surprise that the first

manager saw his division sink as many demoralized people, especially the most

talented, departed? By contrast, the second manager continued to be a strong

leader, his best people stayed, and his division remained as productive as

ever.

Empathy is particularly important today as a component of leadership for at

least three reasons: the increasing use of teams; the rapid pace of

globalization; and the growing need to retain talent.

Consider the challenge of leading a team. As anyone who has ever been a part of

one can attest, teams are cauldrons of bubbling emotions. They are often

charged with reaching a consensus which is hard enough with two people and much

more difficult as the numbers increase. Even in groups with as few as four or

five members, alliances form and clashing agendas get set. A team s leader must

be able to sense and understand the viewpoints of everyone around the table.

That s exactly what a marketing manager at a large information technology

company was able to do when she was appointed to lead a troubled team. The

group was in turmoil, overloaded by work and missing deadlines. Tensions were

high among the members. Tinkering with procedures was not enough to bring the

group together and make it an effective part of the company.

So the manager took several steps. In a series of one-on-one sessions, she took

the time to listen to everyone in the group what was frustrating them, how they

rated their colleagues, whether they felt they had been ignored. And then she

directed the team in a way that brought it together: She encouraged people to

speak more openly about their frustrations, and she helped people raise

constructive complaints during meetings. In short, her empathy allowed her to

understand her team s emotional makeup. The result was not just heightened

collaboration among members but also added business, as the team was called on

for help by a wider range of internal clients.

Globalization is another reason for the rising importance of empathy for

business leaders. Cross-cultural dialogue can easily lead to miscues and

misunderstandings. Empathy is an antidote. People who have it are attuned to

subtleties in body language; they can hear the message beneath the words being

spoken. Beyond that, they have a deep understanding of both the existence and

the importance of cultural and ethnic differences.

Consider the case of an American consultant whose team had just pitched a

project to a potential Japanese client. In its dealings with Americans, the

team was accustomed to being bombarded with questions after such a proposal,

but this time it was greeted with a long silence. Other members of the team,

taking the silence as disapproval, were ready to pack and leave. The lead

consultant gestured them to stop. Although he was not particularly familiar

with Japanese culture, he read the client s face and posture and sensed not

rejection but interest even deep consideration. He was right: When the client

finally spoke, it was to give the consulting firm the job.

Finally, empathy plays a key role in the retention of talent, particularly in

today s information economy. Leaders have always needed empathy to develop and

keep good people, but today the stakes are higher. When good people leave, they

take the company s knowledge with them.

That s where coaching and mentoring come in. It has repeatedly been shown that

coaching and mentoring pay off not just in better performance but also in

increased job satisfaction and decreased turnover. But what makes coaching and

mentoring work best is the nature of the relationship. Outstanding coaches and

mentors get inside the heads of the people they are helping. They sense how to

give effective feedback. They know when to push for better performance and when

to hold back. In the way they motivate their prot g s, they demonstrate empathy

in action.

In what is probably sounding like a refrain, let me repeat that empathy doesn t

get much respect in business. People wonder how leaders can make hard decisions

if they are feeling for all the people who will be affected. But leaders with

empathy do more than sympathize with people around them: They use their

knowledge to improve their companies in subtle but important ways.

Social Skill

The first three components of emotional intelligence are self-management

skills. The last two, empathy and social skill, concern a person s ability to

manage relationships with others. As a component of emotional intelligence,

social skill is not as simple as it sounds. It s not just a matter of

friendliness, although people with high levels of social skill are rarely

mean-spirited. Social skill, rather, is friendliness with a purpose: moving

people in the direction you desire, whether that s agreement on a new marketing

strategy or enthusiasm about a new product.

Socially skilled people tend to have a wide circle of acquaintances, and they

have a knack for finding common ground with people of all kinds a knack for

building rapport. That doesn t mean they socialize continually; it means they

work according to the assumption that nothing important gets done alone. Such

people have a network in place when the time for action comes.

Social skill is the culmination of the other dimensions of emotional

intelligence. People tend to be very effective at managing relationships when

they can understand and control their own emotions and can empathize with the

feelings of others. Even motivation contributes to social skill. Remember that

people who are driven to achieve tend to be optimistic, even in the face of

setbacks or failure. When people are upbeat, their glow is cast upon

conversations and other social encounters. They are popular, and for good

reason.

Because it is the outcome of the other dimensions of emotional intelligence,

social skill is recognizable on the job in many ways that will by now sound

familiar. Socially skilled people, for instance, are adept at managing teams

that s their empathy at work. Likewise, they are expert persuaders a

manifestation of self-awareness, self-regulation, and empathy combined. Given

those skills, good persuaders know when to make an emotional plea, for

instance, and when an appeal to reason will work better. And motivation, when

publicly visible, makes such people excellent collaborators; their passion for

the work spreads to others, and they are driven to find solutions.

But sometimes social skill shows itself in ways the other emotional

intelligence components do not. For instance, socially skilled people may at

times appear not to be working while at work. They seem to be idly schmoozing

chatting in the hallways with colleagues or joking around with people who are

not even connected to their real jobs. Socially skilled people, however, don

t think it makes sense to arbitrarily limit the scope of their relationships.

They build bonds widely because they know that in these fluid times, they may

need help someday from people they are just getting to know today.

For example, consider the case of an executive in the strategy department of a

global computer manufacturer. By 1993, he was convinced that the company s

future lay with the Internet. Over the course of the next year, he found

kindred spirits and used his social skill to stitch together a virtual

community that cut across levels, divisions, and nations. He then used this de

facto team to put up a corporate Web site, among the first by a major company.

And, on his own initiative, with no budget or formal status, he signed up the

company to participate in an annual Internet industry convention. Calling on

his allies and persuading various divisions to donate funds, he recruited more

than 50 people from a dozen different units to represent the company at the

convention.

Management took notice: Within a year of the conference, the executive s team

formed the basis for the company s first Internet division, and he was formally

put in charge of it. To get there, the executive had ignored conventional

boundaries, forging and maintaining connections with people in every corner of

the organization.

Is social skill considered a key leadership capability in most companies? The

answer is yes, especially when compared with the other components of emotional

intelligence. People seem to know intuitively that leaders need to manage

relationships effectively; no leader is an island. After all, the leader s task

is to get work done through other people, and social skill makes that possible.

A leader who cannot express her empathy may as well not have it at all. And a

leader s motivation will be useless if he cannot communicate his passion to the

organization. Social skill allows leaders to put their emotional intelligence

to work.

It would be foolish to assert that good-old-fashioned IQ and technical ability

are not important ingredients in strong leadership. But the recipe would not be

complete without emotional intelligence. It was once thought that the

components of emotional intelligence were nice to have in business leaders.

But now we know that, for the sake of performance, these are ingredients that

leaders need to have.

It is fortunate, then, that emotional intelligence can be learned. The process

is not easy. It takes time and, most of all, commitment. But the benefits that

come from having a well-developed emotional intelligence, both for the

individual and for the organization, make it worth the effort.

A version of this article appeared in the January 2004 issue of Harvard

Business Review.

Daniel Goleman is Co-Director of the Consortium for Research on Emotional

Intelligence in Organizations at Rutgers University, co-author of Primal

Leadership: Leading with Emotional Intelligence, and author of The Brain and

Emotional Intelligence: New Insights and Leadership: Selected Writings. His

latest book is A Force For Good: The Dalai Lama s Vision for Our World.

Can Emotional Intelligence Be Learned?

For ages, people have debated if leaders are born or made. So too goes the

debate about emotional intelligence. Are people born with certain levels of

empathy, for example, or do they acquire empathy as a result of life s

experiences? The answer is both. Scientific inquiry strongly suggests that

there is a genetic component to emotional intelligence. Psychological and

developmental research indicates that nurture plays a role as well. How much of

each perhaps will never be known, but research and practice clearly demonstrate

that emotional intelligence can be learned.

One thing is certain: Emotional intelligence increases with age. There is an

old-fashioned word for the phenomenon: maturity. Yet even with maturity, some

people still need training to enhance their emotional intelligence.

Unfortunately, far too many training programs that intend to build leadership

skills including emotional intelligence are a waste of time and money. The

problem is simple: They focus on the wrong part of the brain.

Emotional intelligence is born largely in the neurotransmitters of the brain s

limbic system, which governs feelings, impulses, and drives. Research indicates

that the limbic system learns best through motivation, extended practice, and

feedback. Compare this with the kind of learning that goes on in the neocortex,

which governs analytical and technical ability. The neocortex grasps concepts

and logic. It is the part of the brain that figures out how to use a computer

or make a sales call by reading a book. Not surprisingly but mistakenly it is

also the part of the brain targeted by most training programs aimed at

enhancing emotional intelligence. When such programs take, in effect, a

neocortical approach, my research with the Consortium for Research on Emotional

Intelligence in Organizations has shown they can even have a negative impact on

people s job performance.

To enhance emotional intelligence, organizations must refocus their training to

include the limbic system. They must help people break old behavioral habits

and establish new ones. That not only takes much more time than conventional

training programs, it also requires an individualized approach.

Imagine an executive who is thought to be low on empathy by her colleagues.

Part of that deficit shows itself as an inability to listen; she interrupts

people and doesn t pay close attention to what they re saying. To fix the

problem, the executive needs to be motivated to change, and then she needs

practice and feedback from others in the company. A colleague or coach could be

tapped to let the executive know when she has been observed failing to listen.

She would then have to replay the incident and give a better response; that is,

demonstrate her ability to absorb what others are saying. And the executive

could be directed to observe certain executives who listen well and to mimic

their behavior.

With persistence and practice, such a process can lead to lasting results. I

know one Wall Street executive who sought to improve his empathy specifically

his ability to read people s reactions and see their perspectives. Before

beginning his quest, the executive s subordinates were terrified of working

with him. People even went so far as to hide bad news from him. Naturally, he

was shocked when finally confronted with these facts. He went home and told his

family but they only confirmed what he had heard at work. When their opinions

on any given subject did not mesh with his, they, too, were frightened of him.

Enlisting the help of a coach, the executive went to work to heighten his

empathy through practice and feedback. His first step was to take a vacation to

a foreign country where he did not speak the language. While there, he

monitored his reactions to the unfamiliar and his openness to people who were

different from him. When he returned home, humbled by his week abroad, the

executive asked his coach to shadow him for parts of the day, several times a

week, to critique how he treated people with new or different perspectives. At

the same time, he consciously used on-the-job interactions as opportunities to

practice hearing ideas that differed from his. Finally, the executive had

himself videotaped in meetings and asked those who worked for and with him to

critique his ability to acknowledge and understand the feelings of others. It

took several months, but the executive s emotional intelligence did ultimately

rise, and the improvement was reflected in his overall performance on the job.

It s important to emphasize that building one s emotional intelligence cannot

will not happen without sincere desire and concerted effort. A brief seminar

won t help; nor can one buy a how-to manual. It is much harder to learn to

empathize to internalize empathy as a natural response to people than it is to

become adept at regression analysis. But it can be done. Nothing great was

ever achieved without enthusiasm, wrote Ralph Waldo Emerson. If your goal is

to become a real leader, these words can serve as a guidepost in your efforts

to develop high emotional intelligence.