The one Powerful
Quality of People With High Emotional Intelligence
No, you simply cannot have emotional
intelligence without it.
If you're a leadership geek like me, you probably know that for the
better part of 50 years, thought leaders and scholars the world over have conducted mountains of research to answer the
question: What are the characteristics of
great leaders?
I'm going to
posit that one cannot, and will not, be the "prototype" leader
without one particular and crucial trait for success.
In fact, I'll
go as far as saying that this is the one leadership trait
every manager in charge of people, or any person aspiring to lead others,
absolutely must add to their development in 2017.
Self-awareness.
The case for self-awareness.
In fact, Matt Tenney, author
of Serve
to be Great and The
Mindfulness Edge, calls it the most important leadership skill there is!
And it is a learned trait.
Self-awareness
falls in one of the quadrants of emotional intelligence. And what most thought leaders (I'll add myself to that list) are
saying about self-awareness is that in order to develop and practice it, it
first helps to assess not only your own strengths but also your shortcomings
and limitations--your blind spots, in other words.
What you don't know about yourself in, say, a
business deal can sink it; what you don't know about yourself in managing
conflict between employees or departments can lead to further conflict.
Ask yourself...
Instead of indulging in self-defeated, victim
behaviors of "why me?" a self-aware person probes and asks questions
like...
·
Why do the same issues keep coming up over
and over in my business unit, marriage, or life?
·
Why do I respond to situations with anger,
fear, optimism, or withdrawal?
·
What makes me think, act, and feel the way I
do?
·
What makes me tick? What pushes my buttons?
But first, get over yourself!
Entitlement and hubris need not apply--it
works against building up self-awareness. As you get introspective about some
fault or shortcoming of yours, you need to handle the obstacle of denial.
Denial is a powerful detriment to
development, and it can keep even the brightest and most successful people
stuck. It can be the greatest hurdle that leaders face in becoming self-aware.
I think we're all pretty much guilty of that
at some point or another in our careers. We all have egos that need to be
stroked, fears and insecurities that need to be smoothed.
Final thoughts.
Many of us (perhaps you) don't realize that
success may be just around the corner but first we need to humbly acknowledge
the blind spots that need to be identified and overcome.
Once you clear denial and identify the blind spots, this will be one of the biggest wins of your business and career life. And your employees, peers, clients, and stakeholders will thank you for it.
Once you clear denial and identify the blind spots, this will be one of the biggest wins of your business and career life. And your employees, peers, clients, and stakeholders will thank you for it.
By Marcel
Schwantes
http://www.inc.com/marcel-schwantes/1-powerful-quality-of-people-with-high-emotional-intelligence.html?cid=nl029week45day07
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