The Business Book

(Joyce) #1

110


E M O T I O N A L


INTELLIGENCE IS


T H E I N T E R S E C T I O N


O F H E A R T A N D H E A D


DEVELOP EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE


E


motional intelligence
(commonly abbreviated
as “EQ”, for emotional
quotient) is the ability to perceive,
control, and evaluate emotions,
both in oneself and in others. The
concept emerged from research
into social intelligence in the 1930s,
and from work in the 1970s on
different forms of intelligence. In
the 1990s, US psychologist Daniel
Goleman published the highly
influential Emotional Intelligence:
Why it Can Matter More Than IQ.
In the book he identified the five
“domains” of emotional intelligence:
knowing your emotions; managing

your emotions; motivating yourself;
recognizing and understanding
other people’s emotions; and
managing relationships.
Goleman pinpoints high EQ as
a common trait among effective
business leaders. Without emotional
intelligence, he argues, a leader can
have limitless energy and ideas, a
perceptive and logical mind, and
impressive qualifications, but still be
ineffective and uninspiring.
Goleman cites Bob Mulholland,
head of client relations at Merrill
Lynch during the 9/11 attacks, as a
leader with high EQ. After his staff
saw a plane hit the twin building
opposite their own, they began to
panic—some ran from window to
window, and others were paralyzed
with fear. His first response was to
“unfreeze” their panic by addressing
each of their concerns individually.
He then calmly told them that they
were all going to leave the building,
via the stairs, and that they all had
time to get out. He remained calm
and decisive, but did not minimize
people’s emotional responses. All
his staff escaped without injury.
This was a rare and unusual context,
but Mulholland’s approach shows
the value of EQ in managing staff
in any form of volatile situation.

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Emotional intelligence

KEY DATES
c.400 BCE The philosopher
Plato says that all learning
has an emotional base.

1930s US psychologist
Edward Thorndike describes
the concept of “social
intelligence”—the ability to
get along with other people.

1983 US psychologist Howard
Gardner suggests that people
have multiple intelligences,
including interpersonal,
musical, spatial-visual,
and linguistic.

1990 US psychologists Peter
Salovey and John Mayer
publish the first formal theory
of emotional intelligence.

1995 Daniel Goleman
publishes Emotional
Intelligence: Why It Can
Matter More Than IQ, which
becomes a global best seller.

The most effective
leaders are alike in one
crucial way: they all
have a high degree of
emotional intelligence.
Daniel Goleman
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