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executive summary the business case for emotional intelligence executive summary the business case for emotional intelligence at the institute for health and human emotional intelligence ei provides we have potential ...

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       Executive Summary 
        The Business Case for Emotional Intelligence
        Executive Summary 
        The Business Case for Emotional Intelligence 
        At  the  Institute  for  Health  and  Human                Emotional  Intelligence  (EI)  provides.  We  have 
        Potential  (IHHP)  we've been studying human               collected data from leading research institutions 
        potential  and  leadership  since  1998  and  we've        and along with our own research, we present the 
        been bringing that learning to you through our             business case for developing leaders to be more 
        programs and services ever since.                          emotionally intelligent.  
        The purpose of this white paper is to help you             What is clear is that EI is no longer a nice to have 
        understand, using a case study, the real, hard,            for organizations aspiring to be high performing; 
        financial return on investment that training in            it is a need to have. 
        What we know about Emotional Intelligence: 
                                                                 Over 80% of competencies that differentiate top 
                                                                   performers from others are in the domain of EI.1  
              As one of our clients – Northern 
              Trust Bank – said to us: “Providing                Companies, who have executives with higher  
              training in Emotional Intelligence to                levels of emotional intelligence, are more likely 
                                                                                               2
              our leaders has become like our                      to be highly profitable.  
              phone systems – it’s not a question                After supervisors in a manufacturing plant  
              of whether we need one, it’s a                       received training in emotional competencies, 
              question of which is the best for our                lost-time accidents were reduced by 50 
              organization.”                                       percent, formal grievances were reduced 
                                                                   from 15 per year to 3 per year, and the plant 
                                                                                                               3
                                                                   exceeded productivity goals by $250,000.   
              Organizations of the future will no 
              longer question whether there is                   American Express tested emotional competence 
              value in providing Emotional                         training on Financial Advisors; trained advisors 
              Intelligence training for their leaders,             increased business 18.1% compared to 16.2% 
                                                                                       4
              they will focus on which EI program                  for a control group.  
              will provide the highest return on 
              investment for their company                       After a Motorola manufacturing facility provided 
                                                                   training in stress management and Emotional 
                                                                   Intelligence, 93% of employees had an 
                                                                                               5
                                                                   increase in productivity.  
            The programs and services we have developed for training in Emotional Intelligence are based on 11 
            competencies  we  uncovered  during  our  early  research  studies.  We  have  since  correlated  those 
            competencies with the performance of over 10,000 people from around the world.    
            We have learned that the smartest people in your organization are not always the most effective (in 
            fact,  they  can  sometimes  be  your  most  destructive).  What  distinguishes  your  most  productive 
            employees from your average is EI; and the size of the performance gap, as you will see in this paper, 
            is significant. 
        The Business Case for Emotional Intelligence 
        Managers and Leaders of the Future 
        Seven years ago, one of North America’s biggest               level was high, although stretched – the required 
        banks faced a daunting predicament: productivity              resources  were  available,  and  the  proper 
        in  its  IT  division  was  lagging  compared  to  the        processes  seemed  to  be  in  place.  Where  they 
        other  divisions  within  the  bank.  This  was               were stumbling was with their people, specifically 
        especially  concerning  as  it  was  the  IT  division        their ‘employee commitment’ scores. They were 
        that  was  responsible  for  the  development  and            very  poor  and  out  of  alignment  with  the  other 
        launch  of  a  new  technology  that  was  being              divisions.  
        heralded  as  the  bank’s  new  competitive                   Yes, IT’s people were showing up for work but, 
        advantage  in  how  it  would  interact  with                 far too many of them were not actively engaged. 
        customers (an innovation which was being driven               They  were  not  giving  that  extra  effort  or 
        in response to steeply declining client satisfaction          demonstrating the urgency that was required to 
        scores).                                                      develop  and  launch  the  industry  altering 
        In fact, the new technology had the capacity to               technology needed to compete against some of 
        alter  the  way  the  entire  banking  industry               the  other  big  banks  and  drive  their  customer 
        connected with customers, and they were not the               satisfaction scores.  
        only ones in the race.  Needless to say, there was            With further investigation into the people-side of 
        a  lot  resting  on  the  shoulders  of  the  banks  IT       the business, the bank uncovered that the scores 
        department.                                                   were being driven by strained employee-manager 
        Recognizing the significance of this disparity, the           relationships within the division. The IT managers 
        bank began to drill down into the problem. They               and leaders were good at getting things (tasks) 
        started by looking at the availability of incentives,         done, but not very good at building relationships 
        resources, skill level, processes and people. Extra           and creating connection and engagement across 
        bonuses weren’t having a significant impact, skill            the IT division. 
                In hard times, the soft stuff often goes away. But emotional intelligence, it 
                 turns out, isn’t soft. If emotional obliviousness jeopardizes your ability to 
                perform, fend off aggressors, or be compassionate in a crisis, no amount of 
                attention to the bottom line will protect your career. Emotional intelligence 
                 isn’t a luxury you can dispense with in tough times. It’s a basic tool that, 
                            deployed with finesse, is the key to professional success. 
        How Effective are Your Managers and Leaders? 
        As you read this example, does it make you think of your leaders? When you think of your organization, 
        how effective are your managers and leaders at building this connection? 
          Do your leaders take the time to stop and                       on by their people as lacking integrity, being 
             listen and really connect with their teams?                   too soft or lacking backbone? 
             Or, are they viewed as uncaring, hard rigid                Is your overall pool of employees fully 
             or even bullies?                                              engaged, pulling together and putting in the 
          Do they hold themselves and others                              extra effort? Or, are they building silos, 
             accountable and have the tough                                hording available information and resources, 
             conversations required? Or, are they looked                   and putting in ‘just enough’ effort to get by?
        Upon asking these questions, the bank realized 
        more resources, more skill and more incentives               The Value of Emotional 
        were not going to fix the issue – however, more 
        listening, coaching, and collaboration were critical         Intelligence for Managers 
        pieces to the puzzle. Looking at other divisions 
        with  higher  employee  commitment  scores,  the             and Leaders 
        bank discovered that managers who were more 
        aware of their emotions and capable of managing              Research has shown that over 80% of the 
        those emotions in the moment were better able                competencies that differentiate top 
        to  respond  appropriately  and  productively  in            performers from others are in the domain of 
        difficult situations – the foundation of emotional           EI, yet the notion of emotions in the 
        intelligence.  To  be  innovative  and  competitive          workplace is often greatly misunderstood. 
        meant that the bank was going to need to focus               For many, EI sounds soft and squishy and 
        on their EI leaders and managers.                            not of high value; but according to Harvard 
        EI  has  the  faculty  to  protect  leaders  and             Business Review, managing emotions is 
        managers  from  derailment.  The  Center  for                anything but soft and squishy. 
        Creative Leadership has found that the primary 
        causes of derailment in executives involve deficits 
        in emotional competencies: difficulty in handling          profitability. The executives with higher levels of 
        change, being unable to work well in a team, and           emotional  intelligence  were  more  likely  to  be 
        poor  interpersonal  relations;  each  having  an          highly  profitable.  Similar  research  has  returned 
        impact on overall productivity. This interference          the same findings in a variety of jobs and levels: 
        was  further  supported  by  another  study  which         people higher in EI outperform those low in EI. 
        tested 186 executive’s emotional intelligence and 
        compared  their  scores  with  their  company’s 
        What Does an Emotionally Intelligent Leader Look Like? 
        One size does not fit all; every leader will have          best able to both create connection and develop 
        different  style  and  that  style  will  interact  with   the talent of their employees; two abilities that 
        different   environments     in   different  ways.         go  hand-in-hand.  These  leaders  honed  in  on 
        However, our research at IHHP of over 10,000               employees’  individual  strengths,  passions  and 
        global leaders revealed that there are some clear          desired career plans and by utilizing a coaching 
        distinctions  between  high  and  low  performing          approach, were able to help their employees feel 
                                                         6
        leaders and EI is at the heart of this difference.         like they were doing meaningful work by seeing 
        Leaders  high  in  EI  have  a  solid  level  of  self-    how they contributed to the organizations goals.  
        awareness about the link between their behavior            These findings were of high interest to the bank 
        and  how  it  makes  others  feel  and,  more              as employees of the IT department did not feel 
        importantly, perform.                                      like  they  were  adequately  being  developed  by 
        Additionally, there are three abilities that leaders       their managers nor did they feel that they were 
        high  in  EI  consistently  demonstrate,  especially       doing    meaningful     work    (interesting   find 
        when it is most difficult to do so:                        considering  it  was  their  department  that  was 
                                                                   driving  the  direction  for  the  entire  bank).  The 
          They are able to admit to their mistakes                impact of their people feeling less connected was 
            and take personal accountability                       that slowly but surely they became less engaged 
                                                                   and decided to give less  effort,  which  was  the 
                                                                   crux of why the technology launch was lagging. 
          They are able to listen to others without               Research  shows  that  people  who  work  for 
            jumping to conclusions                                 emotionally  intelligent  managers  and  leaders 
          They do not avoid difficult                             choose to give more than what is asked of them 
            conversations, and are able to hold                    in  their  job  (discretionary  effort)  driving  overall 
            people accountable.                                    organizational  engagement.  In  a  recent  world-
                                                                   wide  survey  we  found  that  43%  of  employees 
        Our work found that leaders demonstrating these            agreed or strongly agreed that ‘if my manger had 
        three competencies were also described as being            more emotional intelligence, I would give extra 
                                                                   effort.’ 
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...Executive summary the business case for emotional intelligence at institute health and human ei provides we have potential ihhp ve been studying collected data from leading research institutions leadership since along with our own present bringing that learning to you through developing leaders be more programs services ever emotionally intelligent purpose of this white paper is help what clear no longer a nice understand using study real hard organizations aspiring high performing financial return on investment training in it need know about over competencies differentiate top performers others are domain as one clients northern trust bank said us providing companies who executives higher levels likely has become like highly profitable phone systems s not question after supervisors manufacturing plant whether received which best lost time accidents were reduced by organization percent formal grievances per year exceeded productivity goals future will there american express tested comp...

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