By Safe Call Now®'s Steve Gutzler |
"Great leaders inspire us. They ignite the best
version of ourselves. Most importantly, they motivate us to accomplish our best
work and they make us feel important.
A leader who is capable of that inspiration and
motivation has a high degree of Emotional Intelligence. Here are the basic
competencies:
1. Emotional Self-awareness
- Leaders with high self-awareness are attuned to their inner signals,
recognizing how their feelings and moods affect them and those they interact
with daily.
2. Self-confidence
- Self-confident leaders take on challenging assignments.
They possess a sense of presence, poise, and self-assurance.
3. Emotional
Self-management - Leaders with emotional self-control find
ways to manage their challenging emotions and impulses. Staying calm and
clear-headed is a hallmark of a great leader.
4. Transparency
- Leaders who are transparent communicate their values and live them. They
are open about their feelings, beliefs, and choices. They are leaders who can
admit fault, apologize... and move forward.
5. Optimism
- A leader with optimism can quickly shift from a problem and convert it
in to a challenge to be solved. They see life through the lens of possibility
and positivity. They believe the future can and will be brighter.
6. Developing
Others - Leaders who are adept at cultivating abilities
show a genuine interest in the success of others. They ask about
their goals, strengths, what they enjoy. These leaders provide
constructive feedback and lift the vision of those around them to see
the next level of what's possible.
Working with leaders, I find the #1 enemy to personal
leadership effectiveness is their ability to manage their emotions. This is a
challenge because of the stress hormone cortisol.
Leaders who fail to emotionally self-manage these
moments can sabotage their best efforts and put at risk key relationships with
team members and even their clients, affecting their bottom-line results. I've
worked hard over the past several years to partner one-on-one with leaders and
teams to ensure they play at their best and remain smart during stressful
encounters and challenging relationships.
To excel in your field and become an emotionally
intelligent leader, practice these 4 tips
1. Make a
strong first impression
· Smile sincerely
· Have
extraordinary eye-contact
· Take genuine
interest in others immediately
· Greet
others with warmth, charm, and ease
2. Lead
the conversation toward their world not yours
· Enter
conversations by asking sincere questions
· Treat them like
the VIP they are
· Ask follow up
questions rather than "one-up" them with your opinions
or stories
3. Affirm
their stories and actions
· Affirm their
ideas and working solutions
· Affirm their
unique personal drive
· Affirm their
progress... point it out
· Affirm what's
working, shine a light on it
4. Work
daily to self-manage your emotions
· Learn the power
of not responding immediately
· Understand that
emotional hijacking can last 18-20 minutes, take time to breathe
· Learn to
disengage so you can reengage more powerfully
· Don't treat
yourself like a machine - take rest and recovery seriously
The highest performing leaders work to improve their
Emotional Intelligence skills daily. Which tip will you choose to boost
and improve relationships and connections with others this week?"
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