30 Days to Emotional Awareness & Wellness Challenge
Day 23: Emotions at work
We’ve reached one of my favorite areas of emotional intelligence (EI)! As an Industrial/Organizational psychologist, much of the work I perform involves organizations and their workers. One of my goals in my role as a Learning and Organizational (L&OD) consultant is to contribute to the creation of emotionally intelligent communities; hence my decision to host the 30 Days to Emotional Awareness and Wellness Challenge .
Approximately one-third of our adult life is spent in the workplace; totaling nearly 90,000 hours over a lifetime (News@Gettysburg, 2017). Work is how we earn money and maintain finances as well as contribute to an organizational cause. We also participate in work relationships that involve emotional transactions and influence the quality of the bonds we build with our co-workers. Therefore, EI is critical for a well-functioning and productive workplace.
Ingraining EI into every work organization would surely be a noble feat and with this challenge we’re one step closer. While this is a main goal of many EI practitioners and supporters, ongoing challenges are continuing to prevent the implementation of active, organization-wide training and development programs focused on building expertise in EI.
There may be many reasons why EI has not become a top priority for organizations. In passing conversations, many have shared the various causes of low or no EI training in the companies they work for. Some mentioned their organization lacks buy-in from executive leadership, others indicate it’s because of budget constraints, and a few acknowledged the organizational value an emotionally intelligent workforce could bring isn’t clearly understood.
If you’ve heard similar explanations or think these are some of the reasons your employer is not providing EI training or if the conclusions offered in LinkedIn’s report ring true in your place of employment, perhaps your organization needs someone like me to start the conversation and demystify the misapprehensions about educating workers to be emotionally savvy. Take the first step to be an organizational change agent by sharing what you’ve learned on the challenge to start an EI movement in your work organization.
What do the LinkedIn conclusions and insights mean for you—the employee, organizations, business leaders and stakeholders, and the sustainability of workforces?
References
News@Gettysburg. (2017, January 17). 1/3 of your life is spent at work. Retrieved from http://www.gettysburg.edu/news_events/press_release_detail.dot?id=79db7b34-630c-4f49-ad32-4ab9ea48e72b



