30 Days to Emotional Awareness & Wellness Challenge
Day 25: Leading with EI
What does it mean to lead with emotional intelligence (EI)? If we conducted a Google search for “emotional intelligence leadership”, we’d uncover 45.7 million results. This high number of web links proves there’s lots of interest in this area. Many of the resources produced from the search explore the ins and outs of emotions and leadership by providing tips and insights, discussing key skills and traits, and offering evidence to show the importance of EI in leadership.
If we performed a follow-up search for “emotional intelligence organization leadership”, we’d generate 29.7 million results. What these results indicate is nearly 65% of the existing web data around EI leadership relates to organizations, work or otherwise. Some conversations in the corporate domain also focus on the concept of organizational leadership (OL). OL, as TDK Technologies (n.d.) explained, is a twofold approach that allows leaders to simultaneously do what is in the best interest of individuals as well as the organization.
Our current understanding of OL, however, is not where the conversation of emotionally intelligent leadership should end. In other words, how can organizations, in and of themselves, exemplify leadership? What can they do to ensure the people they employ and the communities they serve benefit from their leadership? These are just some examples of questions that organizational leaders and stakeholders should consider as we move forward in 4IR.
They can also opt to take OL one step further by embracing a new perspective about how they should be leading or “paying it forward”, so to speak. Time and time again, organizations have demonstrated they have the power to make change happen. Mostly, they’ve done this by triggering our emotions and heightening our awareness about a specific cause. Thus, using our emotions to get us to act.
In the same vein, corporations can also lead with EI. To be a champion of change as it relates to cultivating emotionally intelligent communities and nations, organizations need lead the movement. Obviously, people will still be needed to run organizations but how those individuals are trained and developed makes a big impact on them both professionally and personally.
To create the type of trickle-down effect that reaches beyond the organization, permeates into immediate and surrounding communities, and broadens the intellect of humankind, we need to educate and train lower level employees in EI. Not only would doing so help equip them with critical life and leadership skills, it would also help to reduce the size of the ‘soft’ skills gap and improve performance across the organization itself.
Think about it, if organizations really want, they can be a major driving force for an EI revolution at the global level. By fusing EI into their workforce and therefore their infrastructure, organizations can educate more than just their employees and contribute to the development of emotionally savvy communities. However, they must first realize the extent of their power and harness it in the same manner as being done with artificial intelligence.
When organizations invest in the well-being of their employees, it goes far beyond the workplace. The interpersonal and leadership skills workers acquire through employment are not strictly for their individual benefit. They bring those skills home to their families and communities, which should be desired by employers and organizational leaders. Unfortunately, this is not usually the case and some organizations lack accountability in their role as community leaders and champions of change.
Surprisingly, the logic behind organizations leading with EI is quite simple: They have the resources and ability to provide their workers with skills that have more than an organizational impact. What they need to do to contribute to change outside the workplace is make EI training and development a top priority. If companies are willing to take this small, yet enormous, step towards educating others in this area, they could spearhead the biggest EI revolution we’ve ever seen.
References
TDK Technologies. (n.d.) Key components of organizational leadership. Retrieved from https://www.tdktech.com/tech-talks/key-components-of-organizational-leadership



