Your emotional quotient, or EQ, is unquestionably influenced by genetics and your personality, but it is in no way limited by them. Your EQ is a learnable, measurable set of skills you can improve for the benefit of your well-being and relationships. Practicing EQ-building skills is how developing your emotional intelligence can support your career advancement, too, by boosting your self-awareness, self-management, and people skills for a happier, more productive work life.
Also known as emotional intelligence, EQ is sometimes called “the other kind of smart,” the counterpart to IQ, or intelligence quotient. EQ is your ability to recognize your emotions and other peoples’ emotions and then act appropriately. First presented as a research subject in the 1990s, EQ answered the question of why, 70 percent of the time, people with average IQs outperform those with the highest IQs (the standard kind of “smart”). Daniel Goleman, author of the first book on the subject, aptly titled Emotional Intelligence, made the case that cognitive intelligence is far less essential to success in life than the ability to navigate complex relationships and interactions.
You likely have noticed this in your personal life and career. When you compare the accomplishments and relationships of people who listen carefully, understand body language, show empathy, ask questions, and respond constructively to stress versus those who don’t, who seems to have career momentum and a happier home life?
Since Goleman’s groundbreaking publication, EQ has become widely studied, accepted, and put to good use in human resources, the classroom, and the boardroom. But what are the core skills and qualities essential to a high EQ? Here’s how they break down under two primary competencies, the personal and the social:
Personal Competence
Social Competence
Personal competence focuses on you as an individual and your ability to keep your emotions and behavior under control. Social competence focuses on your ability to read others’ moods, motives, and messages so you can interact with them more successfully. Developing all four can fast-track your leadership potential.
EQ research finds a direct relationship between the EQ of an organization’s staff (including its executives) and the organization’s success. Here’s how your highly developed EQ would play out at work.
It’s hard to argue with the results of the world’s most dynamic CEOs and revenue increases by high-EQ sales teams. There also is compelling evidence for EQ skills improving your career.
As the digital age transforms into the age of artificial intelligence, finely tuned EQ skills will be more important than ever because machine learning will not be able to replicate the most human of qualities: empathy, motivation, leadership, and savvy. The good news is that there is an antidote to a marketplace heavy on automation and light on the human touch: It’s a diverse workforce, which organically skews to the high side of EQ.
Although EQ seems to revolve around intangible qualities like self-control and patience, it is actually a measurable set of skills that can be evaluated and developed. You will discover valuable insights into your attitude and areas in need of improvement by taking a do-it-yourself EQ test. Most are inexpensive or free.
You can also take advantage of the Birkman Method personality assessment. This test is used to reveal four key perspectives of every person: motivation, self-perception, social perception, and mindset. Once you understand these characteristics about yourself, you can better recognize the emotions and actions that drive your life.
You’ve self-tested, or you’ve been through the rigors of an employment EQ test, or you’ve discovered the hard way that your career is not a perfect match for your EQ skills. Now that you know where you stand, it’s time to do something about it.
Even if you weren’t born with a sunny outlook and a passion for people, you can become a more empathetic, emotionally balanced, can-do person by focusing on science-backed methods of building your EQ. Try these pointers, too:
USF’s Office of Corporate Training and Professional Education can help you develop key leadership qualities, gain certification for the marketplace’s most sought-after skills, and enhance your emotional intelligence for a more rewarding career.
Find out how with our Emotional Intelligence and Situational Leadership certificate: