Emotions are a feedback mechanism. The dictionary defines feedback as ‘information returned to the source.” Thus, emotions contain information for us. They are meant to help us manage our attention. If you do not manage your emotions and pay attention to the emotions of those around you, you will miss an enormous amount of information necessary for effective leadership.

Emotional intelligence (EI) is "the ability to carry out accurate reasoning about emotions and the ability to use the emotions and emotional knowledge to enhance thought.” (2) In their extensive review of EI research, Professor John Mayer and his colleagues reported that high EI scores predict better social relations, decision-making, negotiation results, and long-term leadership success. (2) There are four major emotional skills outlined by Professor Mayer:

  1. Perceive the emotions
  2. Use the emotions
  3. Understand the emotional future
  4. Manage the emotions

Previous articles discussed the first three skills. We will now focus on improving the final EI skill - your ability to manage emotions. Leaders who are strong in this skill have good emotional self-control, think clearly even when they are experiencing strong emotions, and make decisions using both their heart and their head. This does not mean they don't have passionate feelings. On the contrary, they are passionate. However, they understand that a man in passion sometimes rides a mad horse. They temper their passion with reason. Here are a few strategies to help you do the same:

  1. Stay open to emotions. Because emotions contain information, closing ourselves off to certain emotions decreases essential feedback. We seldom shut out positive emotions. Yet, ALL emotions contain information. If you find yourself shutting down when uncomfortable situations arise, try a technique psychologists call systematic desensitization:
    1. Determine which emotion you would like to work on.
    2. Create a list of the various situations that tend to cause that emotion.
    3. List the situations from the least to the most emotionally intense.
    4. Use your imagination to relax (e.g., progressive muscle relaxation, calm scene...)
    5. Generate a calm and pleasant mood.
    6. Picture the least intense emotional situation.
    7. When you find yourself becoming tense, go back to the relaxing step (D) and then generate a calm mood (E).
  2. The goal is to visualize the emotional scene and stay open to the emotion. You begin with the easiest scenes and move slowly toward the more difficult ones.

  3. Change your emotion. Do you ever wish you could change your emotion in a split second? If you're like me, and I know I am, that would be a great trick. Here's the real trick, you already do this. Haven't you been upset and then you’ve gotten a phone call, which of course you answered pleasantly? You already do this. Perhaps not consciously, but you do it. If you want to do it consistently and well, use a variation of the systematic desensitization process:
    1. Determine which emotion you would like to change.
    2. Select a situation that causes this emotion.
    3. Use your imagination to picture that situation.
    4. Bring the emotion that you want to change into a situation you have imagined.
    5. Think of an interruption that could occur in that situation, such as a phone call, knock on the door, instant message, someone calling your name...
  4. Reason with emotion. Sometimes emotions overwhelm us because we generalize them. This is what pessimistic thinkers do. They extend the negative emotion into broad areas of their lives. This is the quintessential “bring the office home” individual. I knew one executive who allowed anger at work to pervade all areas of his life. We all generalize emotions occasionally. Here's one strategy to handle it:
    1. Determine which emotion you tend to exaggerate.
    2. Think of a recent situation in which this emotion was present.
    3. Answer these questions or use Morning Pages to help address them:
      • Was it reasonable to feel this way?
      • Do you often feel this way?
      • Why do you feel this way?
      • Would others interpret this situation the same way?
      • Could someone interpret events differently?
      • How could you think of this situation and the emotion differently?
      • How might you adapt the techniques described above to help you deal with this generalization.

These strategies can help you be a better leader by managing emotions. Adapt them to your situations and style. Let me know how it goes.

Keep on stretching when you're pulled,
Dave

  1. David Caruso and Peter Salovey: ‘The Emotionally Intelligent Manager: How To Develop and Use The Four Key Emotional Skills of Leadership,’ Josse-Bass, San Francisco, California, 2004, page 66.
  2. John Mayer and colleagues: Human Abilities: Emotional Intelligence, ‘Annual Review of Psychology,’ 2008, 59: 507 -- 536.
Author's Bio: 

Dave Jensen is an executive coach and leadership expert who helps leaders achieve their difficult goals in today's complex, competitive, and paradoxical environment. For a FREE Chapter of his ground-breaking, new book, The Executive's Paradox - How to Stretch When You're Pulled by Opposing Demands, or to receive his best practice tips once a month, sign up for his free eZine (Dave's microRaves), visit http://www.davejensenonleadership.com