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The cost of human capital is emotional intelligence

by Toby Elwin on January 29, 2010

Emotional Intelligence (EI) is a capacity to recognize how our own emotions motivate ourselves and the awareness of our emotions on others.  Still a little to warm and fuzzy?  What about a 30% increase in bottom line performance?

Emotional Intelligence is vital to maximize any return on human capital.  Why does this matter?  The happier your people are, and you can’t claim happiness without clarity and consistency from your leaders, teams, and organization culture, research shows an increase bottom line performance measures by 30%.  I say, again, by 30%!

Think about the worst boss you’ve had.  What did this person do that ranks them the worst?  How motivated were you to give your best and strive to meet their goals?

Bad boss in your career? If you haven’t had one you are in a happy minority because, a Gallup poll of more 1 million employed U.S. workers concluded that a bad boss or supervisor is the Number 1 reason people quit their jobs; when career advancement, work environment, pay, and lack of fit are viewed individually, or collectively, the direct influence of their boss or manager.

Why People Change Jobs; Source:  Gallup

You might say, who cares if a boss works his people hard or you don’t have to like me, I pay you to produce.

Paid to produce?  Well if your are bottom-line inclined, then how do these numbers sit with you?

  • Poorly managed work groups are on average 44% less profitable than well-managed groups*
  • Poorly managed work groups are on average 50% less productive*
  • 70 to 80% of people say they quit their jobs because of a bad boss**

Imagine, further, the real cost of replacing employees as a breakdown of:

  • lost team productivity missing a full time equivalent;
  • lost productivity interviewing;
  • cost of on-boarding; 

Then speculate the break even return of the time and the salary for that person to contribute to the organization and a team.

EI framework reveals how we draw on different competencies, depending on strengths, preferences, and the needs of people and situations we work with.

One EI assessment*** I highly value collects behavioral traits around 4 clusters through a 360 degree survey that, in turn, are made up of competencies:

  • Self-Awareness:  recognizing and understanding our own emotions
    • Emotional Self-Awareness
  • Self-Management:  recognizing and understanding the emotions of others
    • Achievement Orientation
    • Adaptability
    • Emotional Self-Control
    • Positive Outlook
  • Social Awareness:  effectively managing our own emotions
    • Empathy
    • Organizational Awareness
  • Relationship Management:  applying emotional understanding in our dealings with others
    • Conflict Management
    • Coach and Mentor
    • Influence
    • Inspirational Leadership
    • Teamwork

Relationship management is where emotional and social intelligence manifests most visibly.  For obvious reasons your ability to identify and understand relationships is vital for motivation and teams.  However the lever of someone’s emotional intelligence is  directly dependent on self-awareness.

EI reveals how intentions are perceived by others and impacts others.  It is a behavior-based assessment.  It provides a reality check on how intentions really come across no matter someone’s IQ or technical brilliance, if they don’t get along and don’t motivate others, what is the cost of their emotional intelligence?

It’s a great coaching tool and a great framework for changing intentions and realizing aspirations – individually and at the organization level.

I’d love to talk about how emotional intelligence, and this tool, could build great capability for the people you manage, the people you motivate, and the organizations that rely on managing how our emotions, our relations, our social acuity, and ourselves provide the real organizational competitive advantage.

There is no shortcut, but the return on investment is a real opportunity cost for your project, for your department, for your company, for your portfolio of companies, and for your assets under management.  There, does that make it real enough?

Contact me to find out how to implement an Emotional and Social Competency Inventory to help your organization and leaders cultivate excellence and steps to build manager, teams, and organization strength.  Perhaps 30% quicker product release, 30% top line growth, 30% less turnover costs, 30% less project delays…

*Gallup “Turning Around Employee Turnover
**Terry Bacon, president of Lore International Institute
***The Hay Group

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