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EMOTIONAL
INTELLIGENCEORGANIZATIONAL
BEHAVIOUR
Presented To :
DR. TEJINDER PAL SINGH
Presented By :
KOMAL SAHI
What Are Emotions and Moods?
AffectA broad range of emotions that people
experience
Emotions
Intense feelings that are
directed at someone or
something
Emotions Defined
Psychological, behavioral,
and physiological episodes
experienced towards an
object, person, or event
that create a state of
readiness.
Most emotions occur
without our awareness
Moods – lower intensity
emotions without any
specific target source
Aspects of Emotions
Biology of Emotions
Originate in brain’s limbic system
Intensity of Emotions
Personality and Job requirements
Frequency and Duration of Emotions
How often emotions are exhibited
How long emotions are displayed
Functions of Emotions
Critical for rational thinking
Motivate people
Sources of Emotions and Moods
Personality
Day and Time of the Week
Weather
Illusory correlation
Stress
Social Activities
Sleep
Exercise
Age
Gender
Why Emotions Were Ignored in OB?
The “myth of rationality”
Emotions of any kind are disruptive to
organizations.
Original OB focus was solely on the
effects of strong negative emotions that
interfered with individual and
organizational efficiency.
OB Applications of Emotions and Moods
Emotions and Selection
Emotions affect employee effectiveness.
Decision Making
Emotions are an important part of the decision-making process in organizations.
Creativity
Positive mood increases creativity.
Motivation
Emotional commitment to work and high motivation are strongly linked
Leadership
Emotions are important to acceptance of messages from organizational leaders.
Interpersonal Conflict
Conflict in the workplace and individual emotions are strongly intertwined.
Negotiation
Emotions can impair negotiations.
Customer Services
Emotions affect service quality delivered to customers which, in turn, affects customer relationships.
Job Attitudes
Can carry over to home
Deviant Workplace Behaviors
Negative emotions lead to employee deviance (actions that violate norms and threaten the organization).
INTELLIGENCE DEFINED
• The ability to learn or understand or to
deal with new or trying situations : the
skilled use of reason
• The cognitive abilities of an individual to
learn from experience, to reason well,
and to cope effectively with the
demands of daily living.
IQ vs. EQ
IQ AND EQ
IQ defines how smart you are,
EQ defines how well you use what smarts you have.
IQ gets you hired, while EQ gets you promoted.
Intelligence Core Components End-StatesLogical-
mathematical
Linguistic
Musical
Spatial
Sensitivity to, and capacity to discern, logical
or numerical patterns; ability to handle long
chains of reasoning.
Sensitivity to the sounds, rhythms, and
meanings of words; sensitivity to the
different functions of language.
Abilities to produce and appreciate rhythm,
pitch, and timbre; appreciation of the forms
of musical expressiveness.
Capacities to perceive the visual-spatial
world accurately and to perform
transformations on ones initial perceptions.
Scientist
Mathematician
Poet
Journalist
Violinist
Composer
Sculptor
Navigator
Gardner’s Seven Intelligences
Gardner’s Seven Intelligences
Intelligence Core Components End-States
Bodily-
Kinesthetic
Interpersonal
Intrapersonal
Abilities to control ones body
movements and to handle objects
skillfully.
Capacities to discern and respond
appropriately to the moods,
temperaments, motivations, and desires
of other people.
Access to ones own feelings and the
ability to discriminate among them and
draw upon them to guide behavior;
knowledge of one’s own strengths,
weaknesses, desires, and intelligences.
Dancer
Athlete
Therapist
Salesman
Person with
detailed
accurate self-
knowledge
Emotional Intelligence
Emotional Intelligence is
• The Ability of an individual to
deal successfully with
other people
• To manage one’s self
• Motivate other people
• Understand one's own feelings &
• Appropriately respond to the
everyday environment
NEED
Important deciding factor for
RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT resulting in
motivation, retention , self management &
managing others.
Bosses and leaders, in particular, need high EQ because they represent the organization to the public, they interact with the highest number of people within and outside the organization and they set the tone for employee morale.
Why Emotional Intelligence is necessary
Help to manage effective relationship.
Help them being focussed and stayon track by remembering purpose &vision.
The 5 Biggest Reasons why new hires
fail
Coachability 26%
Emotional Intelligence 23%
Motivation 17%
Temperament 15%
Technical Competence 11%
- Leadership IQ
Mayer-Salovey Model
MSCEIT
Performance or ability measure
Bar-On Model
EQ-I
Self-report measure
Goleman Model
ECI - Self Report Measure
360 measure
MEASUREMENT OF EI
(A) Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Model (MSCEIT)
Scales
Identify emotions in faces
Using Emotions to Facilitate Thought: use
emotions to solve problems
Understanding Emotions: figure out what
makes people “tick”
Managing Emotions: make optimal decisions
IDENTIFY FACILITATE UNDERSTAND MANAGE
EXPERIENTIAL STRATEGIC
Mayer, Salovey, Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test
FACES
PICTURES
SENSATIONS
FACILITATE
CHANGES
BLENDS EMOT. RELAT.
EMOT. MAN.
(B) Dr. BarOn and Emotional Intelligence
Dr. Reuven Bar-On began in 1980
factors that were related to success in life
why some people with moderate IQ do
well in life while others with high IQ fail
Distinct from IQ (cognitive intelligence)
components resemble personality factors,
but can change and can be altered
BarOn/EQ-i Factors
Intra-Personal
Emotional Self-Awareness
Assertiveness
Self-Regard
Self-Actualization
Independence
Inter-Personal
Interpersonal Relationship
Empathy
Social Responsibility
Adaptability
Problem Solving
Flexibility
Reality Testing
Stress Management
Stress Tolerance
Impulse Control
General Mood
Optimism
Happiness
Social
Awareness
Self-
management
Perceiving and understanding the
meaning of others’ emotions
Managing our own emotions
Self-awarenessperceiving and understanding the
meaning of your own emotions
Relationship
ManagementManaging other people’s emotions
Lowest
Highest
(C) Goleman Model of Emotional
Intelligence
4-29
Emotional Intelligence
Competencies
Self-awareness Social awareness
Self-managementRelationship
management
Self
(personal competence)
Other
(social competence)
Recognition
of emotions
Regulation
of emotions
4-30
1. Self-awareness
“Knowing what we are feeling in the moment, and
using those preferences to guide our decision making;
having a realistic assessment of our own abilities and a well grounded sense of self confidence.”
Knowing one’s internal states, preferences, resources,
and intuitions
•Emotional awareness
•Accurate self-assessment
•Self-confidence
2. Self-regulation
“Handling our emotions so that they facilitate
rather than interfere with the task at hand; being
conscientious and delaying gratification to pursue
goals; recovering well from emotional distress.”
Managing one’s internal states, impulses and resources
•Self-control
•Trustworthiness
•Conscientiousness
•Adaptability•Innovation
3. Motivation
“Using our deepest preferences to move and guide us
to our goals; to help us take initiative and strive to
improve; and to persevere in the face of setbacks and
frustrations.”
Emotional tendencies that guide or facilitate reaching
goals
•Achievement drive
•Commitment
•Initiative
•Optimism
4. Empathy
“Sensing what people are feeling, being able to take
their perspective, and cultivating rapport and
attunement with a broad diversity of people.”
Awareness of other’s feelings, needs and concerns
•Understanding others•Service orientation
•Leveraging diversity
•Political awareness
5. Social Skills
“Handling emotions in relationships well and
accurately reading social situations and networks;
interacting smoothly; using these skills to persuade and
lead, negotiate and settle disputes, for cooperation
and teamwork.”
Adeptness at inducing desirable responses in others
• Influence
• Communication
• Leadership
• Building bonds• Collaboration and cooperation
Developing EI in Workplace
Developing EI in the workplace means acknowledging that
emotions are always present, and doing something intelligent
with them.
People derail because of classic emotional failings, not the
lack of technical skills
Applying EI in Business Organization
Human Resource Planning Job Profiling Recruitment, Interviewing & Training Management Development Customer relations &Customer Service Emotional support Leadership
There are the adverse consequences to have low Emotional Intelligence.
These includes-
•Relationship Problems
•Rage in Workplace
Improving Emotional Intelligence
Emotional intelligence is a set of competencies
(aptitudes, skills)
Can be learned, especially through coaching
EI increases with age – maturity
Job Satisfaction A person's evaluation of his or her job and work
context
A collection of attitudes about specific facets of the
job
4-42
EVLN: Responses to
Dissatisfaction
Loyalty
Voice
Exit
Neglect
• Leaving the situation
• Quitting, transferring
• Changing the situation
• Problem solving, complaining
• Patiently waiting for the
situation to improve
• Reducing work effort/quality• Increasing absenteeism
Organizational Commitment
Affective commitment
Emotional attachment to, identification with, and
involvement in an organization
Continuance commitment
Calculative attachment – stay because too
costly to quit
4-44
Building (Affective) commitment
Shared
Values• Values congruence
Justice/ Support• Apply humanitarian values
• Support employee wellbeing
EmployeeInvolvement
• Employees feel part of company
• Involvement demonstrates trust
OrganisationalComprehension
• Know firm’s past/present/future
• Open and rapid communication
Trust• Employees trust org leaders
• Job security supports trust
Work Overload and Task Control
Stressors
Work Overload Stressor
Working more hours, more intensely than one can cope
Affected by globalization, consumerism, ideal worker norm
Task Control Stressor
Due to lack control over how and when tasks are performed
Stress increases with responsibility
4-46
Cynicism
Reduced Personal
Accomplishment
Physiological,
psychological,
and behavioral
consequences
Emotional
Exhaustion
Interpersonal and
Role-Related Stressors
Job Burnout Process
4-47
Summary and Implications
Emotions and moods can affect job
performance.
You can’t control the employees’
emotions and moods.
But managers who understand the role of
emotions and moods will significantly
improve their ability to explain and predict
their coworkers’ behavior .