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PRIMAL LEADERSHIP Realizing the Power of Emotional Intelligence Daniel Goleman, Richard Boyatzis, Annie McKee Harvard Business School Press, 2002, 300 pp. |
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Goleman’s book Emotional Intelligence created quite
a stir. The word intelligence is
attached apparently to elevate the importance of emotions, i.e. “being
intelligent about emotions.” Primal
Leadership is about the “hidden, but crucial, dimension in leadership—the
emotional impact of what a leader says and does.” (4) Three authors contributed where perhaps
two could have been more concise.
Brain biochemistry is included even though it doesn’t seem to belong,
apparently to enhance credibility.
Few leaders care about neural pathways and the basal ganglia. Nevertheless it is an important book, one
of a growing stream of books that feature the ‘soft’ side of leadership. “The fundamental task of leaders, we argue, is to prime
good feeling in those they lead. That
occurs when a leader creates resonance—a reservoir of positivity that
frees the best in people. At its
root, then, the primal job of leadership is emotional.” (Preface) “Great leaders move us.
They ignite our passion and inspire the best in us.” “Great leadership works through the
emotions.” They “drive our emotions
in the right direction….” “The leader
has maximal power to sway everyone’s emotions. If people’s emotions are pushed toward the range of enthusiasm,
performance can soar; if people are driven toward rancor and anxiety, they
will be thrown off stride.”
“Followers also look to a leader for supportive emotional
connection—for empathy. All
leadership includes this primal dimension….”
(3,5) “…the more open leaders are—how well they express their
own enthusiasm, for example—the more readily others will feel that same
contagious passion. Leaders with that
kind of talent are emotional magnets; people naturally gravitate to them.”
(11) “When people feel good, they work at their best.” (14) “In
general, the more emotionally demanding the work, the more empathic and
supportive the leader needs to be.” (17) Dissonant leadership is that which is out
of touch with the feelings of the people.
It moves in a downward spiral from frustration to resentment to
rancor….” (19) “Four domains of emotional intelligence—self-awareness,
self-management, social awareness, and relationship management…” (30) (These
are described in Appendix B.) Personal Competence (how we manage ourselves): (39) · Self-Awareness
– Understanding your own emotions and their impact; knowing your strengths
and weaknesses; and a sound sense of self-worth · Self-Management
– Keeping emotions under control; being transparent; being flexible; drive
for performance; initiative to seize opportunities; being optimistic Social Competence (how we manage relationships): · Social
Awareness – Sensing others’ emotions and understanding their perspective;
reading the currents of the organization; and recognizing and meeting
customer needs · Relationship
Management – Motivating with vision; using a range of tactics for persuasion;
developing others through feedback and guidance; initiating and managing
change; resolving disagreements; cultivating relationships; and team building “Vision requires what looks to others like a leap of
faith: the ability to go beyond the data and to make a smart guess.” “Intuition works best, it seems, when a
gut sense can be used to build on other kinds of data.” (43) “Self-management…frees us from being a prisoner of our
feelings. It’s what allows the mental
clarity and concentrated energy that leadership demands….” “By staying in control of their feelings
and impulses, they craft an environment of trust, comfort, and fairness.”
(46-7) “Self-management also enables transparency, which is not
only a leadership virtue but also an organizational strength. Transparency—an authentic openness to
others about one’s feelings, beliefs, and actions—allows integrity, or the
sense that a leader can be trusted.”
“Integrity also means that a leader lives his values.” “Effective leadership demands the same
sort of capacity for managing one’s own turbulent feelings while allowing the
full expression of positive emotions.” (47-8) Empathy is “taking employees’ feelings into thoughtful
consideration and then making intelligent decisions that work those feelings
into the response.” (50) “When leaders are able to grasp other people’s feelings
and perspectives, they access a potent emotional guidance system that keeps
what they say and do on track.”
“Empathetic people are superb at recognizing and meeting the needs of
clients, customers, or subordinates.
They seem approachable, wanting to hear what people have to say. They listen carefully, picking up on what
people are truly concerned about, and they respond on the mark.” (50) “Relationship management includes persuasion, conflict
management, and collaboration. It is
“friendliness with a purpose: moving people in the right direction….” (51) Six leadership styles (table on p. 55):
Visionary, Coaching, Affiliative, Democratic, Pacesetting, Commanding. The first four are highly resonance
producing. The latter two should be
used with caution and can easily be dissonance producing. “Overall the visionary approach is most effective. By continually reminding people of the
larger purpose of their work, the visionary leader lends a grand meaning to
otherwise workaday, mundane tasks.”
“Visionary leaders understand that distributing knowledge is the
secret to success; as a result, they share it openly and in large doses.”
(58-9) The visionary style does not work when a leader is working
with a team of experts or peers who are more experienced than he. (59) Leaders tend to use the coaching style least often, but it
provides an outstandingly positive emotional response. “By making sure they
have personal conversations with employees, coaching leaders establish
rapport and trust. They communicate a
genuine interest in their people….”
“Getting to know people individually is more important than ever.”
(60) The affiliative leadership style is marked by an open
sharing of emotions. Such leaders
value people and their feelings, which has a surprisingly positive impact on
a group’s climate. Affiliative
leadership heightens team harmony, improves morale and communication and
repairs broken trust. However, if a
leader relies solely on affiliation, work may suffer in deference to
feelings. (64-65) A democratic approach works best when the leader is
uncertain of direction and needs ideas from able employees. It works well to surface ideas about how
to implement the vision. (67-8) “David Morgan, CEO of Westpac Bank in Australia, spends up
to twenty days each year meeting with various groups of his top 800 people,
40 at a time. ‘It’s a session where
they give me feedback,’ Morgan told us. ‘I want to know how it really
is.’ ‘The greatest risk is being out
of touch with what’s going on.’ For
such feedback sessions to be useful, the leader must be open to
everything—bad news as well as good.
‘I have to keep it safe for everyone to speak up. There’s no problem we can’t solve if we
can be open about it.’” (68) “The best communicators are superb listeners” (69) “The more of the six styles a leader can deploy, then, the
better. Leaders who have mastered
four or more, …especially the resonance-building styles—foster the very best
climate and business performance.” (85) “The higher up the ladder a leader climbs, the less
accurate his self-assessment is likely to be. The problem is an acute lack of feedback. Leaders have more trouble than anybody
else when it comes to receiving candid feedback, particularly about how
they’re doing as leaders.” “The
paradox, of course, is that the higher a leader’s position in an organization,
the more critically the leader needs that very kind of feedback.” (92) “CEO disease: the information vacuum around a leader
created when people withhold important (and usually unpleasant) information.”
(93) “It may take a small act of courage to confront the boss
with bad news about the company, but you have to be even braver to let the
boss know he’s out of touch with how people are feeling.” (93) “Seeking honest information on leadership
capabilities can be vital to a leader’s self-awareness, and therefore, his
growth and effectiveness.” (95) “The crux of leadership development that works is self-directed
learning: intentionally developing or strengthening an aspect of who you
are or who you want to be, or both.
This requires first getting a strong image of your ideal self,
as well as an accurate picture of your real self—who you are not.”
(109) Self-directed learning involves five discoveries: my ideal
self; my real self (my strengths and gaps); a learning agenda (for building
strengths and reducing gaps); practicing new leadership skills; and
leveraging trusting relationships to help you do these things. (109-111)
Then practicing the new behaviors.
“Changing habits is hard work.” (116)
“Taking stock of your real self starts with an inventory
of your talents and passions—the person you actually are as a leader.”
(128) “It requires a great deal of
self-awareness, if only to overcome the inertia of …habits.” “The reality can be painful.” (129-30) Our “ego-defense mechanisms…protect us emotionally so that
we can cope more easily with life.
But in the process, they hide or discard essential information—such as
how others are responding to our behavior.” “The most obvious way to correct
distortions in self-perception, of course, would be to receive corrective
feedback from the people around us.”
“Soliciting negative information may be vital to a person’s continued
growth and effectiveness.” (130-33) “Perhaps the greatest mistake that people make when
setting goals is committing themselves to activities that are difficult to do
in their current lives and work style.”
(148) People learn most often through one of the following modes
(per David Kolb):
“It’s possible to improve if you do three things: Bring
bad habits into awareness, consciously practice a better way, and rehearse
that new behavior at every opportunity until it becomes automatic—that is,
until mastery has occurred at the level of implicit learning.” “The key to learning new habits for
leaders lies in practice to the point of mastery.” (156-57) “Groups begin to change only when they first have fully
grasped the reality of how they function…”
“If the group lacks harmony or the ability to cooperate,
decision-making quality and speed suffer.” (172-73) “One of the biggest mistakes leaders can make: ignoring
the realities of team ground rules and the collective emotions in the tribe
and assuming that the force of their leadership alone is enough to drive
people’s behavior.” (176) “Members of a self-aware team are attuned to the emotional
undercurrents of individuals and the group as a whole.” “Since emotions are contagious, team
members take their emotional cues from each other, for better or for worse.”
(178) “That first step, uncovering the truth and an
organization’s reality, is the leader’s primal task. But too many leaders fail to invite the
truth, which can leave them prey to the CEO disease—being a leader who is out
of touch and out of tune. In their
most benign form, such leaders seem to have not time for important
conversations, and do not build the kind of affiliative or coaching
relationships that result in deep dialogue about what’s working and what is
not. They don’t have enough real contact
with people in their organizations to get a sense of what is happening,
living in a kind of rarefied air that leaves them out of touch with the
underlying emotional reality of day-to-day life.” (193) “Change begins when emotionally intelligent leaders
actively question the emotional reality and the cultural norms underlying the
group’s daily activities and behavior.
To create resonance—and results—the leader has to pay attention to the
hidden dimensions: people’s emotions, the undercurrents of the emotional
reality in the organization, and the culture that holds it all together.”
(195)
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