Definitive Guide to Improving Emotional Intelligence
Satish Mummareddy
Ex - Meta, Yelp, Yahoo. Helping people develop leadership skills and cross career chasms.
Definitive Guide to Improving Emotional Intelligence
Seven years ago after producing outstanding results for my team and greatly exceeding all our goals for the year, I had an unexpected performance conversation with my manager. He mentioned that the way I handled some of the disagreements with people across different levels wasn’t as productive, and I was hurting the effectiveness of the organization. He felt I was too focused on the results themselves instead of the how we produced them as a team. He gave me examples where I came off as being too pushy with a junior PM, where I did not adequately address the concerns of my partners teams, and when I pushed back repeatedly in a leadership meeting without deeply considering the alternate points of view.?
My heart was in the right place and I was advocating for what I thought was in the best interests of the company. However my intentions were not landing accurately on other people, and, as a result, I wasn’t able to drive all of the positive outcomes I wanted.?
This led me on a winding journey of understanding what I needed to change and how to actually make those changes happen. I spent tens of thousands of dollars on courses and bought hundreds of books. I picked up different insights from these materials that made a significant difference in my evolution as a person. I hit many walls along the way and I wanted to give up. I would then dig into my collection of books or find another course. The universe always found a way to send me the right help. I even started to take away learnings from my tennis coach. His favorite mantra was “Your technique is aggressive, You are not!” and I thought about all the ways it applies to my work. I would eventually view the wall as a speed bump in my rear view mirror. A few people who were close to me were inspired by the inner work I was doing and leaned in to help me.
I started to see the impact of my inner work in my performance review feedback I was receiving from other people in the company. My greatest joy was when one of my peers wrote in a recent performance review, “I'm pretty sure I would have flipped a table and started screaming at least a couple of times if put through what he had to go through, but he stayed calm and collected and worked each problem as it arose without any apparent consternation.”?
I have come a long way from six years ago. The improvements I made from each of the individual courses or books were small pieces of the greater puzzle that I had to put together. In hindsight, I wish someone had shown me a more direct path to improving my emotional intelligence.?
I am sharing my learnings so that you can get there 10 times faster than I did.
Emotional Intelligence is the ability to drive positive outcomes in high stakes situations without letting anyone’s hijacked emotions get in the way.
Improving emotional intelligence require intentional work in a few areas:
Below are brief summaries of each of these areas. I will tackle each of these in detail in future posts and will share resources that helped me.
1. Mitigate Emotional Triggers: We need to identify our emotional triggers whether they be specific people, situations or behaviors. In addition we need to dig deeper and identify the root causes of those emotional triggers which are based on childhood experiences, and how we perceive reality. For example: My parents taught me that anything less than a 100/100 in a test was a failure, which resulted in me becoming a perfectionist. The challenge with being a perfectionist is that I used to hold others to an unreasonable standard even about small things and would get triggered when my expectations weren’t met.The Having that realization helped me be more judicious on the things that I wanted to hold myself and others to a high standard and improved my happiness as well as my relationships. There are a number of ways I mitigated triggers:
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2. Develop Self-Compassion: Once we start identifying our mistakes and growth areas it is easy to get stuck in a cycle of self-judgement and punishment. It is extremely important to find a way to radically accept yourself as you cannot move forward without it. I used to be extremely hard on myself and never forgave myself for mistakes. This led me to live in a world of what ifs and constantly self flagellating myself for mistakes I made years ago. It took me a long time to understand that unless I forgave myself and accepted myself for who I am I cannot move on and be happy. I credit three things for helping me develop self compassion:?
3. Develop mindfulness skills: ?Identifying your triggers helps you blunt them, but you still need to develop skills to not get emotionally hijacked or calm yourself down. The secret is that your body sends physical signals that you are having negative emotions way before your brain realizes it and before you do something you will regret. The key then is to listen to your body more actively and recognize patterns that are tied to emotional hijacking. For example, I start to lean in my chair, my breathing gets shallow, my face frowns up etc. There are a few ways to build mindfulness skills:
4. Listen Deeply and Speak Intentionally: Even if you have your emotions under control the conversation can derail if the other person is triggered by your works or your misunderstanding of their intention.? If you can make a person feel truly heard and if you speak in a way that makes them feel good about themselves, you can get positive outcomes in any situation. A number of resources tied together helped me improve my listening and speaking skills:
5. Prepare for tough conversations by setting outcomes, intentions, planning the words to use, identifying potential triggers, how to de-escalate when things go wrong.?
6. Execute on the conversation by working through an agenda, checking if we are on track at frequent intervals, identifying when conversations are going down the wrong path, thinking about how to reframe the conversations, focusing on the pre-established outcomes, asking for a recess/circling back if we can get to alignment etc.
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GenAI Product Leader - Machine Learning at Meta, Adjunct Professor at UCLA | ex-Amazon | ex-PIMCO | raohacker.com
2 年Your content and thinking is always great - I love how specific you get with your tips. Three more tips I can add to the list, that may seem simple but have been powerful for me: 1) Get enough sleep consistently; 2) Meditate (or start a deep breath practice); 3) Get lots of cardio exercise regularly. I can see clear drops in my emotional regulation when these falter.