How to Evaluate Emotional Intelligence When Hiring or Promoting People
Exerts say Emotional Intelligence may be the single largest determining factor of a person's success. Images 123rf, BMG, Shutterstock

How to Evaluate Emotional Intelligence When Hiring or Promoting People

Because Emotional Intelligence is one of the best predictors of workplace success, how can employers determine just how emotionally intelligent a candidate for hire or promotion is?

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Maya Angelou. Daniel Goleman. Leadership Institute. Wall Street Journal. The Financial Post. The Center for Creative Leadership. Travis Bradberry. ?Egon Zehnder. John Sullivan. Carnegie Institute of Technology. Evidence continues to mount that shows that someone’s emotional intelligence is one of the most reliable predictors of their success in the workplace. How, then, can an employer determine just how emotionally intelligent someone is before extending him or her a job offer or promoting him or her into a position of greater responsibility??

Here are three powerful ways to consistently select for emotional intelligence.

One of a manager or leader's most important responsibilities is to select the right person to fill each opening.

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One: Ask the Right Interview Questions

While many traditional interview questions help interviewers assess a candidate’s technical skills and relevant experience, the following questions are designed to help you assess your candidate’s emotional intelligence.? As with any effective interview, you will need to ask follow-on questions and probe for details in order to get a true and accurate picture of the candidate.

  1. Tell me about the person (co-worker, customer, boss) with whom you regularly need to work who is most challenging for you.? What do you do to manage this working relationship? High EQ Clues: the candidate takes responsibility to make the relationship work.? He or she does not badmouth the other person. He or she adapts his/her approach to work more effectively with the other person. He or she seeks a positive relationship with the challenging coworker.? The relationship is currently productive.
  2. When did you last embarrass yourself at work? What were the circumstances, what happened, and how did it turn out for you?? High EQ Clues: the candidate can readily admit being embarrassed. The candidate gave details disclosing how he or she felt. He/she took ownership without blaming others or circumstances.? The candidate provided evidence that it was a learning experience.? He/she has gotten past the negatives of what happened.
  3. Who is your favorite role model with whom you worked? ?What specifically makes him or her a good role model for you? High EQ Clues: the candidate describes the role model’s personal qualities that reflect emotional intelligence, such as trust, compassion, integrity, work ethic, relationship-building, authenticity, and resilience.? He or she wants to be more like that role model and has taken steps to develop him/herself in that direction.?
  4. What specific things make you angry or frustrated at work? Tell me why they anger you and how you cope with your frustration. High EQ Clues: the candidate is self-aware enough to identify things that anger or frustrate him/her and WHY they do so (self-awareness). He or she demonstrates self-regulation to manage his or her negative impulses. He or she doesn’t simply bottle up his or her emotions, but seeks appropriate ways of moving past the anger and frustration.
  5. Take a moment or two to identify the top four or five things that motivate you to do your best, and how present or absent they are in your current role or position.?High EQ Clues: the candidate is well-aware of what motivates him or her.? He or she identifies several that are intrinsic (not supplied by others, such as money, recognition, or advancement). He or she finds appropriate ways to use his or her motivational factors in the current job/role. He or she finds motivation in the work they do. ??

A top candidate will provide answers to your interview questions demonstrating how he or she understands and applies EQ to day-to-day job responsibilities.


Two: Use an Emotional Intelligence Assessment

A reliable, validated, and correlated emotional intelligence assessment is one of the wisest investments you can make to improve your quality of hire.? The greater the degree of people contact the job or role requires, the more important it will be to hire someone with well developed emotional intelligence.?

Among the best EQ assessments I’ve tested are Emotional Quotient? (TTI), the TriMetrix EQ? which blends the sciences of EQ with DISC Behaviors and Driving Forces, Emotional Intelligence 2.0 (Bradberry), and the Emotional & Social Competency Inventory (ESCI, Goleman).

For a tiny fraction of the cost of making a bad hire, using a high-quality assessment like the TriMetrix EQ, will help you know a candidate's emotional intelligence levels.

Above is a sample graph from the 13-page Emotional Quotient? assessment.? It shows how and individual scored on a 100-point scale across five different areas of measurement relative to two benchmarks:

  • The international mean for the tens of millions of people who have taken the assessment (designated by the 74* in 1. SELF-AWARENESS), and
  • Where 2/3 of the population falls (one standard deviation above and below the mean, as represented by the red-canoe shape in 1. SELF-AWARENESS, below the bar graph and above the mean score of 74).

What follows the graph page are additional details and explanation, and more importantly, the specific actions the participant can take to improve his or her EQ in each of the five areas measured.?

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When your interviewers understand how to evaluate a candidate's EQ, they vastly improve their hiring decisions.

Three: Train Your Interviewers in Emotional Intelligence?

In addition to understanding the best practices of effective interviewing and talent selection, interviewers who are trained in emotional intelligence are much more aware of what to look for in a candidate, including the body language signs of a candidate’s emotional intelligence.? The adage, it takes one to know one, is applicable here.? Emotionally intelligent people tend to be able to spot candidates who possess high (and low) emotional intelligence.? They are more sensitive in identifying the nuances of emotionally intelligent behavior, and more likely to be accurate in projecting how well a candidate will fit on the team and in the organization.?

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Bottom Line

Too many organizations fail to pay attention to emotional intelligence as a success factor when hiring or considering someone for promotion.? With the cost of a bad hire regularly exceeding 2.5 times the total annual compensation for a position (per SHRM, HBR, WSJ), your organization can no longer afford to make emotionally UNintelligent hires! ?

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This article is based on more than 30 years’ of my work in behavioral science and the principles taught in ??Leading Through People 18? – Leading More Effectively with Emotional Intelligence and B2B Sales Essentials? 15, Selling With Emotional Intelligence.

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I love working with people and organizations who want to improve their effectiveness!? Here are several outstanding resources that can help you and your organization to go to the next level:

  1. Improving your (or your team’s) management and leadership skills: Leading Through People?
  2. Raising your (or your team’s) selling effectiveness: B2B Sales Essentials??
  3. Conducting a more effective job search: Get a Better Job Faster?

About me: Since founding Boyer Management Group more than 25 years ago, I’ve been blessed to work with some of the world’s top employers by helping them get the most out of their talented people. My company's extensive?leadership development course catalog provides effective skills-building for everyone in the organization, from the new / developing leader to the seasoned C-level executive.?My company's coaching programs produce significant results in compressed periods of time.?In 2023 and 2024 I was named CEO Monthly's Most Influential CEO in Executive Coaching for the results we've produced serving our clients. My company's acclaimed career development tools help people navigate the ever-changing landscape of conducting a successful job search.?To find out more, please visit us at?www.boyermanagement.com, email us at [email protected], or call us at 215-942-0982.??

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