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Emotional Intelligence: Guidelines for Best Practice
The following 22 guidelines represent the
best current knowledge about how to promote emotional intelligence in
the workplace. They apply to any development effort in which social and
emotional learning is a goal. This would include most management and
executive development efforts as well as training in supervisory skills,
diversity, teamwork, leadership, conflict management, stress management,
sales, customer relations, etc.
These guidelines are based on an
exhaustive review of the research literature in training and
development, counseling and psychotherapy, and behavior change. The
guidelines are additive and synergistic; to be effective, social and
emotional learning experiences need not adhere to all of these
guidelines, but the chances for success increase with each one that is
followed.
The guidelines are divided into four
phases that correspond to the four phases of the development process:
preparation, training, transfer and maintenance, and evaluation.
Each phase is important.
These guidelines were developed for the
Consortium by Daniel Goleman and Cary Cherniss, with the assistance of
Kim Cowan, Rob Emmerling, and Mitchel Adler. If you are interested in
the full technical report that includes all the supporting research for
each guideline, you view the full technical report online or download
the document in Word 6.0/95 format from. The address of the Consortium's
Web site is
www.EIConsortium.org.
Paving the Way
1. Assess the organization's needs:
Determine the competencies that are most critical for effective job
performance in a particular type of job. In doing so, use a valid
method, such as comparison of the behavioral events interviews of
superior performers and average performers. Also make sure the
competencies to be developed are congruent with the organization's
culture and overall strategy.
2. Assess the individual: This
assessment should be based on the key competencies needed for a
particular job, and the data should come from multiple sources using
multiple methods to maximize credibility and validity.
3. Deliver assessments with care:
Give the individual information on his/her strengths and weaknesses. In
doing so, try to be accurate and clear. Also, allow plenty of time for
the person to digest and integrate the information. Provide the feedback
in a safe and supportive environment in order to minimize resistance and
defensiveness. But also avoid making excuses or downplaying the
seriousness of deficiencies.
4. Maximize learner choice: People
are more motivated to change when they freely choose to do so. As much
as possible, allow people to decide whether or not they will participate
in the development process, and have them set the change goals
themselves.
5. Encourage people to participate:
People will be more likely to participate in development efforts if they
perceive them to be worthwhile and effective.
Organizational policies and procedures
should encourage people to participate in development activity, and
supervisors should provide encouragement and the necessary support.
Motivation also will be enhanced if people trust the credibility of
those who encourage them to undertake the training.
6. Link learning goals to personal
values: People are most motivated to pursue change that fits with
their values and hopes. If a change matters little to people, they won't
pursue it. Help people understand whether a given change fits with what
matters most to them.
7. Adjust expectations: Build
positive expectations by showing learners that social and emotional
competence can be improved and that such improvement will lead to valued
outcomes. Also, make sure that the learners have a realistic expectation
of what the training process will involve.
8. Gauge readiness: Assess whether
the individual is ready for training. If the person is not ready because
of insufficient motivation or other reasons, make readiness the focus of
intervention efforts.
Doing the Work of Change
9. Foster a positive relationship
between the trainers and learners: Trainers who are warm, genuine,
and empathic are best able to engage the learners in the change process.
Select trainers who have these qualities, and make sure that they use
them then working with the learners.
10. Make change self-directed:
Learning is more effective when people direct their own learning
program, tailoring it to their unique needs and circumstances. In
addition to allowing people to set their own learning goals, let them
continue to be in charge of their learning throughout the program, and
tailor the training approach to the individual's learning style.
11. Set clear goals: People need
to be clear about what the competence is, how to acquire it, and how to
show it on the job. Spell out the specific behaviors and skills that
make up the target competence. Make sure that the goals are
clear, specific, and optimally challenging.
12. Break goals into manageable steps:
Change is more likely to occur if the change process is divided into
manageable steps. Encourage both trainers and trainees to avoid being
overly ambitious.
13. Provide opportunities to practice:
Lasting change requires sustained practice on the job and elsewhere in
life. An automatic habit is being unlearned and different responses are
replacing it. Use naturally occurring opportunities for practice at work
and in life. Encourage the trainees to try the new behaviors repeatedly
and consistently over a period of months.
14. Give performance feedback:
Ongoing feedback encourages people and directs change. Provide focused
and sustained feedback as the learners practice new behaviors. Make sure
that supervisors, peers, friends, family members . or some combination
of these . give periodic feedback on progress.
15. Rely on experiential methods:
Active, concrete, experiential methods tend to work best for learning
social and emotional competencies. Development activities that engage
all the senses and that are dramatic and powerful can be especially
effective.
16. Build in support: Change is
facilitated through ongoing support of others who are going through
similar changes (such as a support group). Programs should encourage the
formation of groups where people give each other support throughout the
change effort. Coaches and mentors also can be valuable in helping
support the desired change.
17. Use models: Use live or
videotaped models that clearly show how the competency can be used in
realistic situations. Encourage learners to study, analyze, and emulate
the models.
18. Enhance insight:
Self-awareness is the cornerstone of emotional and social competence.
Help learners acquire greater understanding about how their thoughts,
feelings, and behavior affect themselves and others.
19. Prevent relapse: Use relapse
prevention, which helps people use lapses and mistakes as lessons to
prepare themselves for further efforts.
Encouraging Transfer and
Maintenance of Change
20. Encourage use of skills on the job:
Supervisors, peers, and subordinates should reinforce and reward
learners for using their new skills on the job. Coaches and mentors also
can serve this function. Also, provide prompts and cues, such as through
periodic follow-ups. Change also is more likely to endure when high
status persons, such as supervisors and upper-level management model it.
21. Develop an organizational culture
that supports learning: Change will be more enduring if the
organization's culture and tone support the change and offer a safe
atmosphere for experimentation.
Did It Work? Evaluating Change
22. Evaluate: To see if the
development effort has lasting effects, evaluate it. When possible, find
unobtrusive measures of the competence or skill as shown on the job,
before and after training and also at least two months later. One-year
follow-ups also are highly desirable. In addition to charting progress
on the acquisition of competencies, also assess the impact on important
job-related outcomes, such as performance measures, and indicators of
adjustment such as absenteeism, grievances, health status, etc.
Source: The Consortium for Research on Emotional
Intelligence in Organizations Guidelines (
www.eiconsortium.org )
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