BELOW ARE THE 10 FILES FROM WHICH YOU NEED TO WRITE. AS YOU CAN SEE EVERYTHING MUST BE WRITTEN FROM ACADEMIC SESSIONS NO REFERENCE NEEDED ONLY 1500 WORDS Your task is to create a Professional Worksho

MBA502 Emotional Intelligence, Cultural Intelligence and Diversity Workshop Week 5 The Emotionally Intelligent Leader COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA Copyright Regulations 1969 WARNING This material has been reproduced and communicated to you by or on behalf of Kaplan Business School pursuant to Part VB of the Copyright Act 1968 ( the Act ). The material in this communication may be subject to copyright under the Act. Any further reproduction or communication of this material by you may be the subject of copyright protection under the Act. Do not remove this notice. Learning Objectives • Define and understand the competencies of an emotionally intelligent leader • Consider the impacts of emotionally unintelligent leaders • Understand the consequence of toxicity and the role of emotional contagion Why Leadership and EQ? • “Leadership is a process of social interaction .” • “It is intrinsically an emotional process, whereby leaders recognise followers’ emotional states, attempt to evoke emotions in followers, and then seek to manage followers’ emotional states accordingly.” • “The ability of leaders to influence the emotional climate can strongly influence performance.” (Kerr, Garvin, Heaton and Boyle, 2005) Leaders’ Feelings • Prior research has found that a leader’s mood can have a subsequent impact on a range of performance -related outcomes, such as the quality of customer service and the behaviour of employees. • Feelings therefore “play a much more central role in the leadership process”. Activity: In groups, you will be allocated one of the following emotions. Your task is to identify five ways in which a leader with that emotion may positively or negatively influence organisational outcomes as a result: ( i) anger, (ii) joy, (iii) sorrow, (iv) exhaustion, (v) cynicism, and (vi) frustration. (George, 2000) Leaders’ Moods • Leadership effectiveness can be influenced by both positive moods and negative moods. • Negative moods, for example, have been found to be useful when analysing complex information, when solving difficult problems and when dealing with urgent matters. Conversely, some negative moods – such as anger – may damage relationships and diminish trust. • Likewise, positive moods aren’t always positive. They, too, have been found to occasionally have negative consequences, such as failure to notice performance issues or to avoid confronting situations. • Therefore, both positive and negative moods can be functional and dysfunctional in a leader’s worklife. (George, 2000) Leadership Competencies • There are eight competencies on which senior leaders are primarily judged:

– Strategic leadership – Leading capability building – Leading political / stakeholder interface – Leading change – Intellectual leadership – Leading culture building – Building relationships and reputation – Building personal learning • Which of those activities require a significant amount of emotional intelligence in order to be successful? The activity over the next two slides will help you to find out. (Higgs and Aitken, 2003) Leadership and EQ Elements • Over the past three decades, dozens of EQ elements have been identified by scholars. • In one particular study, seven of these EQ elements were specially selected and applied among a number of senior managers. The EQ elements are:

– Self -awareness – Resilience – Motivation – Interpersonal sensitivity – Influence – Intuitiveness – Conscientiousness Activity: The next slide presents a matrix. In groups, place a tick in all the EQ cells that you think were found in the study to have a significant impact on leadership competency. (Higgs and Aitken, 2003) Self - awareness Resilience Motivatio n Interpersonal sensitivity Influenc e Intuitive -ness Conscien - tiousness Strategic leadership Leading capability building Leading political / stakeholder interface Leading change Intellectual leadership Leading culture building Building relationships and reputation Building personal learning Self - awareness Resilience Motivation Interpersonal sensitivity Influence Intuitive -ness Conscien - tiousness Strategic leadership     Leading capability building       Leading political / stakeholder interface       Leading change        Intellectual leadership        Leading culture building        Building relationships and reputation       Building personal learning       Activity • How did you go in that activity? What has it taught you about leadership? • Each group will now be allocated one of those leadership competencies. • You are required to discuss why you think the research resulted in the findings related to your leadership competency. • Share your thoughts with the class. Defining the Emotionally Intelligent Leader • An emotionally intelligent leader possesses and displays the hallmarks of the five components of emotional intelligence i.e. 1. Self -awareness 2. Self -regulation 3. Motivation 4. Empathy 5. Social skills The Hallmarks of an EI Leader Activity • Watch this video • President Obama with hecklers EI Leader Competencies • Self -Awareness – The EI leader has emotional self -awareness with the ability to read his/her own emotions and to recognise their impact in decision -making. – The EI leader has an accurate self -assessment, with an intimate understanding of his/her own strengths and limitations. – The EI leader has self -confidence, a sound sense of his/her self -worth and capabilities. EI Leader Competencies • Self -Regulation – The EI leader has emotional self -control, with disruptive emotions and impulses kept under control. – The EI leader is transparent, honest and trustworthy. – The EI leader is adaptable and flexible when confronted with changing situations and obstacles. – The EI leader shows initiative, with a readiness to act and seize opportunities. – The EI leader displays optimism. EI Leader Competencies • Motivation – The EI Leader provides inspiration, guidance and a compelling vision. – The EI leader is goal -focused. – The EI leader expects high standards but understand how to motivate people to pursues those standards. – The EI leader is energetic and enthusiastic, and this has a contagious effect on other with whom the leader interacts. EI Leader Competencies • Empathy – The EI leader is understands the emotional reaction that others are having. – The EI leader takes an active interest in others’ feelings, motivators, thoughts and ideas. – The EI leader is able to anticipate the emotional reaction that others might have and is therefore able to re -craft his/her message to suit that reaction. EI Leader Competencies • Social skills – The EI leader builds networks and relationships and through those connections exert influence. – The EI leader carefully read social cues and to respond accordingly. – The EI leader acts as a mediator and resolves conflicts and disagreements. – The EI leader is a solid communicator in a variety of communication methods. Activity • Each group will be allocated one of the EI Leader competencies on the previous five slides. Your task is now to:

– Think of a famous leader who personifies that EI competency. – Explain to the class not only why you feel that way but what you could also do to adopt that competency as a leader in your own workplace . • Emotional toxicity : – An “outcome of emotionally insensitive attitudes and actions of managers and the practices of their companies … a noxious substance draining vitality from individuals and [the] entire organisation.” (Frost, 1999). Consequences of low EI Source of toxicity include: (Frost, 2003) 1. In tention 2. In competence 3. In fidelity 4. In sensitivity 5. In trusion 6. In stitutional forces 7. In evitability • What is it?

– It’s a control mechanism • How does it manifest?

– By leaders who intentionally create pain in others via: • Coercive behaviour • Degrading others • Causing pain • Undermining self -confidence • Why does it happen?

– A need to control and dominate – Past experiences of the leader leads to distrust of staff Intention  What is it?

– Managers with weak or inadequate people skills  How does it manifest?

– Indecisiveness – an inability to make a decision – Inconsistency (mixed message) – Control freaks – those who micro -manage employees  Why does it happen?

– Lack of management training on how to create productive relationships with staff Incompetence  What is it?

– Acts of betrayal  How does it manifest?

– Repeating something said in confidence – Leading an employee on by deception – Taking credit for others’ work  Why does it happen?

– Abuse of power over subordinates Infidelity • What is it?

– Leaders who cannot gauge the impact of their own actions • How does it manifest?

– Lack of empathy for the feelings of others – Lack of awareness of how their emotions affect other people – Regular expressions of rage, disappointment, negativity • Why does it happen?

– Leaders cannot separate work from emotional needs of staff – Belief that everyone’s emotions should be “checked at the office door” Insensitivity  What is it?

– Based on the belief that an employee is irreplaceable or that a task is so urgent it can’t be delayed  How does it manifest? – Employee burnout – Neglect of one’s own health and welfare  Why does it happen?

– The charisma of the leader – The employees’ desire to be noticed or to get promoted Intrusion • What is it?

– Company practices that hurt the people carrying them out • How does it manifest?

– Inconsistencies between stated policies and what happens in practice – Company policies that are dishonest or misleading – Unrealistic expectations • Why does it happen?

– Organisations and managers are insensitive to the ways in which company practices affect the people who try to make the system work Institutional Forces  What is it?

– The nature of organisational life – decisions may have unintended consequences , such as the emotional impacts of significant change  How does it manifest?

– One example of an impact is that of trauma, such as that which occurs with the death of a co -worker , injury , or downsizing  Why does it happen? – Unavoidable inevitability of organisational life Inevitability Activity • The previous slides outlined the seven areas of workplace toxicity. • The solution in preventing that toxicity, or at least in overcoming it, is via the practice and adoption of emotionally intelligent leadership. • In groups, use Goleman’s five EI leadership competencies to identify which one would be most suitable for each of these toxic factors. Emotional Contagion • Emotional contagion is one way through which human beings affect each other automatically and unconsciously. • It essentially means the way that people think, feel and act is infectious. • Emotional contagion is probably at its most potent among leaders and employees. Contagion: the Ripple E ffect • It doesn’t stop there. When you infect someone with your own emotional state, they then go on to infect others. This is otherwise known as the ripple effect. • If it’s a positive emotion, there’s perhaps no issue. But if it’s negative, obvious consequences materialise. • That is why an awareness of your own emotions, and the effective regulation of them, is so important at work. Activity: In groups, share the most negative emotion you’ve experienced today. If you were to feel that emotion in the workplace, what’s one thing you could do to prevent others from catching it, too? Summary • In this workshop, we defined an emotionally intelligent leader. • We analysed the components and competencies of emotionally intelligent leaders. • We understood the toxic impact of emotionally unintelligent leaders. • We explored the concept of emotional contagion. • In Week 7 we shall explore Cultural & Social Diversity