This blog is for meaning ful discussions on EQ or EI. Visit www.myemotionaljournry.com our website to know morw. PROMOTER: This blog has been created by Dr Dalip Singh IAS an eminent civil servant with experience of more than 38 years in Indian bureaucracy. He belongs to Indian administrative service and joined the civil service in 1982. He is a trained psychologist.
Friday, November 27, 2020
THE INDIAN CIVIL SERVANT: Emotional Intelligence and Your Profession: exclus...
Wednesday, November 25, 2020
Emotional Intelligence and Your Profession: exclusive interview of Prof NK Chadha, Psychologist
Emotional Intelligence and Your Profession:
DO DIFFERENT JOBS REQUIRE DIFFERENT LEVELS OF EQ?
Interview Prof NK Chadha, Psychologist
Learn to use your emotions to your advantage. You will be a different person?
Q: Do different professions require different amount of emotional intelligence or it is a myth?
NK Chadha: In today’s business world,
management pundits have always wondered whether different professions exhibit
different emotional intelligence levels or not. The answer is that different
jobs require different levels of EQ. It is now recognized that emotional
intelligence plays an important role in many areas of life, including work.
Some jobs require and some do not, the emotional skills to succeed. So it is a
reality and not a myth.
NK Chadha: Jobs that can be accomplished individually
or by working with others in fixed, set or structured ways do not require a
great deal of emotional intelligence. For instance, success in painting or
professional tennis may require more self-discipline and motivation, and less
EQ. Jobs which demand interaction with other people, or working in informal
teams, or empathizing with and understanding others are the ones that require
emotional intelligence. If you lack the requisite level of emotional
intelligence, you may not only find such jobs difficult to cope with, but also
less satisfying. Success in sales requires the empathic ability to gauge a
customer’s mood and the interpersonal skill to decide when to pitch a product
and when to keep quiet. There are professions that require interacting with
people, working in teams or having informal relationships. For example, leaders
may need a higher degree of EQ because of the very nature of their job, which
requires them to interact with a large number of people, and empathize and
understand their needs and desires. Experience shows that success in sales
requires an ability to judge clients’ moods and the emotional skill to decide
when to promote the product and when to keep quiet. Such professions may be
satisfying only when one has the requisite level of emotional intelligence.
Q: Are you advocating that leaders with high
EQ are star performers as compared to others?
NK Chadha: YES. A high EQ can set you apart
from your colleagues and lead you to other forms of success at the workplace.
Some professions may exhibit a great deal of emotional intelligence while
others may not. There are professions that require interacting with people,
working in teams or having informal relationships. For example, leaders may
need a higher degree of EQ because of the very nature of their job, which
requires them to interact with a large number of people, and empathize and
understand their needs and desires.
Similarly, teaching
and police require a high level of
EQ. For example, the teaching profession requires emotional competencies such
as rapport, harmony and comfort while dealing with groups. A teacher with high
IQ may not necessarily be high in these emotional competencies. Hence, teachers
with high EQ seem to exhibit open and free expression of ideas that lead them
to creativity and mutual respect. In the police profession, a person has to
constantly work under stress emanating from threat to life, while encountering
criminal elements and dealing with communal clashes. The police officer is
expected to handle the situation tactfully and the job requires firmness and
empathy in appropriate doses. A police officer with high EQ knows how to manage
emotions of people, emotions of victims in difficult times such as ethnic
clashes, rape, political demonstrations and student strikes. Political leaders,
as well as successful businessmen/entrepreneurs, advocates, and the people
engaged in tourism are supposed to be high on EQ.
NK Chadha: YES. In Contrast, there are jobs
that can be executed individually in structured or fixed ways may not require a
great deal of emotional intelligence. For instance, success in painting or
professional tennis may require more self-discipline and motivation, and less
EQ. For example, there are professions
such as judiciary, administration, information technology, medicine, banking,
engineering, accountancy which require moderate
scores level of EQ. This is indicative of a trend that these professions
may not require a high degree EQ. In other words, a moderate level of EQ
appears to be sufficient to be successful in these professions. Bureaucrats,
for instance, face conflict, stress and burnout from internal and external
factors and may be able to deal with them effectively with moderate EQ. The
judiciary, information technology needs a dedicated and individualistic
approach at the workplace. The judge, software engineer, computer programmer or
computer engineer has to concentrate on programmes that require minimal
interaction with people. Hence, it is not surprising that moderate EQ would
suffice in these professions. The scientists, engineers and IT professionals may
prove to be effective in their professions even with a moderate amount of EQ.
Similarly, in medicine, banking, engineering and accountancy professions, the
job is entirely impersonal, involving monetary transactions and financial
matters that usually have little or no interaction with people. In financial
institutions, rules and regulations are well defined and cannot be changed or
modified. Hence, an moderate EQ is fine in these professions.
Q: So Professor where do we stand now? Please dispel the confusion? Do we conclude High EQ is good and LOW EQ is bad?
NK Chadha: Emotions are neither good nor bad.
There are thresholds of each emotion and you have to learn to be emotionally
intelligent to be successful. I may conclude by saying that different
professions do require different levels of EQ. However, having a high or
average EQ cannot simplistically be labeled as ‘good’ or ‘bad’ in a profession.
It is necessary to have the right balance of various emotional competencies
that can help one become a star performer. Although many professions exhibited
moderate EQ, it should not be interpreted that high EQ is not required in these
professions.
Q: How does one come to know about the level
of his-her EQ. Is there any EQ test developed for it?
NK Chadha: Are you emotionally
intelligent? To find out you can test your EQ online. Visit www.eqindia.com and attempt
FREE ONLINE EQ TEST developed by me and Dr Dalip Singh IAS. The test will help you know more
about yourself and about people around you. The test measures the way you use
your emotional skills in your personal and professional life. This EQ test has
a test-retest and split-half reliability of 0.94 and 0.89 respectively and validity
of 0.89. Developed in 2001, this test has been attempted by more than 150,000
people worldwide and being used extensively for research. You can also visit
THE INDIA CIVIL SERVANT on YOUTUBE and get more information.
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