Teambuilding with Emotional Intelligence Competencies

Similar documents
City of Madison. Women s Leadership Series LEADERSHIP ASSESSMENTS. DAY 5: June 28, 2016

TESI 2.0 Sample Team 2. Date: Wednesday, January 28, Facilitated by Marcia Hughes & James Terrell

Assessment Center Report

+ Capacity for Health. Presents

Emotional Intelligence & Leadership Global Health Institute Chiang Mai Thailand

more primal: Great leadership works through the emotions (Boyatzis, Goleman and McKee, 2002).

When it comes to competing for the CFO position, controllers. Navigating the Uncertain Road from CONTROLLER to CFO: The Leadership Imperative

The Maxwell Leadership Assessment

Feedback Report. ESCI - University Edition. Sample Person Hay Group 11/21/06

Emotional Intelligence

E.M.S Leadership Development. Objectives. Leadership Development 11/4/2012. Drew Fried, EMT-CC CHEP, CHSP. Help explain leadership techniques

2 LEADERSHIP CHALLENGES

Dimensions in Leadership. From Commander to Coach

Integrating Ethics Into Your Compliance Program. John A. Gallagher, Ph.D Center for Ethics in Health Care Atlanta, GA

The Disney Approach to Leadership Excellence

Realizing. Issue 17 LEADERSHIP. Everyday Leaders Changing Our World. Linda Fisher Thornton in Conversation ETHICAL LEADERSHIP

A summary of the principles from The Speed of Trust Book:

Competency Model for HR Professionals

Your Future s So Bright

PERSONAL COMMUNICATION STYLES INVENTORY

Using Your Emotional Intelligence as a Consultant. Jill Dann FBCS CITP

steps for brand clarity + authenticity mezzanine.co transformation application of brand expression expression expression expression expression

(Kotter & Cohen, 2002, P. 183)

Leadership communication: the three levels

TRANSFORMATIONAL LEADERSHIP

What are the common and unique Public Service competencies?

Return on Investment Return on your EQ-i investment

EQ 4 Law-Academy Syllabus Emotional Intelligence Training for Law Enforcement

BUILDING GOOD WORK RELATIONSHIPS

Project Manager: Superman or Entrepreneur?

Sales Gene Discovered. Do your sales people have it?

HOW YOUR CAREER BACKGROUND CAN HELP YOU BECOME A BUSINESS ANALYST

Bellevue University College of Continuing and Professional Education Recent Professional Development Deliveries

Introducing Leadership Alchemy

Managerial Style Workbook Developing your leadership strength

What skills and abilities does it really take to succeed as a Senior Human Resource Professional today?

Manager, Supervisor & CEMA Skill Set Model County of Santa Clara

Santa Monica College

ProfessionalPro. for Sample Person. March 7, 2008

TEAM EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE SURVEY REPORT

Your Personality Type and its Impact on Your Relationships

Leadership Boot Camp. Sylvia Escott-Stump, MA, RD, LDN S Escott-Stump

Turning Clients Into Creative Team Partners. inmotionnow

Sales Executive Customer Service Skills TANTO

Welcome to: 21 st Century Futures Coaching for mid-life career change. Choose a card.

ENVIRONMENT FACTORS TO ACHIEVE STRATEGIC OBJECTIVES IN COMPANIES

Building the Emotional Intelligence of Your Project Team

Creative Leadership Questionnaire (CLQ)

Organizational Change Capacity Questionnaire

7 Quality Organizations and Service. Copyright 2016, 2013, 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. 1

The Cost of Tactical Project Management: And the Opportunity of Strategic Project Leadership

Advanced Principles of Leadership

Proactively Managing Underperformance

ROLES OF A SUPERVISOR 1

Leadership. Masterclass. and Management

at work TIPS, TOOLS & INTELLIGENCE FOR DEVELOPING TALENT

Emotional Intelligence Self-Assessment Gabrielle K. Gabrielli, Ph.D.

The Value-Adding Board

WORKPLACE SKILLS (WPS)

Soft Skills. **Chart developed by the Seattle Jobs Initiative s Performance Skills Coalition, comprised of employer partners.

Career Compass Navigating Your Own Path to Success

What do effective leaders do? What should leaders do?

Top 10 Competencies Essential to Excellence on the Job (and in Life)

Dialing Up and Down Your Behavior

Profile Comparison Top-Leader

HIGH PERFORMANCE TEAMS

Facilitating Emotional Intelligence Skills in Your Fieldwork Students

[Insert Date] Teambuilding Skills. Leadership & Management Skills. Business Training Skills

[Insert Date] Leadership & Management Skills. Business Training Skills. Teambuilding Skills

SCU OF HEALTH SCIENCES Job Description. JOB TITLE: Clinical Research Associate

EQ Competencies Assessment

Key Performance Indicator Mapping

Ethics & Compliance Professional Competency Model

TRAINING CALENDAR (Soft Skills)

Nelson Mandela s Influence Using Organizational Behaviour Techniques

360 FEEDBACK SURVEY. Prepared for Organisation Name [NAME] 27 October AIM Research HR

Expert Report for Prof David Hall. Professional. Styles

1.2. What Motivates? Motivation of Internal & External Audiences

Achieving Results Through Genuine Leadership

SPORT MASSAGE: PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND MARKETING. BM.Wara Kushartanti Yogyakarta State University

LEADERSHIP PRINCIPLES (418)

Herb Stevenson, CEO, Cleveland Consulting Group, Inc. John Crum, Co-President, Seaman Corp Alex Williamson, Co-President, Seaman Corp.

Leading with Emotional Intelligence. by David Cory, M.A., 2010

THE LEADERSHIP ASSESSMENT THAT ILLUMINATES LEADER EFFECTIVENESS

Expert Report Chris Park

Scripps Core Competencies

Organizational Behaviour

INTEGRITY MANAGEMENT CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT. Foundation for an Effective Safety Culture

4-Dimension Service Recovery Plan: a Resource for Resolution

SEMESTER -----I UNIT ---I Soft Skill Meaning and Definition of oft Skills----Types of soft skills---listening and Monitoring Soft

Management and Leadership in the Modern Appraisal Organization. Nelson Karpa MBA, AACI P.App, AMAA, AAM

CAMPUS ADVANTAGE INC. Job Description. JOB TITLE: Corporate Intern

SYSTEMS OF SELF- ORGANISING WORK KIASMA, 08 June 2016

Susan de la Vergne You re never a finished product.

Using Key Principles to Build Rapport

5 STEPS To become a Charismatic Leader

PREPARATION FOR NEGOTIATION

Wales Millennium Centre Behavioral Competencies Framework 1

Transcription:

Teambuilding with Emotional Intelligence Competencies - Marcia Hughes & James Terrell What makes a group of people want to work together as a team? What makes a team want to do their very best work? When people feel safe, supported, and free to make a valuable contribution that will be recognized, they consistently perform at their best. In this article we explore how to build the emotional intelligence competencies necessary to create these conditions. When the emotional environment is rich and transparent, teams can trust enough to take risks and that promotes more complete and creative decision making. Desired team competencies include trusting, risk taking, communicating, conflict resolution and being respectful and productive. These result when an organization intentionally understands these competency domains and develops the environment that elicits the motivation to fully participate and the emotional intelligence skills to support the competencies. While different types of competencies are needed by teams, including technical expertise, we are focusing on Emotional Intelligence ( EI ) Competencies for this article. Competencies are the big picture statement of what is needed to be successful in a job. This is accomplished in part by the application of emotional intelligence skills, which can be independently measured and grown. EI skills are needed by the team as a whole, and can be measured by the TESI (Team Emotional & Social Intelligence Survey ) and by each individual and can be measured by the EQi. These skills are related to but different from individual personality traits, such as measured by the MBTI or Emergenetics. The following chart shows the progression we work with in understanding and developing team EI Competencies. www.cgrowth.com Page 1 www.eiteams.com

Figure 1: Team Emotional Intelligence Competencies When we are talking about team competencies, we are speaking of the skills or abilities needed to perform the specific tasks or functions assigned to the team. Accomplishing the competency is based upon their attitudes and behaviors as well as having the skills and knowledge needed. To be successful, teams need strength in emotional intelligence competencies such as trusting, risk taking, communicating, conflict resolution and being respectful and productive. We consider each of these areas as their own competency domain, and each competency domain is implemented through a complement of skills, attitudes, behaviors and information that are called for in a particular setting. Team Emotional Intelligence Competencies are implemented through a complement of skills, attitudes, behaviors and information. Teams need technical skills. For example, a team may need a competency in working with metal if they are building bridges, but to actually get the bridge designed, funded and built so it s structurally sound and aesthetically pleasing requires many competencies from the technical ones to others that are based in how intelligently the team works with their emotional and social information. Some of that information will be new, such as occurs when the CEO of a big bridge project walks into a team meeting and congratulates the team for being ahead of schedule and under budget. Most of the emotional and social information that informs team decisions will come from past experiences. When we reference past experiences as a part of our thinking, they www.cgrowth.com Page 2 www.eiteams.com

always come with emotional tags. We can t avoid it, there is no such thing as making a decision without using our emotions. Our choice is whether that emotional information is used well. That is why teams and their individual members need to use their emotional and social intelligence. Conflict Resolution Team Competency To exercise conflict resolution skills well, teams need to create the capacity to embrace divergent thinking, engage creatively and then coalesce around a common decision. The competency of a team resolving conflict is implemented by a collection of team and individual skills. At the team level they need team identity, emotional awareness, the ability to communicate well, stress tolerance skills, and a positive mood. Individuals on the team also need individual emotional intelligence skills in self regard, assertiveness, empathy, reality testing, impulse control and optimism. While every team needs all of these skills to resolve conflict, different teams will need a different balance of those skills. Depending on the culture of the organization that houses the team and the sociopolitical environment in which they operate there will be different emphasis on how conflict is addressed. For people who serve on many teams, success requires the ability to dial those skills up and down based on the specific situation. Let s take a look at a strategic approach for developing conflict resolution skills for a team. Figure 2 shows the skills needed at each of the three levels we have discussed. To apply this strategy the organization would: 1) Identify that they value teams being able to resolve conflict well resulting in establishing conflict resolution skills as a team competency. 2) Identify the emotional intelligence skills at the team and individual levels needed to support success in resolving conflict. (Remember there are other factors at play in addition to EI skills, such as sufficient information and resources and take those into account as appropriate.) The EI skills needed are: By the team: team identity, emotional awareness, the ability to communicate well, stress tolerance skills, and positive mood. By the individuals: self-regard, assertiveness, empathy, reality testing, impulse control and optimism. Together these skills need to support the ability to engage in divergent thinking and then move to convergent thinking where all rally around the final decision. 3) Measure the current strengths and challenges for the team with the TESI and for the individuals with the EQi or EQ 360 and set strategic goals for improvement. www.cgrowth.com Page 3 www.eiteams.com

4) Give all team members their individual MBTI or Emergenetics profiles and discuss how these trait or personality preferences affect team engagement. Understanding this will help define the best learning approaches as skills are being developed. Figure 2: Team Emotional Intelligence Competency for Conflict Resolution www.cgrowth.com Page 4 www.eiteams.com

Using a team model to measure and strategically target team emotional growth The Collaborative Growth team model provides a process for successfully implementing team EI competencies. The seven scales measured in the outer circle are all competencies, the implementation of any one supports successful implementation of the others, which is why the model is presented in a circle. However, some scales will be more relevant to particular goals, such as demonstrated in Figure 2. The middle circle shows the four desired results of team engagement, such as trusting one another, are more complex competencies that result from developing the first seven scales. The inner circle, or bull's eye, demonstrates the long term benefits teams and their organizations gain when these competencies are implemented. The TESI is a team 360 which measures the team members assessment of how well they are implementing the seven scales in the outer circle. It can be used to measure team progress through taking it before development begins and again as the strategies are being implemented. Conclusion When developing your teams, you ll have much more success when you strategically use a multi-dimensional approach including competencies, specific skill development and incorporating awareness of the personality traits of team members. www.cgrowth.com Page 5 www.eiteams.com