Every organization dreams of promoting high-performing experts into leadership roles that truly inspire others. Yet, research from Gartner reveals a painful truth: nearly 60% of new managers fail within their first two years. Why? Because technical brilliance doesn’t automatically translate into people leadership. That’s where emotional intelligence in leadership becomes essential. Emotional intelligence (EQ) equips leaders with the self-awareness, empathy, and communication skills needed to manage people—not just processes. It’s the human side of leadership that turns good managers into great ones.
A large U.S. conservation organization with over 30,000 employees learned this firsthand. As Senior Executive Hector Ortiz explained, “Putting people in leadership positions who are the most technically skilled won’t work out if you don’t equip them with the right leadership skills.” His organization made emotional intelligence training the core of its leadership development strategy. Each new leader undergoes a 360° assessment and an EQ evaluation to uncover blind spots in areas like self-management, empathy, and relationship-building.
Dr. Travis Bradberry, co-author of Emotional Intelligence 2.0, reinforces this approach: “Unlike IQ or personality, emotional intelligence is a skill that can be learned and improved.” By teaching EQ, organizations aren’t just developing leaders—they’re cultivating emotionally resilient cultures.
Ortiz’s organization uses a repeatable framework: Assess, Workshop, Practice, Coach, and Repeat. After initial assessments, leaders attend workshops focused on self-awareness, emotional control, and empathy. They’re then paired with certified internal coaches who help them navigate real-world challenges. “When they encounter issues or conflicts, they have a coach there to guide them,” Ortiz says.
The results speak for themselves—over 4,000 leaders have gone through this EQ journey, growing stronger with every promotion. Leaders are re-tested and re-coached regularly, ensuring emotional intelligence development is continuous, not a one-time event.
After years of applying emotional intelligence in leadership, Ortiz and his team highlight three critical lessons:
Lead with humility. Ego blocks growth. As psychologist Daniel Goleman notes, humility fuels adaptability.
Create space for reflection. Emotional pauses lead to wiser decisions.
Keep learning continuous. Reassess and retrain often—EQ matures through experience.
Looking ahead, Ortiz envisions immersive EQ bootcamps: “You’d live there, eat there, breathe emotional intelligence, and come out a better leader.” It’s ambitious, but essential. After all, the most technically skilled person doesn’t always make the best leader—but with emotional intelligence, they can become one.
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