Emotional intelligence is often promoted as the solution to organizational silos—but many leaders still struggle to see results. Why? Because most emotional intelligence training focuses on individuals, not the systems that keep teams disconnected. Based on more than 20 interviews with heads of learning and leadership development, a clear pattern emerges: leaders invest heavily in EQ, yet collaboration stalls. The missing piece isn’t empathy or communication skills alone. It’s understanding how people are connected at work. When emotional intelligence is applied at the network level, it becomes a powerful tool for breaking silos and orchestrating collaboration.
Why Organizational Silos Persist Despite Emotional Intelligence Training
Dr. Noah Askin, Associate Professor of Organization and Management at UC Irvine’s Paul Merage School of Business, offers a critical reframe. “The fundamental unit in organizations isn’t just the person,” he explains. “It’s the connections between people.” Traditional emotional intelligence programs emphasize self-regulation and awareness, which matter—but they don’t change how information flows. Silos persist because relationships form predictable patterns. Those patterns become networks that quietly determine who collaborates, who influences decisions, and who is left out. Without addressing those structures, even well-intentioned leaders reinforce silos.
How Network Blind Spots Undermine Collaboration
One of the first things Askin teaches leaders is to map their networks. Many leaders discover they sit inside dense clusters where communication is frequent and trust is high. These environments feel productive, but they often become echo chambers. Others act as “network brokers,” connecting groups that rarely interact. Research shows dense networks build trust, while brokers gain access to novel information. Innovation lives in that space between groups. Leaders who don’t understand where they sit in the network struggle to collaborate beyond their immediate circle.
Emotional Intelligence at the Team Level Changes the Game
When emotional intelligence is applied through a network lens, it becomes more practical. Instead of asking how leaders manage emotions, the question shifts to how they shape connection. Askin argues that effective leaders design collaboration intentionally rather than leaving it to chance. This insight is central to his book Orchestrating Connection, where he shows how leaders can build purposeful networks. Emotional intelligence, in this context, helps leaders decide where trust is needed and where new bridges must be built. The focus moves from personality to patterns.
Why Trust Is the Real Antidote to Organizational Silos
Understanding networks is only the first step. Trust is what allows leaders to cross boundaries. Askin is clear about what doesn’t work. Simply telling people to “network more” rarely changes anything. Connection deepens only when there is vulnerability. In his leadership programs, Askin replaces surface-level introductions with reflective prompts that invite personal meaning. That small act of openness accelerates trust. Without trust, cross-functional collaboration fails—not because of strategy, but because people don’t feel safe sharing ideas or uncertainty.
How Emotionally Intelligent Leaders Broker Across Differences
Breaking silos also requires translation. Different functions speak different languages. Sales prioritizes customers and revenue, engineering focuses on feasibility, and R&D values experimentation. Leaders who approach all groups the same way often create friction. Emotionally intelligent leaders adapt their style to the context. They listen for priorities, adjust their language, and frame ideas in ways others can hear. This is emotional intelligence applied beyond one-on-one interactions. It’s about reading environments and bridging perspectives.
Why Emotional Intelligence Can’t Be Delegated to AI
As organizations adopt AI, Askin warns against outsourcing the emotional work of leadership. AI can streamline communication, but it can’t replace attunement. Leaders don’t need to read a chatbot’s emotions—but they must read people. Emotional intelligence is never finished. Each relationship introduces new experiences and expectations. That ongoing curiosity is what builds strong networks. Efficiency without connection may save time, but it weakens collaboration.
The Leadership Shift That Finally Breaks Silos
Leaders who successfully break silos think differently about emotional intelligence. They understand the networks they operate in, not just org charts. They build trust deliberately, using vulnerability as a catalyst. And they act as brokers—translating ideas instead of protecting turf. Emotional intelligence becomes powerful when it changes how leaders connect and with whom. In siloed organizations, that shift may be the most critical leadership move of all.

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