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Justin Wright Emotional intelligence becomes real when people still feel respected after a disagreement, not just understood during a calm conversation. The leaders people never forget are rarely the smartest in the room; they’re the safest to be human around.
Emotional intelligence shapes how people lead, communicate, and build relationships.
Six years in HR and the pattern was remarkably consistent. The people who got promoted weren't always the most technically skilled. They were the ones who could read a room, handle a difficult conversation without making it worse, and own a mistake without making everyone around them feel the need to manage their reaction to it. Number three on this list — pause before reacting — is the one that separated the high performers from the high maintenance. Emotions are just information is one of the most useful reframes I've ever come across. The people who internalized that stopped being reactive and started being effective.
EQ is not what you say about yourself. It shows up in how people feel after dealing with you. If your team feels tense, something in your control is still off.
EQ gets talked about like a buzzword, but in real work it’s just how you show up when things get messy
EQ is such an underrated skill. Technical skills may open doors, but emotional intelligence is what helps people build trust, lead well, and grow long-term.
Most successful leaders are experts in emotional intelligence and must be very good at people management. These are helpful tips, Justin Wright
A lot of people think EQ is about being nice all the time. In reality some of the highest EQ leaders I’ve met are the ones willing to have the hard conversation calmly instead of avoiding it.
Emotional intelligence is becoming one of the most valuable leadership advantages in high-performance environments. 🙏🏼
EQ usually shows up most in the moments that test you, not the easy ones. How someone handles pressure, feedback, and conflict tells you a lot about how they lead Justin Wright.
A lot of careers don’t break from lack of skill.They break from poor emotional control when pressure hits.
Being happy for others when they do well is the one that separates high EQ from just managing your own emotions well.
Understanding people is one of the great qualities of great leaders
Titilola Madedor I agree completely
Emotional intelligence shows in how calmly you handle pressure and people.
Justin Wright Emotional intelligence creates stronger teams because understanding reactions and emotions often improves decisions more than technical skills.
Emotional intelligence is not just a soft skill. It is a system.
I ran it through the CGOSTI Transformer. Here is the G output.
Goal: Individuals consistently respond to people and situations with self-awareness, empathy and composure — building trust, resolving conflict and creating environments where others feel safe to contribute and grow.
Every one of the eight behaviours you listed — empathy, trust, pausing before reacting, owning mistakes — are the Objectives and Tactics of that Goal in action.
The system already exists. Most people just have not mapped it.
🔗 cgosti.mightyunits.com
#CGOSTI #EmotionalIntelligence #EQ #MightyUnits #Clarity #Leadership #SystemsThinking #AI
High EQ in leadership is less about staying calm all the time and more about creating spaces where people feel safe to speak, disagree, and grow. That tends to be the difference between authority and real influence.
Superpower like no other. I think managing reactions in the moment because sometimes depending on it, it can be a pretty big situation.