Browse Comments — Clean (de-noised)
Close reading of the corpus at each pipeline stage: raw → clean → relevant → coded.
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High performance is tied directly to how we manage our emotions and support others during difficult moments. Building an environment of mutual respect is what transforms workplace culture and drives long-term career success.
Justin Wright EQ shows up in the small moments: who you hire, who you back in a tough meeting, how you react when a target is missed. The leaders who compound value are the ones who can stay steady under pressure and still make the hard call without making it personal.
Love this. Workplaces tend to function better when emotional awareness is active in daily interactions, shaping communication and reducing unnecessary friction across teams.
Justin your framing implies EQ is the determinative factor separating top from average performers. Decades of I-O psychology say otherwise. Schmidt & Hunter (1998) established general mental ability as the strongest single predictor of job performance across occupations (r ≈ .51, .58 in high-complexity roles). This has been confirmed over and over again ever since.There is some research suggesting correlation between Emotional Intelligence and job performace. Joseph & Newman (2010) found ability EI adds ~0.2% incremental variance in job performance over cognitive ability and the Big Five. Conclusion: There is zero peer-reviewed evidence that supports a 95% figure.
Strong teams grow through emotional understanding, where respect for differences builds steady and consistent collaboration. Thank you, Justin
Great breakdown. The part people miss is that emotional intelligence does not remove difficult conversations. It makes them more productive. Avoidance feels peaceful in the short term, but it usually creates a bigger mess later. Clarity with empathy is still one of the most underrated leadership skills.
Emotional intelligence is not about being agreeable. It is about being effective with people.
EQ is certainly beyond being nice.
Strong EQ turns self awareness into better conversations, trust, and leadership.
EQ really does show up in the small moments, how people respond, listen, and handle pressure says a lot. Great post Justin Wright!
High performers who last long-term usually combine competence with emotional maturity. Technical skills may open doors, but EQ is what builds trust and sustainable leadership.
Emotional intelligence is such a key ingredient in effective leadership and teamwork.
Emotional intelligence shows up strongest during disagreement. Calm reactions usually build more trust than perfect answers.
In a high-pressure moment, the person who slows things down instead of matching the panic in the room is almost always the one people look to Justin
High performance isn’t just technical skill it is emotional control, self awareness, and how well you handle people under pressure.
EQ shows up less in polished conversations and more in how someone handles frustration, tension, and pressure in real time.
How you treat people is also part of the performance.
Making it easy for people to speak up is the one that actually tests emotional intelligence under pressure. The rest is relatively straightforward when things are going well.
“Being a calming presence” is underrated leadership JustinTeams feel it immediately.
Without EQ, even strong skills can struggle to translate into real impact. Because how you handle emotions and people often determines how far your performance can actually go.