Emotionally intelligent people learn to embrace a deceptively simple habit that helps them overcome undermining their own goals and exhibiting a lack of emotional intelligence. That habit is brevity, shares Bill Murphy, Jr.
Coming up with a good message takes time, but truly crafting it — editing it, to put it differently, and ensuring it’s efficiently tied to your ultimate desired outcomes — can take a heck of a lot more time.
Source: Inc, January 29, 2022. Link. The emotionally intelligent leader frames everything from the point of view of his or her team:
- what the opportunity means for everyone together
- what it means for individual contributors
- what’s specifically needed from each person to reach the goal
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