Goleman, D. (1998). Working with emotional intelligence . Bantam Books. 1. Overview and Context Following the massive global success of his 1995 bestseller Emotional Intelligence , Daniel Goleman—a psychologist and science journalist for The New York Times —released Working with Emotional Intelligence (1998) to address a specific, practical domain: the workplace. While the first book introduced the general concept of EQ (Emotional Quotient) to the public, this sequel rigorously applies emotional intelligence to professional effectiveness, leadership, and organizational success.
HR professionals, organizational leaders, executive coaches, and anyone interested in why "people skills" predict career success more than IQ alone. Would you like a one-page summary, a PowerPoint outline, or a comparison with Goleman’s 1995 Emotional Intelligence ?
Goleman’s central thesis is that for jobs at every level—but especially for leadership and complex collaborative roles—emotional intelligence is twice as important as technical skills (IQ and expertise) in determining outstanding performance. He argues that modern organizations have been overly focused on cognitive intelligence and hard skills, ignoring the "human skills" that drive collaboration, resilience, and influence. In this book, Goleman refines his earlier model into four fundamental clusters of emotional intelligence (which he sometimes presents as five, merging motivation into self-management). These are:
With Emotional Intelligence. New York Bantam - Goleman D. -1998-. Working
Goleman, D. (1998). Working with emotional intelligence . Bantam Books. 1. Overview and Context Following the massive global success of his 1995 bestseller Emotional Intelligence , Daniel Goleman—a psychologist and science journalist for The New York Times —released Working with Emotional Intelligence (1998) to address a specific, practical domain: the workplace. While the first book introduced the general concept of EQ (Emotional Quotient) to the public, this sequel rigorously applies emotional intelligence to professional effectiveness, leadership, and organizational success.
HR professionals, organizational leaders, executive coaches, and anyone interested in why "people skills" predict career success more than IQ alone. Would you like a one-page summary, a PowerPoint outline, or a comparison with Goleman’s 1995 Emotional Intelligence ? Goleman, D
Goleman’s central thesis is that for jobs at every level—but especially for leadership and complex collaborative roles—emotional intelligence is twice as important as technical skills (IQ and expertise) in determining outstanding performance. He argues that modern organizations have been overly focused on cognitive intelligence and hard skills, ignoring the "human skills" that drive collaboration, resilience, and influence. In this book, Goleman refines his earlier model into four fundamental clusters of emotional intelligence (which he sometimes presents as five, merging motivation into self-management). These are: Bantam Books
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