This is the human half of the SMART Leadership Suite. CI gives you the rhythms — check-ins, Gemba, reviews. Emotional intelligence is what makes those land with real people rather than becoming another dashboard they quietly ignore.
Daniel Goleman's model breaks emotional intelligence into four capabilities that build on each other. You can't manage an emotion you haven't noticed, and you can't read a room if you can't first read yourself. So the model moves inward-to-outward, and self-first.
The vertical axis is self vs. others; the horizontal is awareness vs. action. Awareness of self is self-awareness; acting on it is self-management. Awareness of others is empathy; acting on it is relationship management. Master them in order and each makes the next possible.
Noticing your emotions as they happen, knowing your triggers, and understanding the impact your mood has on others. This is the foundation — every other cluster depends on it. Most people overrate themselves here.
Choosing your response instead of being driven by the reaction. Staying composed under pressure, and keeping your own motivation and energy in view. It's built on self-awareness — you can only manage what you notice.
Reading how others are really feeling, taking their perspective before you respond, and sensing the dynamics in a room. This is where psychological safety is built — and where it's destroyed.
Turning all of the above into impact: difficult conversations handled well, influence without authority, conflict navigated, trust that survives disagreement. The visible output — but hollow without the first three.
| The trigger | My usual reaction | The response I'd rather choose |
|---|
Between a trigger and your response there is a gap. When you're stressed, that gap shrinks to nothing and the reaction fires automatically — the sharp email, the interruption, the cold silence. Self-management is the deliberate act of widening that gap so you can choose.
This is physiological, not just willpower. When you're triggered, your body floods before your thinking brain catches up — which is why "just stay calm" never works. What works is a pre-decided move you can run on autopilot: a breath, a phrase that buys time, a walk. You build it in the calm so it's there in the storm.
Most difficult conversations go wrong in the same way — they open with a judgement ("you're being difficult") instead of a fact, so the other person defends rather than listens. SBI-E keeps you on solid ground by separating what happened from what you made it mean.
Situation — the specific when and where, not "always." Behaviour — only what was observable, no interpretation. Impact — the real effect it had. Emotion — named and owned as yours ("I felt…"), never weaponised ("you made me…"). Facts first, feeling last, judgement never.
| Question I'll use | When it helps |
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The Change Curve in the Managing Change planner maps where people are — denial, resistance, exploration, commitment. Emotional intelligence is how you meet them there rather than dragging them through it.
| The habit | When / cue | Which cluster it builds |
|---|
Emotional intelligence is deeply human — but a capable AI can be a genuinely useful rehearsal partner and perspective-checker. These prompts are built on the 4Ds from SMART AI: a clear role (Delegation), your real context (Description), a constraint, and a request to show its thinking so you stay in charge of the judgement (Discernment & Diligence).
A word of care: AI can help you prepare for a hard conversation, but it can't have it for you, and it doesn't know the person. Use it to rehearse and to check your blind spots — never to script real people. Replace the [bracketed] parts and paste into whichever AI you use.