Primal Leadership vs. Getting Things Done
"Primal Leadership" by Daniel Goleman applies the concepts of emotional intelligence to leadership. The book postulates that a leader must spread positivity and radiate energy and enthusiasm and not negativity and dissonance in order to lead an organization towards success.
Indeed, the emotional task of a leader is primal, according to Goleman. Leaders in today's organizations must "drive the collective emotions in a positive direction" and clear the smog created by toxic emotions. If the organization's members' emotions are pushed towards enthusiasm, performance will accelerate. If, however, people are driven towards "rancor and anxiety," performance will suffer as the people are thrown off stride.
The trick for leaders to push their organization's members in a positive direction emotionally is emotional intelligence. How leaders handle themselves and their own relationships is the leading controller of top organizational performance: "Leaders who maximize the benefits of primal leadership drive the emotions of those they lead in the right direction."
More specifically, resonant leaders know when to collaborate and when to be visionary; in other words, they know when to listen to others and when to simply command. This knowledge comes from emotional intelligence. Resonant leaders with emotional intelligence naturally nurture relationships within their organizations, air latent or simmering issues and crate the human synergies of a group in harmony. That is how they build fierce loyalties within their organizations, and that is how they drive their organizations towards success.
In "Getting it Done," David Allen postulates that it is indeed possible to have an overwhelming number of tasks to accomplish but still function in...
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