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Emotional intelligence and the art of negotiation
Business
BY Shelly Ann Mohammed  
February 12, 2019

Emotional intelligence and the art of negotiation

With so much focus on the details – or lack thereof – in the UK’s proposed agreement for leaving the EU, you could be forgiven for thinking that deal-making is a technocrat’s art. For the negotiation teams in the UK and Europe, technical expertise and competences about the issues at stake are of course critical, but another quality is also essential— empathy. To offer agreements that work in the interest of both sides, you need to be able to see things from a perspective other than your own.

The British Prime Minister’s and Parliament’s negotiating and persuasion skills will remain firmly in the spotlight until a decision on Britain’s future place in Europe is reached.

And at the recent G20 meeting, it was clear that how to manage bilateral relationships are top of the global agenda, with other governments and businesses across the world all needing to navigate increasingly complicated trade and political differences in ways that are ideally, mutually beneficial.

There’s an increasing focus on how political leaders and their teams balance their competencies in such complex discussions. The art of diplomacy and deal-making is not just the domain of global politicians, business leaders and policymakers. We all have to negotiate on a daily basis – with our peers, our teams, with suppliers, and with customers. And for those working in accountancy and finance, the ability to negotiate successfully using empathy is a must in an age when budgets and the bottom line are under scrutiny.

To the casual observer, emotions and accountancy can seem like unrelated concepts. But to succeed in an era of increasing digitisation, today’s professional accountants need recognise the importance of this valuable human quality that’s notably difficult for machines to replicate.

Emotional intelligence is the ability to identify your own emotions and those of others, harness and apply them to tasks, and regulate and manage them. In our latest ACCA research into this capability, the report titled Emotional Quotient in a Digital Age identifies emotional intelligence as a key skill for developing the accountancy profession, as it is needed for a fast-evolving digital age and the impact of technology on it.

Ultimately, professional accountants need a rounded set of skills that go beyond the technical knowledge expected of them. In 2016 our groundbreaking research, Professional Accountants – the future: drivers of change and future skills, identified that finance professionals will increasingly need a broad blend of capabilities to succeed. Intellect, creativity, emotional intelligence, vision, experience, mastery of the digital world, technical skills, and a strong ethical compass are the seven key, sought-after skill areas we isolated which employers are seeking today – and in the decade ahead.

Collectively, these seven distinctive attributes come together to create the optimum blend of technical knowledge, skills and abilities the profession will need to be able to deploy.

Many people have an intuitive sense of emotional intelligence or EQ, often expressed as recognising and responding to emotions, and interacting effectively with people. But it is important to go beyond this and critically reflect on the value embedded in emotions in today’s digital age. And being able to effectively harness this value is vital for success.

Developing one’s EQ requires working on a range of competencies including a growth mindset, self-knowledge, perspective-taking, empathy and influence. In our research, the concept of having a growth mindset emerged as a key enabler for the development of EQ. By this, we mean feeling comfortable in one’s ability to overcome obstacles, challenging one’s own identity, and extending oneself into new areas.

Practising a growth mindset is also a point of high leverage – for example, improvements here can help professionals develop successfully across all emotional competencies more generally.

Experience can be an enabler for improving EQ, with higher scores for many competencies being correlated with the level of exposure to situations needing that competency. An implication of this is that EQ can be learned and, like most other skills, it can be developed and improved over time.

There’s a strong case and real opportunity for those in the accountancy profession to embrace their emotional intelligence and build their EQ competencies. By doing this, they’re strengthening their competitive advantage in the

SHELLY-ANN MOHAMMED

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