IHHP Blog

Scaredy Cat Hires Idiots

Filed under: Emotional Intelligence — ihhp @ 2:46 pm on October 13, 2011

This is a story about Fred. Fred manages a very busy full-service hardware store that’s part of a huge national chain. His store is immaculate, his inventory spot on and his ability to predict what his customers want is legendary. But something’s not quite right in Fred’s store.

Fred’s supervisors really want to love him, but they just can’t because Fred’s store sales are consistently below average, despite the size of the store and the high amount of traffic his store experiences.

On the surface, Fred’s a good guy. He’s friendly with all of his staff. He’s really good with customers and is by far the best salesperson in the store … potentially even within the entire chain. In a large store like his, however, it takes more than one person to drive overall store numbers; Fred’s team needs to produce as well. But they don’t, and the sales results continue to be a disappointment to the company.

You see, Fred is a scaredy cat. What, you may ask, is Fred so scared of?

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Think Your Way to a Healthier You

Filed under: Emotional Intelligence — admin @ 2:41 pm on

The IHHP research team, headed up by our very own Dr. JP Pawliw-Fry, has been working on several studies over the past number of years that explore how individuals (specifically leaders) approach and/or avoid difficult tasks, relationships or change and the effect this has on the individual, as well as the people and teams around them.

The results of these studies, thanks to many of you who participated and/or cheered us on throughout the years, is the basis for several workshops that we are launching this year, along with future books and resources.

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Leading Through Change (Lead Thyself Before Others!)

Filed under: Leadership Training — admin @ 12:00 am on September 1, 2011
Leading Through Change (Lead Thyself Before Others!)

It began as an average day for Jean, an HR executive in a large public relations firm. The ride in on the subway was uneventful. Summer was lazily winding down but the day was warm and agreeable. Autumn was approaching, though – back to school and back to work time.

And so the winds of change began to blow.

Jean was usually the first to arrive at her office but today she was greeted by the CEO – a very excited and anxious CEO. This combination was never good. Jean felt a small storm begin to churn in her stomach. Trying to ignore it,she prepared herself for what the CEO had to say.

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Even IHHP is Not Immune To Change!

Filed under: Leadership Training — admin @ 11:51 pm on August 31, 2011
Even IHHP is not Immune To Change

As a company built on helping organizations and people be their best when it matters most, we recently faced one of our biggest changes ever.

Here’s our story.

It began about 18 months ago when the newly formed board of directors (consisting mostly of founders, owners and a great consultant named Mike Boydell from Boydell Inc.), came together to assess IHHP’s future. The goal was to grow the company in order to reach more people with what we at IHHP feel is a very important message. After some challenging (and sometimes painful) reflection sessions, it became clear to the leadership team that the key issue was the current management and operational style and they would need to bring in a new leader if they truly bought in to the changes that needed to be made.

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Checking Assumptions in Difficult Conversations by John Doan

Filed under: Emotional Intelligence — admin @ 10:28 pm on July 25, 2011
John Doan - IHHP Coach

Emotional Intelligence has many applications, one of the most helpful being in the area of having important conversations that address overt, covert or impending conflict. Conflict itself is not inherently positive or negative but rather it’s how we respond that tends to shape the experience in either direction. As such, E.I. skills can greatly increase the odds of conflict being positive or useful as a client of mine recently discovered during our E.I. Coaching session.

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Coaching on Empathy by Lisa Garber

Filed under: Emotional Intelligence — admin @ 9:57 pm on
Lisa Garber - IHHP Coach

What do you do when someone doesn’t value empathy? Sometimes a client simply announces that he or she doesn’t care about what is going on with other people. They don’t care what the other person is going through or feels or how they are impacted. Is it true that they really don’t care?

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Customer Service: How NOT to do it

Filed under: Emotional Intelligence — admin @ 7:55 pm on June 28, 2011

Our company moved e-mail servers this week.  Having a degree in Mathematics and Computer Science, I understand the complexity of doing this and that things are likely to go wrong.  Well, things did go wrong.   On the day of the migraine, I mean migration, I started to get calls from partners and clients telling me their e-mails to me were getting bounced back i.e. getting an “undeliverable” message.   When you are migrating e-mail servers, this is the one thing you don’t want to have happen – customer not able to send you e-mails.

As you can imagine, I am feeling very concerned about not only these clients, but also the customers who aren’t calling me and what e-mails might be getting lost.  I am a practitioner of Emotional intelligence, so I make sure that I am not feeling panicked or frustrated when I call for help.   I called the appropriate technical support person at our vendor and explained the situation.  The first thing he said was “your team didn’t do x, y and z and that’s why we are having the problem”.  I am not sure that blaming my team members for the problem is making me feel any better.  Is that really the best response at that point?

So that’s a little annoying, but again I want to manage my emotional response and focus on solving the problem.   Here is the dialogue that followed:

Bill: “are the e-mails that clients have sent being saved on a server somewhere or are they lost?”.  This seemed like a reasonable questions to me.

Tech guy: “you wouldn’t lose those e-mails”.

Bill: “what do you mean we wouldn’t lose them?”

Tech guy “your clients got an undeliverable response, so those e-mails were never sent.  They can’t be lost if they were never sent”

Ok, now I like to be specific, but is this not splitting hairs?  If a client sends an e-mail that gets bounced back, and they either ignore the bounce back notice or it goes into their spam folder and they never see it, can we not call that “lost”.  But is that really the point any way?   At that point, I am feeling like this support person doesn’t care if I lost a year of e-mails.  Is this the kind of support I want from this vendor?

So what do I do? Yell at him was what I really wanted to do, but I can tell the tech support guy is emotionally triggered and defending his position, and there is no point in discussing this any further as he is likely to only get further triggered, making him even less capable of solving the problem.  So, I let him know it’s urgent to us that he solve the problem and ask what help he needs from us.

We will definitely be giving feedback to the vendor once everything has settled down.  If you want to learn how to give feedback in a skillful way, check out our Three Conversations of Leadership program.

In my next Blog post, I am going to discuss how the technical support person could have responded, and without accepting blame for what happened,  left me feeling that he understood how I was being impacted, and confident that he cares about fixing the problem.

What Are Some Things to Expect from EI Training?

After a series of sessions with a leadership group from one of the world’s largest multi-national corporations, I followed up with a list of their key learning outcomes. I wanted to share these with all of our clients as they reflect some of the broader brush strokes of our approach.

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The Lazy Co-Worker: Focus on What You Can Control

Filed under: Emotional Intelligence — ihhp @ 3:48 pm on April 1, 2011

So you are working with someone who is not very motivated and does the minimum needed to keep their job. That’s frustrating, but what can you do?

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Why Do You Journal?

Filed under: Youth Leadership — ihhp @ 5:34 pm on March 10, 2011

I’ve been journaling for a long time. I got my first journal when I was 6 years old. I still have it! I go back from time to time to read over these and it turns out, when I was 6, I used to write only about the bad things that were happening…

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