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Boosting Emotional IQ to Be a Better Leader

While training programs designed to increase emotional intelligence have become a lucrative business, there are steps individuals can take on their own to make improvements. So reports Forbes.

One way to start is by cutting back on the smart phone. Just as being glued to your smart phone can distract from real-time social interactions and hurt relationships, it also can stunt one's ability to read emotions, writes Amy Morin, a psychotherapist and Forbes contributor.

A 2014 study showed that preteens who had no access to their phones for five days at a camp "greatly improved their ability to read other people's emotions," Morin writes. "Consider doing a digital detox every once in a while," she notes. "Going a few days without your electronics could do wonders for your ability to read other people's emotions."

Understanding your emotions as a friend or a foe also can help you make better decisions. "Once you know how you're feeling, consider whether that emotion is a friend or an enemy in that moment," Morin writes. "Anger could be a friend when it helps you stand up for injustice. It could be an enemy, however, when you're entering a discussion with your boss."

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