By Keld Jensen, Forbes
Albert Einstein’s was estimated at 160, Madonna’s is 140, and John F. Kennedy’s was only 119, but as it turns out, your IQ score pales in comparison with your EQ, MQ, and BQ scores when it comes to predicting your success and professional achievement.
Albert Einstein’s was estimated at 160, Madonna’s is 140, and John F. Kennedy’s was only 119, but as it turns out, your IQ score pales in comparison with your EQ, MQ, and BQ scores when it comes to predicting your success and professional achievement.
IQ tests are used as an indicator of logical reasoning ability and
technical intelligence. A high IQ is often a prerequisite for rising to the top
ranks of business today. It is necessary, but it is not adequate to predict
executive competence and corporate success. By itself, a high IQ does not
guarantee that you will stand out and rise above everyone else.
Research carried out by the Carnegie Institute of Technology shows that
85 percent of your financial success is due to skills in “human engineering,”
your personality and ability to communicate, negotiate, and lead. Shockingly,
only 15 percent is due to technical knowledge. Additionally, Nobel Prize winning
Israeli-American psychologist, Daniel Kahneman, found that people would rather
do business with a person they like and trust rather than someone they don’t,
even if the likeable person is offering a lower quality product or service at a
higher price.
With this in mind, instead of exclusively focusing on your conventional
intelligence quotient, you should make an investment in strengthening your EQ
(Emotional Intelligence), MQ (Moral Intelligence), and BQ (Body Intelligence).
These concepts may be elusive and difficult to measure, but their significance
is far greater than IQ.
EQ is the most well known of the three, and in brief it is about: being
aware of your own feelings and those of others, regulating these feelings in
yourself and others, using emotions that are appropriate to the situation,
self-motivation, and building relationships.
Moral Intelligence. MQ directly follows EQ as it deals with your
integrity, responsibility, sympathy, and forgiveness. The way you treat
yourself is the way other people will treat you. Keeping commitments,
maintaining your integrity, and being honest are crucial to moral intelligence.
Make fewer excuses and take responsibility for your actions. Avoid little white
lies. Show sympathy and communicate respect to others. Practice acceptance and
show tolerance of other people’s shortcomings.
Body Intelligence. Lastly, there is your BQ, or body intelligence, which
reflects what you know about your body, how you feel about it, and take care of
it.
Good nutrition, regular exercise, and adequate rest are all key aspects
of having a high BQ. Monitoring your weight, practicing moderation with
alcohol, and making sure you have down time can dramatically benefit the
functioning of your brain and the way you perform at work.
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