Empathy is the New Killer App

It stings. Another soul-crushing reprimand from a boss, parent, or spouse. That nauseous feeling when you feel unappreciated, misunderstood, and blamed. We’ve all been there, and in that knee-wobbling state we are far from playing at our best.

On the other hand, remember how you felt after receiving a big boost of positive reinforcement. A “great job”, “thank you”, or “I love you” that injected 1000 kilowatts of energy into your step. You felt invincible. Awake. In the groove.

I find it ironic that while each of us knows both feelings so well, many people totally fail to think about how their own behavior impacts others. They don’t realize that their harsh words can smash someone they care about like a mallet to over-ripe cantaloupe.

Naturally, there’s a better way. The best business leaders carefully manage the emotional state of those around them. They realize that people perform at their very best while feeling supported and appreciated. In our competitive world, you’ll only seize your full potential by supporting the imagination, confidence, and sense of purpose of others. Command-and-control tactics of the past have been rendered useless now that team members create value with their brains instead of backs.

I’m not suggesting leaders should just be feel-good Pollyannas and pass out daisies instead of holding their teams accountable. Whether you’re engaged in business, art, medicine, community development, or politics, you still need to mange to specific outcomes. What I’m suggesting is that with the speed and complexity of the times, being acutely mindful of the emotional impact of your actions will drive the bottom line far better than simply cracking the whip again.

The same applies outside the business world. In any human relationship, you will perform far better knowing the other person has your back. Knowing this to be true, it’s time to connect with the perspective of those around you. If you think taking someone down a peg is “teaching them a lesson”, you’re about as accurate as Zena, the midtown tarot card reader.

When you change your approach, thinking about how your words and actions will impact others, you will transform the possibilities around you. Relationship will come to life. Imagination will soar. And to top it off, people will return the favor and start treating you with the respect that both of you deserve.

If your go-to move makes others feel the burn of #200 extra-coarse sandpaper to the forehead, it’s time to take a radically new approach. Empathy 2.0. And this new App is free to download; available for all platforms and devices.

Read More

Open Collaboration: The Key to a Strong Culture of Innovation

Here’s a thought experiment. Imagine your company’s most valuable asset isn’t your product, your patents, your trademarks, or even your people. It's the connections between ...

How AI Will Shape the Physical World

Introduction Last year, I watched a video of Alex Conley, a man with a cervical spinal cord injury, controlling a robotic arm mounted to his ...

What Jazz Musicians and AI Researchers Have In Common

Introduction We have always built things in our own image. The ancient Greeks carved gods that looked like idealized humans. Renaissance architects designed buildings proportioned ...

How AI Will Make Corporate Conferences More Exciting

Introduction I have delivered keynote speeches at over 1,000 events. And I can tell you the single biggest factor that separates a forgettable conference from ...

Force vs. Flow

The tighter you grip, the less you control. We've been conditioned to believe that forcing outcomes is the path to success. Clench your jaw. White-knuckle ...

The Innovator’s AI Dilemma

Here's a question that should keep every leader up at night: What is generative AI actually doing to our ability to think critically? Not "could ...

Are Your Meetings Killing Innovation? A Simple Reset That Gets Ideas Flowing Again

 If you’re a leader who’s ever led a brainstorm of any kind, you’ve probably had this experience. You open up the floor for ideas, and ...

New Thinking for the New Era of Business

Albert Einstein famously noted, “We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking that we used when we created them.” In our post-COVID world of ...

When an Astronaut Needs a Pen

Ever get stuck on a problem, only to realize you're solving for the wrong thing? That's exactly what happened when the rocket scientists at NASA ...