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Innovation Copilots Navigating disruptions, since 2007
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  • The Agency
  • Innovation Strategy
    • Creating Added Value
    • Corporate Incubation
    • Startups
    • MBA
  • Culture Leadership
    • Innovation Mindset
    • Corporate Culture
    • Strategic Mentoring
  • Our Web School
  • Get in touch
emotions at work tedx 2014
MManagerial Development

Emotions at work. Going mainstream?

  • byStéphanie Mitrano
  • May 23, 2020
  • 2 minute read
After many years of evangelizing about emotions at work, and facing resistance. I finally start seeing signs that it is going mainstream.

Since my TEDx talk in 2014 entitled “emotions at work”, I’ve been watching for signs of increasing levels of acceptance of emotions in the workplace. Emotions are a well covered subject in sciences, and business sciences, by researchers and PhDs, but that doesn’t mean this is mainstream. After all ages ago, Dan Pink was sharing about the disconnect between what science knew about motivation and engagement and what business practices were doing (still ignoring what science had know for decades).

So imagine my delight, when I came across this video from a few months ago, on the subject of emotions at work delivered by Liz Fosslien following pretty much step-by-step the key ideas of my 6 year-old TEDx talk:

To be fair, I really like the simplicity and the graphics of her presentation which really adds to making it accessible to everyone.

If you need a refresher on my TEDx here it is in its original glory:

And here were my key points (which still stand):

  • We live in two worlds, personal and professional, with the misconception that we have to leave our emotions in a locker outside the office door;
  • We wear a professional mask at the office and fear to show any vulnerability or expression of emotions;
  • We are humans at work and sharing emotions is beneficial for driving change, solving conflicts and communicating;
  • Self-awareness and empathy are key;
  • We “don’t kill the emotional dragon but tame it” by channeling our emotions rather than letting them run crazy;
  • “Emotions Augmented Managers” can lead the way showing the use of emotions at work;
  • Final advice: start small with simply sharing authentically about your weekend, your worry about a project, or asking for help.

So what do I take way from this surprising similitude between these two talks?

First and foremost there’s a clear upside to see more talks on the matter. The science about emotions is getting more and more mainstream, while companies are still in such a dire need to get on grip on this — and obviously, Covid-19 is not helping.

Second, you might think there’s justifiable frustration at seeing this kind of copy-and-paste content out there. Undeniably, but hey… when dealing with insights, ideas and vision, content is here to be recycled on and on.

Nothing goes to waste, that’s OK. And as far as content recycling goes, now is probably a good time to check Austin Kleon’s insights on creativity.

I specifically love chapter 8. titled “Be nice. (The world is a small town.)” 😊

steal like an artist

In any case, if you want an edge on the hot topics of emotions at work before it gets recycled further — or if you want to make your own mash-up 🥰 — here’s a direct link on all the content from those past few years.

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Related posts:

  1. Understanding the purpose of emotions
  2. Resilience and the mechanics of emotions
  3. Being authentic at work
  4. Emotions, survival, crisis & radical change
  5. The Female Code book
  6. Building emotional strategies
Stéphanie Mitrano

Insightful and open-minded, Stéphanie accompanies organisations in their cultural transformation to support innovation and business agility. She is one the few European expert both implementing and doing research on mentoring programmes.

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