JJK Workplace, LLC

JJK Workplace, LLC Creating positive Workplace experiences!

06/07/2023

NIJO Southwest 2023, Chandler,AZ
📢 Exciting News! 🎉✨

I am thrilled to announce that I had the incredible opportunity to present at the National Institute of Jail Officers conference of Corrections Officers on Monday.

Sharing my expertise on Motivating Employees, Career Development, and Onboarding Millennials was truly an honor. The conference was a fantastic platform to engage with fellow professionals and exchange valuable insights.

It was a privilege to contribute to the ongoing development of our corrections community and to support the growth of our incredible officers.

A big thank you to everyone who attended my sessions and participated in the enriching discussions! Your enthusiasm and engagement were inspiring.

Looking forward to continuing the conversation and implementing positive change in our field. Together, we can achieve great things!

03/18/2023

There is a direct link between Emotional Intelligence and success in the Workplace.
Emotional Intelligence is responsible for more than 85% of Star performance in top leaders. (Daniel Goleman)
Emotional Intelligence accounts for nearly 90% of what moves people up the ladder. (Harvard Business Review)
Emotional Intelligence is one of the top 10 employment skills of the immediate future.
Let JJK Workplace help you get started.

Send a message to learn more

02/24/2023

The Genos Emotionally Intelligent Leader Program is Here!
Emotionally intelligent leadership is about leaders intelligently using emotions to facilitate high performance in themselves and others. Leadership is fundamentally about facilitating performance, getting others to do their best, and to do their work effectively and efficiently. One of the most robust, consistent findings in the area of social sciences is that there is a direct link between the way people feel and the way people perform. As such, leaders need to be skilled at identifying, understanding and influencing emotion within themselves and others in order to inspire performance. If you’d like to learn how you can work your clients or with the leaders in your organization to become more emotionally intelligent, contact me at [email protected].

Send a message to learn more

Psychological Well Being.An important message from Dr. Ben Palmer, Geno Emotional Intelligence
03/20/2020

Psychological Well Being.
An important message from Dr. Ben Palmer, Geno Emotional Intelligence

Message from Genos International CEO, Dr. Ben Palmer.

03/14/2020

TELEWORKING - WORKING VIRTUAL- WORKSHOP (via GoTo Meeting)

Social distancing is definitely necessary for the foreseeable future. Fortunately, the technology exists that minimizes disruption to business results.

Working virtually in a home office requires a unique set of skills. Teleworkers or virtual employees have additional challenges created by not being in a centralized office. Communication issues alone make it a challenging job, and recognizing these challenges will help your participants become great teleworkers.

Through this Working Virtual Workshop you and your employees will see a great improvement in their performance and well-being. Being a teleworker does have the advantages of flexible schedules, no commute, and saving the company money. Your participants will establish the additional skills needed to be successful in their work from home environment.

Workshop Objectives:

Know the skills required for working outside the office
Learn keys to proper self-management
Learn ways to manage time
Know different methods of organization and planning
Identify various forms of communication and their proper use
Address and resolve challenges that teleworkers can face
Contact me to schedule your individual or group session.

02/28/2020

The fast moving development of Coronavirus is creating an explosion of justified Emotions among us. In past posts, I have held workshops about Emotional Intelligence talking about how the processing of emotions in our brains work. Just a reminder, the effects of negative emotions can limit our thinking and interpretation of events, while positive emotions create more rational problem solving and cause us to think more deeply about issues. During these trying times, I encourage you to think positively and manage your emotions in more satisfied, useful, and meaningful ways. (Genos Emotional Intelligence Practitioner-Johnny Knatt) [email protected]

02/25/2020

She’s Smart—But She’s Not Emotionally Intelligent
Patience, empathy and understanding from the boss lead to high-performing teams

By: Dana Wilkie, 2/19/2020
The employee you just promoted to management has always been fast, productive, smart and creative.
But some of the qualities that make her such an asset aren't translating well into her new role: She gets impatient with people who move more slowly than she does. She's frustrated with direct reports who aren't as prolific as she was. She grows annoyed with workers who need things explained more than once.
How can you as her employer help her acquire the skills—patience, empathy and understanding—that don't come naturally to her?
"This is a typical client in my coaching practice," said Geri Grossman, president of My Executive Coach in Buffalo, N.Y. "A first step is to communicate to this new manager the many assets she possesses and the contributions that she brings to the organization."
After that, Grossman said, it's time to have a heart-to-heart discussion with her about developing emotional intelligence—a trait workplace experts say is key to becoming a successful manager.
When people move into management, they "often continue doing what worked before, which was getting results at all costs," said Annie McKee, a senior fellow at the University of Pennsylvania's graduate school of education who teaches leadership and emotional intelligence. "They've been so focused on individual achievement that it's really hard to switch to focusing on collective achievement [for the] team.
"That's a sure way to fail as a manager," continues the co-author of Becoming a Resonant Leader (Harvard Business Review Press, 2008). "Because as a manager, you get results through the people you manage. This requires a great deal of emotional intelligence."
What Is Emotional Intelligence?
People sometimes refer to emotional intelligence as EQ, like how we refer to intelligence as IQ.
Grossman defines EQ as the "capacity to be aware of, manage and express our emotions and to be able to manage the emotions of others."
"This involves a high level of self-awareness and empathy," she said. "Our level of EQ is influenced by our values, such as respect for others, empathy and compassion. Our beliefs, socialization and upbringing also influence our level of emotional intelligence."
Is EQ inherent? Something people are just "born with"?
There is new research suggesting that "there is a definite connection between a person's genetics and his or her ability to empathize with others," Grossman said. "Empathy is a significant EQ skill, and leaders with empathy are able to attune to a wide range of emotional signals. Such leaders listen attentively and can grasp the other person's perspective. Empathy in the workplace enables a manager or leader to be able to get along well with people of diverse backgrounds and different cultures."
There may also be environmental factors at work that contribute to EQ, she said.
"Organizations that include values in their vision and mission statements tend to hire people who have higher EQ," she explained. "These organizations build a culture of values-based leadership and a culture of accountability. They value a manager's ability to build trusting relationships, develop others, empathize and demonstrate optimism, and [those] who can create an environment where people can do their best work. There is a saying that IQ will get you the job, but EQ will help you to keep the job."
Can EQ Be Taught?
For new managers to develop EQ, the training conditions have to be right.
"One-shot presentations are not enough," said Cary Cherniss, professor emeritus of organizational psychology and co-chair of the Consortium for Research on Emotional Intelligence in Organizations at Rutgers University. "Even a daylong workshop or a weekend retreat is usually insufficient. Developing EQ requires intense effort over a sustained period of time."
A coach—whether inside the company or outside—is often helpful, she said.
"It needs to be someone the new manager trusts," said Cherniss, whose forthcoming book Leading with Feeling: Nine Strategies of Emotionally Intelligent Leadership (Oxford University Press, 2020) uses as an example a case where an outstanding leader coached a peer who was lacking in EQ.
An internal coach, Grossman said, should be "an established, credible and respected leader … who possesses the qualities of empathy, understanding and patience, and the payoff for acquiring behaviors that motivate and engage others is achieving high-performing and cohesive teams."
It's also a good idea to start with an assessment, Cherniss said. How does the new manager see herself and the situation she's in? And how do the people around her view her? The company's HR or organizational development team often can administer assessments that will give the new manager powerful insights into her management strengths as well as the challenges and behaviors that may hinder her success. Some assessments also will identify the factors at work that motivate and engage the new manager.
"She should be willing to be self-reflective [and] open to learning, practicing and experimenting with new strategies and behaviors that will support her management development, effectiveness and influence in the organization," Grossman said.
Then, Cherniss said, comes "a long period of trial and error, feedback and correction, setbacks and renewed effort."
The process is rarely quick and easy, McKee said. "I believe people can learn emotional intelligence, but only if they want to and only if they focus and put a lot of effort into it. And that's because people who are self-aware, empathetic and have a positive outlook have developed those things over many years since they were children. So, if we want to shift how we read people, we're literally rewiring our brains."

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