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Emotional regulation and peak performance: What's the connection?

April 27, 2021 - 5 min read

When people are not doing well emotionally, they can’t perform well. The reason: human motivation is tied to a hierarchy of needs.

The world has been changing rapidly. Many organizations are feeling the pressure to deliver financial returns while making significant changes to the way they work and do business. In an ideal world, all of your employees would perform at their peak, every day, to help navigate this pressure and uncertainty. 

Peak performance means that your people are doing their best work. “Best” probably looks different for each person. But, broadly, someone performing at their best is meeting commitments and able to direct their focus to get important work done. They are showing up with energy and working effectively with others. They are able to switch gears, and rolling with unexpected changes or setbacks. 

But when people are not doing well emotionally, they can’t perform well. Personal motivation becomes secondary when we are struggling on the inside.

The reason: human motivation is tied to a hierarchy of needs. An employee’s ability to perform their best work will be hampered if basic needs (safety, security, belonging, self-esteem) are not met. 

Motivation aside, it’s a lot harder to work with others, stay focused on a task, or recognize productive alternatives when we’re roiled by powerful emotions. Employees simply can’t perform at their best if they are overly stressed or if any foundational human needs are threatened. 

To get more of the workforce performing at their best more often, organizations can help employees develop the psychological and emotional bandwidth to direct resources toward high achievement and innovation. 

We’ve seen this in recent events. The pandemic, social and political unrest, and national tragedies all threatened our basic human needs and put a spotlight on the fundamental interconnectedness of our emotional states and work performance. But the concept is evergreen: less dramatic events and interactions disrupt our emotional state every day and can derail performance. 

Emotional regulation is defined as the ability to maintain healthy emotional states and stay calm and collected through stress. 

When we help people build skills in emotional regulation, it unlocks their ability and energy to focus on doing their best work. 

BetterUp set out to explore whether there is a correlation between emotional health and performance. Specifically, we wondered whether leaders with strong emotional regulation fared better in terms of common performance metrics. 

What the data say -- what is the impact of emotional health?

We examined 2.6K BetterUp Members and their direct reports to understand how leaders strong in emotional regulation skills compared in performance, agility, and goal attainment, to those with the lowest levels of emotional regulation. 

Overall, Members who have strong emotional regulation skills have 153% higher team performance as rated by their direct reports. They are also rated 24% higher for team agility by their direct reports. Additionally, these leaders themselves report 13% higher rates of goal attainment.

Why it matters 

Overall, when employees have emotional regulation skills, we see higher scores on markers of achieving peak performance. 

This is not a causal conclusion. Yet, the evidence does suggest that emotional thriving coincides with more favorable outcomes. A psychologically healthy workforce has real value to the business and failing to recognize that could be a real competitive disadvantage. 

When employees build skills that help them manage emotions — and their inner lives — better, it doesn’t just feel like the right thing to do. It may also be the key that unlocks the peak performance levels that companies are looking for and need.  

Published April 27, 2021

Erin Eatough, PhD

Dr. Erin Eatough is an occupational health psychologist who has published research on employee well-being in over 30 outlets such as the Journal of Applied Psychology and has been featured in media outlets such as Harvard Business Review. Erin currently serves BetterUp in translating data to insight and helps to bring the science of BetterUp to life through content marketing. Erin received her Ph.D. in Industrial-Organizational Psychology from the University of South Florida.

Before BetterUp, Erin was a professor of Industrial and Organizational Psychology. She lives in Alexandria, VA with her husband and two young children. When not working, you can find her and her family on adventures in their tiny home on wheels, a converted Sprinter van.

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