15 interview questions to measure emotional intelligence

Published by rudy Date posted on June 10, 2015

Earlier this year, Container Store CEO Kip Tindell said one of the most important things a leader can have is high emotional intelligence.

“Emotional intelligence is the key to being really successful,” he told Business Insider’s Jenna Goudreau.

Perhaps that’s why more and more companies are asking interview questions that are designed to measure a candidate’s emotional intelligence — which is the ability to perceive, control, and evaluate emotions.

According to Phil Johnson, founder of Master of Business Leadership (MBL) Inc., an online coaching platform, these are some of the most common ones:

  • How will this role help you to achieve what you want?
  • What makes you laugh?
  • When is the last time you were embarrassed? (What happened? How did you handle the situation?)
  • What activities energize and excite you?
  • How do you have fun?
  • What are two personal habits that have served you well?
  • How good are you at accepting help from others?
  • How good are you at asking for help?
  • What is one of the internal battles to have each day?
  • What makes you angry?
    What aspect of your work are you passionate about?
  • How could you create more balance in your life?
  • Who inspires you? Why?
  • On an “average day” would you consider yourself a high or low energy person?
  • On an “average day” is your main focus on results and tasks or people and emotions?

“Emotional intelligence multiplies the results and effectiveness of intellectual intelligence,” Johnson writes in a LinkedIn post. “Emotional labor is the most difficult type of work to do and up until now, the easiest to avoid. It is the essential education we need to embrace the unimaginable.”

This article is published in collaboration with Business Insider. Publication does not imply endorsement of views by the World Economic Forum.

April 2025

World Day for Safety and Health at Work
“Safety and health at work every day!”

Invoke Article 33 of the ILO constitution
against the military junta in Myanmar to carry out the 2021 ILO Commission of Inquiry recommendations against serious violations of Forced Labour and Freedom of Association protocols.
Accept National Unity Government
(NUG) of Myanmar.
Reject Military!
#WearMask #WashHands #Distancing #TakePicturesVideos

Time to support & empower survivors. Time to spark a global conversation. Time for #GenerationEquality to #orangetheworld!

Monthly Observances:

March – Women’s Role in History Month
April – Month of Planet Earth

Weekly Observances:
Last Week of March: Protection and Gender Fair Treatment of the Girl Child Week
Last Week of April – World Immunization Week

Daily Observances:
Mar 25 – International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Slavery and the Transallantic Slave Trade
Mar 27– Earth Hour
Apr 21 – Civil Service Day
Apr 22 – World Earth Day
Apr 28 – World Day for Safety and Health at Work

Trade Union Solidarity Campaigns

No to Trafficking

Jobs! Jobs! Jobs!

Categories