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Factors beyond intelligence contribute to success


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By Keld Jensen, Forbes

Albert Einstein’s was estimated at 160, Madonna’s is 140, and John F. Kennedy’s was only 119, but as it turns out, your IQ score pales in comparison with your EQ, MQ, and BQ scores when it comes to predicting your success and professional achievement.

IQ tests are used as an indicator of logical reasoning ability and technical intelligence. A high IQ is often a prerequisite for rising to the top ranks of business today. It is necessary, but it is not adequate to predict executive competence and corporate success. By itself, a high IQ does not guarantee that you will stand out and rise above everyone else.

Research carried out by the Carnegie Institute of Technology shows that 85 percent of your financial success is due to skills in “human engineering,” your personality and ability to communicate, negotiate, and lead. Shockingly, only 15 percent is due to technical knowledge. Additionally, Nobel Prize winning Israeli-American psychologist, Daniel Kahneman, found that people would rather do business with a person they like and trust rather than someone they don’t, even if the likeable person is offering a lower quality product or service at a higher price.

With this in mind, instead of exclusively focusing on your conventional intelligence quotient, you should make an investment in strengthening your EQ (Emotional Intelligence), MQ (Moral Intelligence), and BQ (Body Intelligence). These concepts may be elusive and difficult to measure, but their significance is far greater than IQ.

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Comments

Comments (5)
  1. TahoeKaren says - Posted: April 26, 2012

    IQ numbers measure your potential. What you do with it determines your true intelligence. I have known some incredibly intelligent people who made some terrible life choices. I have also known people with average intelligence who have soared through life and left quite a mark in their wake.

  2. thing fish says - Posted: April 26, 2012

    How does this article define success?

    Exactly.

  3. dan wilvers says - Posted: April 26, 2012

    success=well done my good and faithful servant

  4. TeaTotal says - Posted: April 26, 2012

    Success=not falling prey to religious cult thieves

  5. Kay Henderson says - Posted: April 27, 2012

    In their most interesting book, Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength, 2011,Roy F. Baumeister & John Tierney discuss research showing self-control to be more powerful than intelligence as well.