If you've ever felt the wave of frustration from an unexpected deadline change or experienced the stress of managing a difficult conversation with a colleague, you know that emotions at work are unavoidable. They show up in subtle ways and obvious ones, affecting how we perform and how we interact with the people around us.
The numbers tell a striking story. According to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, more than 80% of U.S. workers report having experienced work-related stress, and 65% describe work as a significant source of stress in their lives. These statistics represent real people navigating real emotional challenges every single day at work.
Emotions at work are inevitable, and in many ways, they're valuable. The challenge comes when we don't know how to manage them effectively. Unmanaged emotions can derail productivity, damage relationships, and turn workplace challenges into personal crises.
The goal is to develop the skills to recognize, understand, and respond to your emotions in ways that serve you. For HR professionals, understanding these dynamics becomes essential for building workplaces where people can actually thrive.
Workplace stress carries a hefty price tag. In Financial Costs of Job Stress, UMass Lowell shares a number of alarming statistics, including:
Beyond the financial impact, of course, there's a human cost that shows up in burnout, disengagement, and deteriorating mental health.
But here's the upside: investing in emotional wellness pays dividends. Employees with higher emotional intelligence deliver better quality work, experience greater wellbeing, and contribute more effectively to their teams.
The connection between emotional regulation and workplace outcomes runs deep. Gallup research reveals that engaged employees, who tend to have stronger emotional regulation skills, experience higher levels of psychological wellbeing and greater resilience when faced with challenges. In fact, employee engagement has 3.8 times as much influence on stress levels as work location does.
For HR professionals, this creates both an opportunity and a responsibility. Understanding how emotions shape the employee experience allows you to create more supportive policies and build cultures where emotional intelligence becomes a competitive advantage.
Before you can manage your emotions effectively, you need to know what sets them off.
Emotional triggers are the specific situations, interactions, or circumstances that spark intense emotional responses. For some, it's criticism from a supervisor. For others, it might be missing an important deadline or feeling excluded from key decisions.
Identifying your triggers requires honest self-reflection. Think about the last time you felt overwhelmed at work. What was happening? Who was involved? What thoughts were running through your mind?
Patterns often emerge when you pay attention. You might notice that certain types of meetings leave you drained, or that particular communication styles trigger defensiveness.
Understanding the difference between relevant and irrelevant emotions can transform how you respond to workplace challenges. Relevant emotions are directly tied to the situation at hand. If you feel anxious about an upcoming presentation, that anxiety relates to the task itself.
Irrelevant emotions come from unrelated sources. The irritation you carry from your morning commute has nothing to do with the project review meeting you're walking into, even though it might color your responses.
When you can distinguish between these two types of emotions, you gain clarity about which feelings deserve your attention and which ones you need to set aside. This awareness forms the foundation of effective emotional control strategies.
When emotions spike during the workday, you need tools that work quickly and discreetly. Here are three techniques you can use immediately:
These techniques work because they interrupt the automatic emotional response and give you back a measure of control. The key is practicing them before you desperately need them so they become second nature.
The best time to manage emotions is before they escalate. Building preventive habits into your routine reduces the frequency and intensity of emotional challenges at work.
Sustainable emotional management requires more than quick fixes. It demands intentional work on the underlying conditions that shape your emotional experience at work.
HR professionals play a unique role in shaping workplace environments where emotional intelligence can flourish. This responsibility extends beyond individual skill-building to creating systems and cultures that support emotional wellbeing at scale.
Organizations that take emotional wellness seriously communicate clearly and often about available resources. Employees need to know what support exists, from employee assistance programs to mental health benefits to flexible work arrangements.
But awareness alone isn't enough. The culture must make it genuinely safe to access these resources without fear of judgment or career consequences.
Training and development programs focused on emotional intelligence yield measurable returns. When employees learn to recognize and regulate their emotions, they perform better individually and collaborate more effectively in teams.
These programs work best when they include practical, applicable skills rather than abstract concepts. Employees need to walk away knowing exactly what to do differently on Monday morning.
Policies matter as much as programs. Consider how organizational decisions affect emotional wellbeing:
Leadership sets the tone. When managers model healthy emotional regulation, acknowledge their own struggles, and respond supportively when team members face challenges, they create permission for others to do the same. Conversely, when leaders dismiss emotions or treat stress as a personal failing, they drive problems underground where they fester and grow.
The goal is to build workplaces where managing emotions doesn't feel like a solo struggle against impossible odds. When organizations invest in emotional intelligence at every level, everyone benefits.
Employees experience less stress, greater satisfaction, and better mental health. Organizations see improved productivity, reduced turnover, and stronger team cohesion. That's the kind of return on investment that transforms workplace culture from the inside out.
When you partner with Ulliance, our Life Advisor Consultants are always just a phone call away to teach ways to enhance your work/life balance and increase your happiness. The Ulliance Life Advisor Employee Assistance Program can help employees and employers come closer to a state of total well-being.
Investing in the right EAP or Wellness Program to support your employees will help them and help you. Visit https://ulliance.com/ or call 866-648-8326.
The Ulliance Employee Assistance Program can address the
following issues:
• Stress about work or job performance
• Crisis in the workplace
• Conflict resolution at work or in one’s personal life
• Marital or relationship problems
• Child or elder care concerns
• Financial worries
• Mental health problems
• Alcohol/substance abuse
• Grief
• Interpersonal conflicts
• AND MORE!
References:
WLearn How to Manage Emotions at Work and What They Are; Indeed.com UK https://uk.indeed.com/career-advice/career-development/how-to-manage-emotions-at-work
Help Your Employees Cope With Stress; Gallup; Marie-Lou Almeida and Camilla Frumar
https://www.gallup.com/workplace/509726/help-employees-cope-stress.aspx
How To Harness The Power Of Emotions In The Workplace; NPR; Meghan Keane https://www.npr.org/2019/11/21/781673489/how-to-harness-the-power-of-emotions-in-the-workplace
Stress at Work; UMass Lowell
https://www.uml.edu/research/cph-new/worker/stress-at-work