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Is emotional intelligence actually more valuable than IQ — and can you prove it with economics? Brian Demcher says yes, and the case he makes is hard to argue with.EQ is greater than IQ.
That is the idea Brian is selling this week. Not because IQ does not matter, but because the economics of scarcity have changed everything. Information is everywhere now. Anyone with a smartphone has access to more knowledge than the smartest person in any room twenty years ago. That makes IQ less scarce, and basic economics tells us the less of a thing that exists, the more valuable it becomes.
Emotional intelligence — the ability to read a room, regulate your own reactions, and respond to what people are actually feeling — is still rare, and it is getting rarer.
Brian spent years in medical device sales walking into operating rooms and presenting to surgical committees. He thought preparation and product knowledge were everything. Until a committee meeting at a major hospital taught him the hard way that being the most prepared person in the room means nothing if you cannot read it. He called on a surgeon mid-presentation without warning, saw the discomfort, and doubled down on facts instead of adjusting. He did not get the account, and he has never forgotten why.
In this episode: what emotional intelligence actually is and why it has nothing to do with being soft, the scarcity economics framework that explains why EQ is your biggest professional edge right now, how to start building emotional intelligence through practical daily habits, why artificial intelligence is accelerating the urgency of this conversation, and what changes in your career and relationships when EQ becomes your default.Your resume gets you considered, but your EQ gets you chosen.
IN THIS EPISODE
[0:00] Welcome — Brian Demcher and the idea worth buying [3:00] The Sell: emotional intelligence is greater than IQ [6:00] The scarcity economics framework — why IQ is losing its edge [10:00] The surgical committee story — the sales meeting that changed everything [16:00] What emotional intelligence actually is — and what it is not [22:00] Why defaulting to IQ is really a confidence problem [27:00] How to develop emotional intelligence — practical reps that work [33:00] AI and the future of work — the one skill it cannot replace [38:00] What success looks like when EQ becomes your edge [43:00] Krista's IQ story — worth the wait
KEY QUOTE
"EQ is becoming more and more scarce while IQ is becoming less and less scarce every single day." — Brian Demcher
MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE
Switch by Chip and Dan Heath — Krista references it directly as a book they have discussed multiple times on the podcast, about how humans lead with emotion before logic
The lizard brain — Krista's reference to how we are wired emotionally before rationally
She Sells He Sells 1.0 — Krista references the original trailer and the shift from buyer beware to seller beware
Connect with us: Instagram: @SheSellsHeSellsPodcast YouTube: She Sells He Sells Podcast
By Krista and Brian Demcher5
124124 ratings
Is emotional intelligence actually more valuable than IQ — and can you prove it with economics? Brian Demcher says yes, and the case he makes is hard to argue with.EQ is greater than IQ.
That is the idea Brian is selling this week. Not because IQ does not matter, but because the economics of scarcity have changed everything. Information is everywhere now. Anyone with a smartphone has access to more knowledge than the smartest person in any room twenty years ago. That makes IQ less scarce, and basic economics tells us the less of a thing that exists, the more valuable it becomes.
Emotional intelligence — the ability to read a room, regulate your own reactions, and respond to what people are actually feeling — is still rare, and it is getting rarer.
Brian spent years in medical device sales walking into operating rooms and presenting to surgical committees. He thought preparation and product knowledge were everything. Until a committee meeting at a major hospital taught him the hard way that being the most prepared person in the room means nothing if you cannot read it. He called on a surgeon mid-presentation without warning, saw the discomfort, and doubled down on facts instead of adjusting. He did not get the account, and he has never forgotten why.
In this episode: what emotional intelligence actually is and why it has nothing to do with being soft, the scarcity economics framework that explains why EQ is your biggest professional edge right now, how to start building emotional intelligence through practical daily habits, why artificial intelligence is accelerating the urgency of this conversation, and what changes in your career and relationships when EQ becomes your default.Your resume gets you considered, but your EQ gets you chosen.
IN THIS EPISODE
[0:00] Welcome — Brian Demcher and the idea worth buying [3:00] The Sell: emotional intelligence is greater than IQ [6:00] The scarcity economics framework — why IQ is losing its edge [10:00] The surgical committee story — the sales meeting that changed everything [16:00] What emotional intelligence actually is — and what it is not [22:00] Why defaulting to IQ is really a confidence problem [27:00] How to develop emotional intelligence — practical reps that work [33:00] AI and the future of work — the one skill it cannot replace [38:00] What success looks like when EQ becomes your edge [43:00] Krista's IQ story — worth the wait
KEY QUOTE
"EQ is becoming more and more scarce while IQ is becoming less and less scarce every single day." — Brian Demcher
MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE
Switch by Chip and Dan Heath — Krista references it directly as a book they have discussed multiple times on the podcast, about how humans lead with emotion before logic
The lizard brain — Krista's reference to how we are wired emotionally before rationally
She Sells He Sells 1.0 — Krista references the original trailer and the shift from buyer beware to seller beware
Connect with us: Instagram: @SheSellsHeSellsPodcast YouTube: She Sells He Sells Podcast

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