Smart Leaders Keep Their Ego in Check and Listen In The more successful you become, the more your confidence may swell. Practice these tips to take full advantage of the wealth of ideas from your team.

By Shirley Engelmeier Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Confidence is what helped you take your idea from a mere thought on paper to a full-fledged business. But the more successful your business becomes, the more likely you are to let your confidence become overwhelmed by your ego.

Although flexing that muscle may put extra cash in your pocket, it could also damage relationships with those around you, especially employees. Instead try putting the "I'm the smartest person in the room" aside when it comes to dealing with your workforce. Take these three tips into consideration to secure quality feedback from your employees and better collaboration -- and more favorable results:

Related: Keep Innovation Flowing as Your Startup Grows

1. Ask for input regularly. The collective intelligence of your team will generate more and better ideas than you can alone. And in today's dog-eat-dog business world, innovation is not just an annual objective. It's an everyday goal.

Whether your business is a five-person show or a Fortune 500 company, instill a culture that makes it desirable for ideas to be shared.

Related: Richard Branson on Why Leading Means Listening

2. Listen first and then make decisions. Listening attentively is such a simple concept, yet this task is often poorly performed by business owners. You may be sitting next to the person giving you input and hearing what they are saying, but are you really thoughtfully considering their ideas? If you are, that's listening.

Truly listening to other viewpoints can result in a healthy give-and-take and lead to your next great idea. But if your employees think you aren't listening, they'll stop giving you input. As the driver of your company's growth, you have the final say-so but think twice before cutting off a useful well of ideas that could aid in critical business decisions.

Related: In Business and Love, Emotional Intelligence Rules

3. Discover and practice emotional intelligence. It's for good reason that emotional intelligence is so buzzworthy of late. This is the ability to monitor your emotions and those of others to guide thinking and behavior. When ego takes the steering wheel, a leader might treat all situations the same.

Yet realizing that people respond to circumstances differently might be the key to retaining a star employee or resolving issues voiced by the workforce. An ego-driven person will have a hard time recognizing the complexities of each unique situation. Displaying empathy is a great way to discover and fine-tune your emotional intelligence.

Ego can have its place in business. But experience has shown that an ego-driven leader can create a dark cloud over a company's culture, resulting in the exits of high-performing employees or creating animosity among teams.

Putting these three tips into action is a start to shaking off your ego's excesses so you can most effectively lead your company.

Related: On Becoming That Truly Inclusive Leader

Shirley Engelmeier

CEO and Founder of InclusionINC and Author

Shirley Engelmeier is the founder and CEO of InclusionINC in Minneapolis. She champions workplace initiatives that improve business results through employee engagement and inclusion. She is the author of Inclusion: The New Competitive Business Advantage and Becoming an Inclusive Leader: How to Navigate the 21st Century.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2025.

Science & Technology

Generative AI Is Completely Reshaping Education. Here's Why Leaders Can't Afford to Ignore It.

From dorm-room startups to faculty-built chatbots, the future of learning is being rewritten right now — and the institutions that can't keep up are getting left behind.

Business News

Baby Boomers Over 75 Are Getting Richer, Causing a 'Massive' Wealth Divide, According to a New Report

A new paper outlines the three factors driving the generational wealth divide. Here's how some baby boomers keep getting richer.

Buying / Investing in Business

From a $120M Acquisition to a $1.3T Market

Co-ownership is creating big opportunities for entrepreneurs.

Buying / Investing in Business

Big Investors Are Betting on This 'Unlisted' Stock

You can join them as an early-stage investor as this company disrupts a $1.3T market.

Side Hustle

This Mom's Creative Side Hustle Started As a Hobby With Less Than $100 — Then Grew Into a Business Averaging $570,000 a Month: 'It's Crazy'

After Krista LeRay shared her passion project on Instagram, she realized there was enough demand to start a business.