The Meaning of Leadership
The Meaning of Leadership
The Meaning of Leadership
A simple definition is that leadership is the art of motivating a group of people to act
towards achieving a common goal. In a business setting, this can mean directing workers and
colleagues with a strategy to meet the company's needs.
The word "leadership" can bring to mind a variety of images. For example:
An explorer, cutting a path through the jungle for the rest of his group to follow.
Leaders help themselves and others to do the right things. They set direction, build an
inspiring vision, and create something new. Leadership is about mapping out where you need
to go to "win" as a team or an organization; and it is dynamic, exciting, and inspiring. Yet, while
leaders set the direction, they must also use management skills to guide their people to the
right destination, in a smooth and efficient way.
Put even more simply, the leader is the inspiration and director of the action. He or she
is the person in the group that possesses the combination of personality and leadership skills
that makes others want to follow his or her direction
Leader
• Do things right
• Change
• Long-term
• Ends
• Architects
• Inspiring & motivating
Manager
• Status quo
• Short-term
• Means
• Builders
• Problem solving
History is full of people who, while having no previous leadership experience, have
stepped to the fore in crisis situations and persuaded others to follow their suggested course of
action. They possessed traits and qualities that helped them to step into roles of leadership.
Writing in Forbes magazine, Erika Andersen, author of "Leading So People Will Follow,"
says, like most things – leadership capability falls along a bell curve. So, the fact is that most
folks who start out with a modicum of innate leadership capability can actually become very
good, even great leaders.
1. Traits theories
2. Behavioral Theories
3. Contingency Theories
1. Traits theories
Assumed that a basic set of personal traits that differentiated
leaders from nonleaders could be used to identify leaders and
predict who would become leaders. The trait approach was
unsuccessful in establishing empirical relationships between traits
and persons regarded as leaders.
2. Behavioral Theories
Job-centered behavior—managers who pay close attention to
subordinates’ work, explain work procedures, and are keenly interested
in performance.
Employee-centered behavior—managers who focus on the
development of cohesive work groups and employee satisfaction.
The two forms of leader behaviors were considered to be at opposite
ends of the same continuum.
3. Contingency Theories
Appropriate leader behavior varies from one situation to another. Key
situational factors that are interacting to determine appropriate leader
behavior can be identified.
Personality Attributes of Great Leaders
Although leadership is a group process (leaders require followers), leadership research
has a long history of focusing on attributes of leaders alone that make them effective—great
leaders. The 19th-century belief that leaders are born rather than made is no longer in vogue—
research has failed to find “great leader” genes. However, the idea that some people have
personalities, however acquired, that predispose them to lead effectively in all situations,
whereas others do not, has attracted enormous research attention.
A definitive review published in 2002 concluded that three of the Big Five personality
dimensions are associated with effective leadership: Extraversion, Openness to Experience, and
Conscientiousness. Overall, however, personality does not allow people to differentiate
between effective and ineffective leaders very reliably.
A third interactionist theory is path-goal theory, which assumes that a leader’s main
function is to motivate followers by clarifying the paths that will help them attain their goals.
Leaders do this by directing task-related activities (structuring) or by addressing followers’
personal and emotional needs (consideration). Structuring is most effective when followers are
unclear about their goals and how to reach them, and consideration is most effective when the
task is boring or uncomfortable.
Transactional Leadership
Another way to look at leadership is as a transaction between leaders and followers—
the leader does something benefiting followers, and followers in turn allow the leader to lead.
Eric Hollander coined the term idiosyncrasy credit to describe a transaction in which leaders
who initially conform to group norms and therefore serve the group well are subsequently
rewarded by the group by being allowed to be idiosyncratic and innovative—key features of
effective leadership.
About how one can distinguish between charisma in the service of evil (Slobodan Milosevic)
and charisma in the service of good (Nelson Mandela).
Stereotypes of Leadership
According to leader categorization theory, people have stereotypical expectations
(schemas) about the attributes an effective leader should have in general, or in specific
leadership situations. Once a person categorizes someone as a leader, the person automatically
engages the relevant leadership schema—the better the match is between the leader’s actual
characteristics and the leadership schema, the more favorable are the person’s evaluations of
the leader and his or her leadership.
Role congruity theory focuses on gender and leadership. The argument is that
stereotypes of women typically do not match well with schemas of effective leadership, and
thus in many leadership situations, women find it difficult to be endorsed as effective leaders.
There is an incongruity between the attributes of the leadership role and the stereotypical
attributes of women.