What Kind of Leader Are You
What Kind of Leader Are You
What Kind of Leader Are You
Lewin's research introduced the idea that leadership and its associated skills could
be taught and learned that leaders were not just born but could be made. It also
recognized the influence that the team members had on a person's leadership style
as well, prompting further research over the years.
From the 1940s to the 1970s, leadership research focused on the traits of leaders,
such as responsibility, intelligence, status, situation, achievement and capacity.
Nearly every study came to a similar conclusion: Such a characterization was
insufficient to isolate specific traits of leaders based solely on possession of the
characteristic, but knowing what traits great leaders have in common has a strong
influence as leaders try to learn new skills and become better supervisors and
managers.
In the 1970s and '80s, leadership experts Paul Hersey and Ken Blanchard introduced
the concept of situational leadership, meaning that a leader adapts his or her style to
the situation. In short, suspenseful situations, an autocratic approach may be more
effective, but in situations with time to plan and respond, group participation may
yield the best results.
Awareness
Focus
Accountability
Empathy
Confidence
Optimism
Honesty
Inspiration
In research published in the Harvard Business Review in 2000, author and
psychologist Daniel Goleman uncovered six different leadership styles, which he
argues spring from different components of emotional intelligence:
Commanding: Leaders demand immediate compliance.
Visionary: Leaders mobilize people toward a vision.
Affiliative: Leaders create emotional bonds and harmony.
Democratic: Leaders build consensus through participation.
Pacesetting: Leaders expect excellence and self-direction.
Coaching: Leaders develop people for the future.
According to Mind Tools, a number of other styles exist beyond those definitions,
including:
Bureaucratic leadership, whose leaders focus on following every rule.
Charismatic leadership, in which leaders inspire enthusiasm in their teams and
are energetic in motivating others to move forward.
Task-oriented leadership, whose leaders focus only on getting the job done.
People-oriented leadership, in which leaders are tuned into organizing,
supporting and developing people on their teams.
Transformational leadership, whose leaders inspire by expecting the best from
everyone and themselves.
This article was originally published in 2012 and was updated July 21, 2015.
Additional reporting by Business News Daily senior writer Chad Brooks.
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