1.0 LEADERSHIP
Leadership is influencing people to do certain things or to move in a certain direction. Leadership can be learned.
Good leaders persuade and do not rely on command, fear, or authority. They serve and do not dominate. They use leadership
power to improve and make a change. They pull and do not push. They empower followers by coaching and delegation. Good leaders
rely on personal power (character, expertise, charisma, and personal relations) more than positional power (formal authority,
decisions, rewards, punishments, information, and organizational resources). Leadership credibility is based on competence,
character, self-confidence, activity and drive, boldness and assertiveness. Leadership is a necessity and its absence means
chaos. Good leadership leads to success; bad leadership leads to frustration and failure. One of the harbingers of doom is
to place leadership authority in the wrong hands.
2.0 LEADERS
Leadership is exercised by almost everybody. Its effectiveness is increased
by formal training or job experience. Its success depends on follower consent. Leaders face problems of loneliness, taking
responsibility for failures, follower problems (disloyalty, poor values, dissent), external threats, and lack of privacy.
A leader as a human has strengths and weaknesses. Leaders can be autocratic, democratic, and laissez-faire. They can be transactional,
transformational, or charismatic. They can be task oriented or people-oriented. The appropriate style of leadership is determined
by the situation on the ground. Some situations require combinations of leadership styles. Management and leadership skills
and functions are different but are found in an individual in varying proportions. Leadership is about effectiveness, intuition,
long-term vision, change, challenging the status quo, innovation, development, originality, and motivation of others. Management
is about rational problem-solving, efficiency, process and mechanics, stability, harmony, status quo, short-term view, following
and not innovating.
3.0 FOLLOWERS
Followers are described as lazy or hardworking, taking or shunning responsibility,
'yes people' following whatever is moving, survivors avoiding trouble, alienated and do not caring, and obedient or rebellious.
Followers differ in intelligence, education, experience, honesty, respect for leaders, and gratitude. Followers are part of
leadership situation, they play an important function in a leadership situation, and are not passive spectators. Books of
history ignore follower. Followers close to the leader can guide or misguide him. The duties of the followers to the leader
are obedience, respect, advice and correction, feedback, and loyalty. Leader must rely on the followers and make them know
they are trusted and are valued. A good leader discourages false praise by followers and development of a personality cult.
4.0 FUNCTIONS & ACTIVITIES OF
LEADERS
A leader may play one of the following roles/functions: clarification of vision, goals, and objectives; making decisions
and solving problems; strategic and tactical planning; training; coordinating and integration; representation the organization;
managing and resolving conflicts; motivation of followers; assigning tasks; maintaining positive and smooth working relationships;
participation and not being aloof; evaluation of self and of followers; forming groups, coaching them and delegating responsibility
to them; and communication (the most important function of leadership).
5.0 FAILURE OF LEADERSHIP
A leader fails due to several often inter-related causes: refusal to admit mistakes; feeling indispensable; dictatorship;
fear for position and not developing replacements; disloyalty to superiors, peers, followers and the organization; lack of
creativity; lack of common sense; lack of human skills; failure to produce results; following the crowd and not leading; condoning
or tolerating incompetence; failure to recognize and reward good work, and hatred by the followers. A leader is hated for
impersonal behavior, not listening to followers, self importance, wrong decisions, claiming credit for followers' work, blaming
followers for his mistakes, secretiveness, withholding information, not protecting followers from external attacks and criticizing
them in public, not consulting followers, and over-working followers, being arrogant and feeling indispensable, putting people
down, mistrust and disloyalty, inaccessibility, poor human relations, and following the crowd. A leader hated by followers
should resign in the interests of the organization.
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