Influence Practices of Elon Musk and Jeff Skilling
CEOs and Presidents
Abstract
This paper looks at the influence processes of three CEOs: Elon Musk of Tesla, Alex Gorsky of Johnson & Johnson, and Jeff Skilling of Enron. These leaders have various strengths and faults and their leadership approaches are all different and to some extent based on their own personalities and styles of management. Some have met with more success than others, and some have met with more failure. Gorsky has succeeded at leading Johnson & Johnson for the past 8 years. Skilling failed in his leadership role at Enron and was jailed for fraud. Musk has seen a string of successes and failures during the course of his tenure as head of Tesla. This paper discusses their various influence processes, analyzes their strengths and weaknesses and summarizes their key attributes that effect positive organizational change and improved performance.
Introduction to the Concept of Influence Processes
The concept of influence processes is that it is an action a leader takes to have an impact on followers immediately and the organization overall. Lunenburg (2012) states that leadership itself is an influence process, and by this he means that what are often called leadership styles—such as transformational leadership, servant leadership, democratic leadership, or authoritarian leadership—are really influence processes that leaders engage in to affect their teams and workplaces. Singh-Sengupta (1997) has also argued that leadership styles are really influence processes that use interpersonal influence to motivate and communicate with others so that they can self-actualize. Self-actualizing in turn creates a level of self-influence wherein self-leadership becomes the manner in which the potential of the workers and the organization is achieved (Prussia, Anderson & Manz, 1998).
Leadership styles are not the only influence processes. Others include direct decision-making, allocating resources, implementing a reward system, identifying and promoting leaders from within, and role modeling (Brown & Trevino, 2014; Kameda, Ohtsubo & Takezawa, 1997). Building trust, establishing credibility, and utilizing expert power or referent/charismatic power are other ways (De Vries, 1998). Elon Musk is a leader who combines expert power and charismatic power to influence those around him, particularly stakeholders with whom he engages on Twitter, where he communicates to the public at large. Leveraging Twitter is a way to influence stakeholders (Malhotra & Malhotra, 2016).
Role of Influence in Contemporary Leadership
Influence is highly important when it comes to contemporary leadership because it impacts the way leaders motivate workers, empower them and get them to achieve their potential. Leadership is about having the ability to motivate people and guide them to the well-defined goals that have been set before them. Unless goals and objectives are clearly identified and a pathway to achieve them is laid out, it is very difficult for workers to feel like they know what they are doing or what they are working towards. So it is vital that leaders not only be able to motivate and guide but that they be able to communicate the vision of the end goal. This is the essence of effective influence in contemporary leadership. Indeed, communicating a vision is one of the central skills of transformational leadership (Bromley, 2007). For example, in an organization, a CEO will focus his team on a goal like increasing profitability. The vision is laid out—this is where the organization wants to go, and then it is explained how the organization can get there. That is step one. Step two is motivating the people, which requires an intimate understanding of them, how they think, what they need, and how to reach them. As Maslow (1943) points out in his hierarchy of needs and theory of human motivation, the pinnacle of the needs hierarchy is self-actualization, but to get there people need their lower levels needs satisfied first, such as shelter, food, a sense of belonging, love, esteem, self-respect and so on. Once those needs have been satisfied the individual will be self-motivated. Most leaders want to be surrounded with self-motivated workers, but this is not always possible so a great leader is able to find out what each worker needs and then support them so that they can reach their full potential.
Various Types of Influence Processes and the Factors That Can Affect Them
The four main types of influence processes are negative, neutral, positive and life changing. The latter two are the most important to use while the former two should be avoided. Positive influence leads to...
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