¶ … Management
The survey was sent to 87 managers in these two organizations, and there were 32 responses. The survey focused on four main questions, all of which were open-ended in nature, therefore not lending themselves to statistical analysis. This section will cover the responses to the four questions.
The first research question was " What does leadership and progress mean to employees at these companies and are they different form other companies?" There are obviously two components to this question. The first component is what leadership means to the employees at these companies. The surveys indicated that the managers at these two companies felt that leadership was important, and this was the view of 31 managers out of the 32 who responded. Not surprisingly, those in leadership positions felt that they were contributing something positive to the organization, and that employees responded well to their leadership. Most respondents indicated that leadership was either "important" or "very important." At this point in the survey, there was no discussion of leadership style, so no links can be made from this data as to whether or not the importance of leadership relates to the leadership style.
The second part of this question is whether these two companies are different from other companies in this respect. The study did not include any data from other companies, so no direct comparison of results could be made. Studies on the importance of leadership tend to focus on specific roles that leadership plays, such as leading through merger & acquisition activity (Sitkin & Pablo, 2005) or in shaping business values (Ciulla, 1999). This means that there is no way to determine whether leadership is more important at these two companies than any other company. There is no intuitive reason why it should be, but the research design did not even test this hypothesis.
The second research question was "which models of leadership best fit the leadership profiles that are present with in the organizations?" The respondents were provided with a quick primer on leadership styles, but that did not stop them from going off the board in a lot of their answers. The respondents did not understand the concepts that were presented to them for the most part. The most common answer among established leadership theories was that of transformational leadership, which 6 leaders felt best described leadership found within the organization. Five responded positively to transactional leadership, showing perhaps a schism between the different leadership styles that are present in the organizations. Two responded positively to the Great Man Theory, and one to Trait Theory. The other respondents delivered a fairly wide range of theories, ranging from ones that have some basis in the literature (ethical leadership) to things like "good leadership" and "incompetent leadership" that are not present in the literature. These responses illustrated that many managers, even those in leadership positions, may not have studied leadership and were not familiar with the concepts, at least not familiar enough to provide a reasonable answer.
The third question was "How has gender and diversity affected the leadership profiles in these companies?" This is another open-ended question, one that the respondents did not actually manage to answer. It was probably written poorly. The main issue with the responses here is that the respondents did not understand the leadership profiles. The objective of the question was to determine whether increasing diversity in leadership had an effect on the styles the leaders used most commonly. Many managers did not understand the leadership styles concept, and a few other indicated that they did not have much experience in their company, so could not say how things were in the past. Only five responses were of value in this question. Three indicated no change, two more indicated a shift towards transformative leadership styles. The latter would be expected, as there has been a general shift towards that type of leadership. In many cases, it would also be expected that leadership styles would not change, especially in situations where the leader does not change, or where promotions are strongly based on tenure so that more progressive thinkers do not receive promotions.
Others who had no understood the concepts also indicated that there was no change, but since they did not understand the ideas in Question 2, they would also have not understood the ideas in Question 3. Others indicated that there were more women and minorities in leadership positions now, but of course this was the baseline assumption for the question, so they were in essence not answering the actual question that was being asked.
The fourth question was "how...
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