Verified Document

Servant Leadership Essay

Servant Leadership At the center of servant leadership is a leader's ability to transform a team, department or entire organization by concentrating on their specific needs for direction, individualized coaching, development and recognition. A highly effective servant leader will also have a correspondingly high level of Emotional Intelligence (EI) and exhibit the traits of transformational leadership (Washington, Sutton, Feild, 2006). A highly effective servant leader will often create unique development and training programs that align with the strengths and weaknesses of a given subordinate as well.

Servant leaders also excel at creating team-based cultures that seek to provide their subordinates with an opportunity to gain autonomy, mastery and purpose over their work. These three factors are critical to long-term motivation for learning (Leavy, 2012). Highly effective servant leaders realize that by showing trust, they become trusted. By concentrating on the three foundational...

Creating a culture of achievement engenders greater levels of trust both within an organization across department and within teams. The higher the level of trust and transparency, nurtured by a servant leader, the higher the level of innovation as well (Oliveira, Ferreira, 2012). A transformational leader has the ability to create a very innovative, forward-thinking organization by being the catalyst of trust throughout their teams and with others. One of the most effective strategies for gaining trust is to also be willing to self-sacrifice for an objective. Individual leaders vary in their level and depth of self-sacrifice, yet the highest performing servant leaders regularly show they believe in and continually pursue the broader vision of their department or organization through their actions and words (Washington, Sutton, Feild, 2006).…

Sources used in this document:
References

Leavy, B. (2012). Michael Beer - higher ambition leadership. Strategy & Leadership, 40(3), 5-11.

Oliveira, M.A., & Ferreira, J.J.P. (2012). How interoperability fosters innovation: The case for servant leadership. African Journal of Business Management, 6(29), 8580.

Washington, R.R., Sutton, C.D., & Feild, H.S. (2006). Individual differences in servant leadership: The roles of values and personality. Leadership & Organization Development Journal, 27(8), 700-716.
Cite this Document:
Copy Bibliography Citation

Sign Up for Unlimited Study Help

Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.

Get Started Now