Cultural Dimensions of Leadership
February 12, 2025
According to Kotter and Schlesinger (1979) proposed six crucial techniques for overcoming the resistance to change. These are given below: Widespread Education and Improving Communication Facilitating Participation and involvement Support and Facilitation Agreement & Negotiation Co-optation & Manipulation Coercion-Both Explicit and Implicit Education and Effective Communication: This is one of the commonest techniques for minimizing […]
Here are few tips to ensure a great presentation… State the Objectives: A presenter must ensure that he/she understands the purpose of the presentation. Sometimes a good presentation fails to make an impact because the audience is not clear what the presentation is about. A good way to start a presentation is to clearly state/mention/include […]
Politics is inevitable wherever there are groups of people and wherever there are blocs of people competing for the same set of scarce resources. In this context, it is indeed the case that organizations have their own share of office politics due to the prevalence of power centres and interest groups each with competing and […]
In 1960’s, Edwin Locke put forward the Goal-setting theory of motivation. This theory states that goal setting is essentially linked to task performance. It states that specific and challenging goals along with appropriate feedback contribute to higher and better task performance. In simple words, goals indicate and give direction to an employee about what needs […]
Ever since the allegations against the famous (now infamous) Hollywood celebrity, Harvey Weinstein, about sexual harassment broke out, there has been a flurry of women across the political, economic, social, and entertainment world who have come forward detailing their own experiences with sexual harassment. Also, with noted Silicon Valley firms being accused of covering up […]
The emotionally intelligent manager is one who has an inner rudder, defers gratification, and is empathic towards his or her coworkers. An emotionally intelligent manager creates a working environment that is as much driven by performance as it is by greater cooperation and greater sensitiveness towards each other.
In other words, an emotionally intelligent manager creates a working environment is free from rancor and prejudice and at the same time is characterized by high performance that emanates from the ability to focus on results and at the same time not swayed by petty conflicts.
The point here is that the emotionally intelligent manager manages his or her employees according to their needs for intrinsic and extrinsic motivation apart from making them realize their true potential by targeting their need for self-actualization. This means that an emotionally intelligent manager ensures performance through empathy, awareness, and emotional connect between the employees rather than mere performance driven by cold calculations of profits and bottom lines.
We have discussed the characteristics of emotionally intelligent managers. Continuing along the same lines, the spiritually intelligent manager derives performance through understanding, support, and targeting the innate strengths of the employees.
Whereas an emotionally intelligent manager is able to derive high performance through empathy and awareness of the employees’ needs, the spiritually intelligent manager is able to derive performance through the premise that each individual has talents that can manifest themselves through nurturing and mentoring.
The point here is that in many organizations, it is the case that the working environment is characterized by intense competition and driven solely by profits. However, emotional and spiritual intelligence can also result in higher profits because by targeting the latent potential of employees, it is possible to make them perform at their best.
In other words, contemporary management thought is finally recognizing the fact that emotionally and spiritually intelligent managers are a boon and an asset to the organizations as they have the ability to get the best out of people in a manner that leads to a workplace that is fulfilling for the employees.
Further, emotional, and spiritual intelligence are very much needed in these turbulent times when the obsession about profits alone has us into a situation where humanistic values have been abandoned in the pursuit of money and greed.
The key aspect about EQ or Emotional Quotient and SQ or Spiritual Quotient is that these terms mean that organizations have to move from competition to cooperation and from sympathy to empathy if they are to survive the challenges of the 21s century. Considering the fact that the world now needs these qualities more than the pursuit of profit alone, it is the case that EQ and SQ are very much needed if we are to survive the present times.
Further, change takes time and must be accompanied by nurturing and patience and therefore, SQ and EQ are badly needed for our species to make the next evolutionary leap.
The point to be noted here is that unless we move to the next level of our evolution through awareness, understanding, support, empathy, and cooperation, we are likely to miss the chance in our collective evolution.
Further, challenges like social and environmental concerns can only be met through the actualization of these aspects and therefore, there is an urgent need to embrace EQ and SQ among managers and employees.
Finally, while we do not advocate abandoning the need to make profits and say that there must be utopia, we mean to say that unless the working environment becomes something closer to humaneness and is more towards actualizing one’s potential, we are likely to move on the same path that is leading us to ruin.
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