Does sacrificial leadership have to hurt? The realities of putting others first
Por: Mckenna, Rob.
Colaborador(es): Brown, Terran.
[USA] International Society for Organization Development 2011Descripción: 13 páginas.Tema(s): RECURSOS HUMANOS | CAPITAL HUMANO | GESTIÓN DEL PERSONAL | LIDERAZGO | ALTA DIRECCIÓN | DIRECCIÓN DE PROYECTOS | DIRECTIVOS PÚBLICOS | ESTADOS UNIDOSRecursos en línea: Haga clic para acceso en línea | Haga clic para acceso en línea En: Organization Development Journal 2015. Volumen 29 Número 3, p. 39-50Resumen: Sacrificial leadership has generally been associated with positive outcomes for organizations and employees. While it is often desired by organizations, we suggest that current organizational systems often fail to promote sacrificial behaviors. It present a new perspective sacrificial leadership that includes character-based elements such as humility, a willingness to calculate the cost of leading and the courage to be irrelevant in the presence of systems that pressure leaders to behave otherwise. We discuss how these elements are often not encouraged in current selection, employee dev.Sacrificial leadership has generally been associated with positive outcomes for organizations and employees. While it is often desired by organizations, we suggest that current organizational systems often fail to promote sacrificial behaviors. It present a new perspective sacrificial leadership that includes character-based elements such as humility, a willingness to calculate the cost of leading and the courage to be irrelevant in the presence of systems that pressure leaders to behave otherwise. We discuss how these elements are often not encouraged in current selection, employee dev.
There are no comments for this item.