Examining employee willingness to execute shared leadership: The role of leadership behaviour, gender, age, and context

Henrico van Roekel
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Abstract

Shared leadership refers to a post-heroic conceptualization of leadership dispersed among employees. Studies on shared leadership in teams show its emergence depends highly on team and formal team leader characteristics, but employees’ own voice is remarkably absent: we know little about how employees individually consider how they would want to execute shared leadership. Taking a bottom-up perspective, this study presents a large-scale conjoint experiment in which 6742 healthcare employees were asked to evaluate specific leadership behaviours. The results show a notable share of employees are willing to execute shared leadership, but willingness varies dependent on a number of factors. Employees are more willing to share leadership when it is focused on building relationships or bringing about change, when it takes only few hours and when it benefits others. Besides, willingness to execute shared leadership is higher among young or male employees, and in the context of the COVID-19 crisis. This study contributes to understanding how leadership behaviour, personal characteristics and context affect the emergence of shared leadership. The study concludes by critically exploring some of the possible systemic causes for differences in willingness to execute shared leadership, connecting these to broader issues in healthcare employment.
考察员工执行共享领导的意愿:领导行为、性别、年龄和环境的作用
共享领导力指的是一种后英雄主义的领导力概念,分散在员工之间。对团队共享领导力的研究表明,它的出现高度依赖于团队和正式团队领导者的特征,但员工自己的声音却明显缺失:我们对员工个人如何考虑他们希望如何执行共享领导力知之甚少。本研究采用自下而上的视角,对6742名医疗保健员工进行了大规模的联合实验,以评估具体的领导行为。结果显示,有相当比例的员工愿意执行共享领导,但意愿取决于许多因素。当领导的重点是建立关系或带来变革,当领导只需要几个小时,并且对他人有利时,员工更愿意分享领导权。此外,在新冠肺炎危机背景下,年轻或男性员工执行共享领导的意愿更高。本研究有助于理解领导行为、个人特征和环境如何影响共享领导的出现。该研究的结论是批判性地探索了一些可能的系统性原因,以执行共同领导的意愿差异,将这些与医疗保健就业中更广泛的问题联系起来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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