YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Leadership and Organizational Culture
Essays 541 - 570
resources for competitive advantage. For some organizations, this means spending more on material resources. Truly competitive org...
This analytical paper concludes that the stress is different today, and this results in lax leadership at home, and stronger leade...
survey. Encouraging nurses to cultivate an inquiring attitude The American Association of Critical-Care Nurses (AACN) indicates ...
is Lou Platt, who was promoted to a position of leadership in 1992, after serving with the company for some 26 years (OToole, 2000...
equally useful lessons about leadership. With that in mind, this paper will explore the leadership actions of one of recent histor...
the value of leadership might strive to emphasize this capacity of emotional intelligence among all organizational leaders. This...
around the ten-dollar mark, but books that are significantly lower are often perceived as being of a reduced value and people may ...
leaders (Emery & Barker, 2007). Contact personnel were from the banking and food store organizations. The third article by Brede...
some boards of directors are not focusing just on total returns but rather, are thinking about metrics such as executive-developme...
for this element. Low to moderate maturity employees have low motivation and require more direction and more personal attention. M...
leadership and attempt to present a more nuanced approach to the skills or qualities associated with leaders in the personal sense...
and its basic conceit, around which the paper will be based. The primary theme of Goodwins work is that the presidency of Abraham ...
sort of person who can truly identify with the values the organization wishes to promote, and so on (Brown & Mitchell, 2010). Th...
2009). Contingency styles consider the relationship between the leader and follower, the specific task, and power (Doyle & Smith, ...
goals. However, most, if not all projects involve four phases: the initiation of the project, planning the projects activities, ex...
about coping with change" (Bencivenga, 2002). These definitions seem to encompass what other authors and theorists and even practi...
of people". This is a view with agrees with Drucker, who does not believe that leaders can be defined merely by personality, but t...
more or less inherited their leadership roles. Fledging governments such as those of the United States did put some store on elect...
the same growth and development experiences they give men (Pinder, 2005; Stelter, 2002). There is an ongoing debate that suggests...
in learning and developing leadership skills. in this stage, students must be given very explicit lessons and directions to learn ...
teams and why it is essential, there is nothing better than teaching through example. The book does not end there. In fact, the an...
to success. This is an aspect that authors Rooke and Torbert (2005) introduced some years ago, is the concept of "action logic," i...
deciding what to do about it (Taylor, 2009, p. 44). Mulally has made some risky moves, such as increasing the companys debt in o...
One of the theories from the mid-1990s that is still getting a lot of press is Golemans introduction of emotional intelligence as ...
leadership style of the student may be seeking to emulate this, with consideration of others and seeking to listen. However, more...
Positive interdependence is a keystone of effective teams. Positive interdependence means that members of the team believe their s...
The writer chooses four modern business leaders and contrasts their different approaches to leadership to demonstrate the variety ...
undesirable, the style works. Jobs is a great leader because he combines the basic functions of management and does them well with...
and people were referred to as sheep: "When he saw the crowds, he had compassion on them, because they were harassed and helpless,...
by a strong set of values resolves issues before we even really think about them. A person cannot really be a good leader withou...