Key Takeaways
1. Leadership and Communication: Inseparable Dynamics of Social Influence
We view leadership as a process of social influence.
Social influence is core to leadership. Leadership and communication are deeply interconnected, both being pervasive aspects of our lives. Leadership is fundamentally about designing and implementing messages, strategies, processes, and structures to facilitate social influence. This influence occurs through verbal, nonverbal, and material communication, including both planned and unplanned, intentional and unintentional interactions.
Followers define outcomes. A key insight is that the process and outcomes of social influence are defined by followers as much as by leaders. The traditional view of leadership as a one-way process from leader to follower is inadequate. Instead, leadership outcomes are co-created through the interplay between leaders' actions and followers' interpretations and responses.
2. The Evolution of Leadership and Communication Theories
Throughout the evolution of communication thinking, there have been a number of creative attempts to explain why messages-as-received often failed to correspond to the intended meanings for those messages by their sources.
From linear to systemic models. Both leadership and communication theories have evolved significantly over time. Early models of communication, like Aristotle's speaker-message-audience framework, were linear and one-directional. Similarly, early leadership theories focused on traits or behaviors of individual leaders.
Paradigm shift in understanding. More recent theories in both fields recognize the complexity and interactivity of these processes. Communication is now seen as a multidirectional, co-constructive process involving multiple participants and contexts. Leadership theories have likewise expanded to consider situational factors, leader-follower relationships, and transformational aspects of leadership.
Key shifts in communication theory:
- From source-centered to receiver-centered
- From one-way to interactive and systemic perspectives
- From event-oriented to process-oriented
- From information transmission to interpretation and relationships
Evolution in leadership theory:
- From trait theories to situational and contingency approaches
- From leader-centric to leader-follower relationship focus
- From transactional to transformational leadership concepts
3. Resonance: The Foundation of Leadership-Followership Dynamics
Resonance is a way of thinking about the potential for communicative connections that may occur through messages, processes, strategies, and structures.
Resonance defines connection potential. Resonance refers to the potential for communicative connections between leaders' messages and followers' needs, values, and perspectives. It's the degree to which a leader's actions align with followers' sensibilities, susceptibilities, and accepted rules of evidence.
Zone of resonance determines influence. A leader's effectiveness is largely determined by how well their messages fall within followers' "zone of resonance." This zone is shaped by followers' personal paradigms, experiences, and cultural contexts. Leaders who understand and can tap into these zones of resonance are more likely to achieve their desired influence outcomes.
Factors influencing resonance:
- Followers' needs, attitudes, beliefs, and values
- Source credibility and perceived motivation
- Message consistency and repetition
- Cultural and contextual factors
4. Activation: Triggering Responses in Potential Followers
Activations occur when messages (rhetorical, symbolic, or material) fall within the zone of resonance, an area where the likelihood of a connection or engagement is high for intended (and at times unintended) audiences.
Activation is the response trigger. Activation refers to the process by which followers engage with or respond to a leader's messages. When a message resonates strongly, it triggers a response - either supportive or resistant. This response is the core of social influence.
Activation varies in immediacy and intensity. The strength and nature of activation can vary widely. Some messages may trigger immediate and intense responses, while others may lead to more gradual or subtle changes in follower behavior or attitudes.
Characteristics of activation:
- Can be positive (supportive) or negative (resistant)
- Varies in immediacy of response
- Ranges in intensity from weak to strong
- May be reflexive or deliberate
5. Cultivation: Long-term Development of Follower Connections
It is through the perpetual and cumulative dynamics of cultivation that our individual zones of resonance – our susceptibilities and take-into-accountabilities, "engage-abilities," and "activate-abilities" – are shaped.
Cultivation shapes long-term resonance. Cultivation refers to the long-term process of developing and shaping followers' zones of resonance. It involves repeated exposure to messages, experiences, and cultural influences that gradually shape how individuals interpret and respond to leadership efforts.
Paradigms evolve through communication. Over time, cultivation processes shape followers' personal paradigms - their ways of understanding and interpreting the world. These paradigms then influence future resonance and activation patterns, creating a cyclical process of influence and change.
Key aspects of cultivation:
- Occurs over extended periods
- Shapes followers' interpretive frameworks
- Influences future resonance and activation potential
- Can broaden or narrow zones of resonance
6. The Competency Framework for Effective Leadership
Competencies are bundles of habits. Whatever we are capable of doing depends upon bundles of habits of which we have no immediate control. To become more competent, we have to change our habits.
Leadership requires multiple competencies. Effective leadership involves developing and applying a range of competencies across different domains. These competencies are not fixed traits, but skills and habits that can be developed and refined over time.
Five key competency areas. The framework identifies five core areas of leadership competency: disciplinary/positional, analytic, personal, communication, and organizational. Each area contributes to a leader's ability to understand, engage with, and influence followers effectively.
Core leadership competencies:
- Disciplinary/Positional: Context-specific knowledge and skills
- Analytic: Ability to assess situations and stakeholders
- Personal: Character, values, and self-management
- Communication: Interpersonal and public interaction skills
- Organizational: Administrative and strategic capabilities
7. Leading Change: Applying Resonance, Activation, and Cultivation
There is nothing more difficult to take in hand, more perilous to conduct, or more uncertain in its success, than to take the lead in the introduction of a new order of things.
Change leadership is complex. Leading change is one of the most challenging aspects of leadership, requiring a nuanced understanding of resonance, activation, and cultivation dynamics. Change often faces resistance due to established patterns of thinking and behavior.
Stages of planned change. Successful change leadership involves guiding followers through several stages: attention, engagement, resolve, commitment, action, and integration. Each stage requires specific leadership strategies to overcome resistance and build support.
Strategies for leading change:
- Capture attention by connecting with existing values and needs
- Foster engagement through dialogue and shared understanding
- Develop resolve by addressing obstacles and building consensus
- Motivate action by clarifying outcomes and providing resources
- Promote integration by reinforcing and celebrating changes
8. The Power and Responsibility of Followership
Followers – whether described as collaborators, colleagues, team or group members, stakeholders, or some other label – play an indispensable and easily undervalued role in shaping the outcomes that occur in interactions with those who are regarded as formal or informal leaders in any setting.
Followership is an active choice. Being a follower is not a passive role, but an active decision to engage with and support leadership efforts. Followers have significant power in shaping leadership outcomes through their responses and interpretations.
Follower competencies matter. Like leaders, followers can develop competencies that enhance their effectiveness. These include analytical skills to assess leaders and situations, communication abilities to engage constructively, and personal competencies like self-awareness and ethical decision-making.
Key follower responsibilities:
- Critically assess leaders' goals and methods
- Engage actively in organizational processes
- Provide constructive feedback and support
- Maintain ethical standards and personal integrity
- Contribute to the co-creation of leadership outcomes
9. Ethics and Self-Reflection in Leadership and Followership
Being an initiator and supportive voice among others in collaborator or followership roles – encouraging and validating the voices of those who may think similar thoughts but are otherwise unable or unwilling to exercise agency themselves, perhaps due to an absence of critical reflection on their own patterns of resonance and activation, or fear of the reality or the perception of associated risks.
Ethical considerations are crucial. Both leaders and followers have ethical responsibilities in their roles. This includes critically examining one's own motives, values, and the consequences of one's actions on others and the broader community.
Self-reflection enhances effectiveness. Regular self-reflection is essential for both leaders and followers. It helps in understanding one's own biases, expanding zones of resonance, and making more conscious choices about engagement and influence.
Key practices for ethical leadership and followership:
- Regularly examine personal values and motives
- Seek diverse perspectives and information sources
- Challenge unexamined patterns of thought and action
- Speak truth to power when fundamental values are at stake
- Encourage and support ethical behavior in others
Download PDF
Download EPUB
.epub digital book format is ideal for reading ebooks on phones, tablets, and e-readers.