Shot Clock wrote:I guess we disagree on that. The military practices like that as well. All the training revolves around it. I've been through both types of leadership as a firefighter and let me tell you in practice if someone is goofing off they are going to get an earful. Some people can take it and some can't. Usually the ones that can't are the ones unwilling to accpet that they are in fact the problem.
Yeah, but there's a difference between goofing off and messing up while giving it your damndest. I can't say for sure not being there that MJ was cool with someone ****ing up, but I'd say the evidence points otherwise. Of course, there's this -- "I can accept failure, everyone fails at something. But I can't accept not trying." Maybe MJ did practice what he preached, and maybe it's only the dark stories that came to light due to the fact that it makes for a good headline.
VideoGameJames wrote:
In the general population amongst average people it probably is, not when it comes to the super elite of the elite in the world. Dictatorial leadership works quite well in situations where fight or flight is to be constantly activated, thats why its employed in the military. Also important to note is who the leadership is coming from, leadership isnt credible if the leader isnt considered worthy of following, before they even utter a single word.
Are you sure that first sentence is empirically proven? Because from what I understand, only that second sentence is, and to a lesser extent, the third. But in fact, if the leader isn't considered worthy to be followed, the power distance is what comes into play. If there's a a lack of respect but a large power distance, dictatorial leadership is exactly the type of leadership that is employed, and it works out better than the rest due to the fact that the subordinates
have to obey the leader -- word for word. Transformational leadership doesn't work on that kind of platform because it's meant to allow the followers to be autonomous and cultivate their strengths and develop into something greater.
[Remember your high school days when you were in a **** job, retail or restaurant or something of the sort, and everyone hated the manager because he was relatively incompetent (or too by-the-book, depending on which you got), yet everyone did everything he said because you guys were all high school kids, and he was a 30-something who got along with the regional manager because he did everything asked of him? Or maybe I'm getting too specific -- but I think you get the point.]
Furthermore, if the leader is considered to be a part of the in-group, as MJ was to his teammates (or at least what he should have been), dictatorial leadership is entirely unnecessary (unless you're within that fight or flight activation mode) and detrimental, especially if you're working with the super elite of the elite who know what they're doing. In order to get the most out of them, they require a sense of autonomy and freedom to explore what works best for them. This is why the laissez-faire leadership style is employed when a manager is working with highly talented individuals.
You want
less micro-managing with greater talent, not more.