Leadership Development Resource Center - Better Leaders, Better Workplaces

The Invisible Leader - Leaders Going Bad!

Navigate The Leadership Questions and Answers Section

Index Page - Leadership Models, Theories and Terms
General Leadership Questions and Principles
Leadership Challenges and Their Solutions
Developing Your Leadership Capabilities
Leadership Myths and Mistakes
Leadership Skills, Actions and Behaviors

 

It's common for new leaders to spend a lot of their time being visible and in touch with their employees. In fact, it's an important aspect of assuming the mantle of leadership. But here's an odd, but understandable phenomenon.

As leaders become more caught up in their management responsibilities, there's a tendency for them to forget that effective leadership requires personal contact with those beneath them in the organizational hierarchy. It's not uncommon for effective leaders to abandon (or forget) what got them there in the first place. And that's the people contact side.

One reasons leaders go from effective to ineffective is that they lower the priority of their leader oriented activities, and raise the priority of their management tasks until they actually become invisible to employees. And when that happens their ability to lead erodes.

Being a visibile leader should remain a high priority since it's a long term strategy for creating good things in the organization. Do not abandon visibility even if the time pressures to do so are great. Allocate a percentage of your day to being visibile to employees and you will maintain your leadership "power", or increase it. Become invisible and you become irrelevant to employees.


sherlockThe Best Leadership Search Engine On The Planet And, Have Your Say/Comment or Question

Need to find more articles, ideas, and help with leadership and management? Use of specialized high powered search engine designed just to find leadership and management related material.

Hint: Narrow your search by clicking on the appropriate tab after you have done your initial search. For example, type in your keywords, press search. All relevant results will appear. If you want to view ONLY articles free to view, click the "free to view" tab.

Loading

commentYou can have your say on this topic, leave a comment, ask a question and/or interact with our other visitors to the Leadership Development Resource Center. Tell us what you think of the page, or ask us a leadership question. Let us know what you are looking for.

 

| Home | Privacy Policy | | About | Contact |
Copyright 2007-2008 Robert Bacal/Bacal & Associates