Leadership competencies should act in unison

Jonathan Mills
3 min readAug 27

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The ability of the leader to connect emotionally with employees and drive performance does not just stem from the leader’s mood or ability to say the right thing, but also from a number of coordinated activities that comprise particular leadership styles. Daniel Goleman (Primal Leadership) notes: “The best, most effective leaders act according to one or more of six distinct approaches to leadership and skilfully switch between the various styles depending on the situation.” In other words, this kind of leadership recognises the ‘moment’ and is able to address the ‘moment’ in a way that will produce the most effective results.

In a study done by McBer and Co (now The Hay Group) on a global database of 3 871 executives (Managerial Style as a Behaviour Predictor of Organisational Climate), analysis looked at how the climate that resulted from various leadership styles affected financial results, such as return on sales, revenue growth, efficiency, and profitability. The results showed that, all other things being equal, leaders who used styles with a positive emotional impact saw decidedly better financial returns than those who did not. Most importantly, leaders with the best results didn’t practice just one particular style but used many of the six distinct styles, seamlessly and in different measures, depending on the business situation.

Goleman puts this approach beautifully in the following analogy: “Imagine the styles, then, as the array of clubs in a golf pro’s bag. Over the course of a match, the pro picks and chooses from his bag based on the demands of the shot. Sometimes he has to ponder his selection, but usually it is automatic. The pro ‘senses’ the challenge ahead, swiftly pulls out the right tool, and elegantly puts it to work. That’s how high impact leaders operate too.”

Goleman helpfully outlines the six distinct leadership styles with the understanding of the underlying emotional intelligence capabilities that each approach requires and, most compelling, each style’s causal link with outcomes. The research thus allows us to see how each style actually affects climate, and therefore performance (see table below):

The Six Distinct Leadership Styles (Goleman: Primal Leadership)

VISIONARY

How it builds resonance

Moves people towards shared dreams

Impact on climate

Most strongly positive

When appropriate

When changes require a new vision or when clear direction is needed

COACHING

How it builds resonance

Connects what a person wants with the organisation’s goals

Impact on climate

Highly positive

When appropriate

To help an employee improve performance by building long-term capabilities

AFFILIATIVE

How it builds resonance

Creates harmony by connecting people to each other

Impact on climate

Positive

When appropriate

To heal rifts in a team, motivate during stressful times or strengthen connections

DEMOCRATIC

How it builds resonance

Values people’s input and gets commitment through participation

Impact on climate

Positive

When appropriate

To build buy-in or consensus or to get valuable input from employees

PACESETTING

How it builds resonance

Meets challenging and exciting goals

Impact on climate

Because too frequently poorly executed, often highly negative

When appropriate

To get high-quality results from a motivated and competent team

COMMANDING

How it builds resonance

Soothes fears by giving clear direction in an emergency

Impact on climate

Because so often misused, highly negative

When appropriate

In a crisis, to kick-start a turnaround, or with problem employees

The leader who can successfully move between the styles depending on the business context will build resonance with employees — the first four having a strong positive impact on the emotional climate of the organisation, but the last two needing to be used carefully and with skill. Leadership competencies should thus act in unison to produce the most effective results.

Originally published at https://www.stretchforgrowth.com on August 27, 2023.

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Jonathan Mills

Jonathan has spent over 30 years focusing his efforts on developing people throughout the world. He believes that people have the most impact when stretched.