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Published byFrederica Sanders Modified over 9 years ago
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1 Shared Meanings Why Myths Matter
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2 Orientation Focus on how people create and change perceived meanings in organisations (map making and changing) Organizational reality is socially constructed and influenced through symbolic power of leadership actions Leadership involves inter-dependent processes through which meanings are constructed and challenged We may think of the processes as establishing a story Stories that persist have their mythology, or non-rational basis. (The tales of leadership achievements or betrayals)
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3 Symbolic Leadership Perceptions of leadership are rooted in symbol systems (of a social group) Visions are important action triggers through activating cultural symbol systems (values and beliefs) The process creates and sustains a leadership ‘story’ (myth) Process is also seen as giving sense or meaning to actions and plans
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4 Management of Meaning Symbolic leadership processes have been described as the ‘management of meaning’ Leaders bring structure to a situation through actions of symbolic significance (I.e. framing perceptions) In this way formalized roles are established In informal groups, social processes are more emergent and less constrained. (Smircich & Morgan, 1982)
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5 Barry Turner’s POU Symbolism: Leadership and Culture Culture is powerfully influenced by symbol systems (archetypes) The approach differs from strictly rational explanations of social reality Provides a powerful map for going beyond the dominant (rational) leadership model of the earlier chapters Helps explain processes of charismatic influence, and the difficulties (e.g. dilemma of trust) of evaluating charismatic behaviours
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6 McWhinney’s Change Model Influence of charismatic leaders derives from their actions taking on a mythic quality. (The leader’s myth becomes accepted as reality). Mythic leaders enable change through the symbolic impact of their mythic ‘story’ on those of other realities ‘Power of the myth’ distinguishes them from people focussing on other realities (Empiricists, Fatalists, Relativists) The model again indicates the potential dangers of charismatic leadership as well as its potency
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7 McWhinny’s 3 types of charismatic leader Prophetic leader: Anita Roddick; Michael Eisner Entrepreneurial Charismatic: Bill Gates; Stephen Spielberg Facilitative Entrepreneur: Richard Branson; Google/Yahoo (Page & Brin; Filo & Yang) Charismatic business leaders tend to be more of a mix rather than an ideal pure type
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8 Culture & Leadership (Schein) Schein’s map treats culture as the secret to understanding leadership and organizations Culture shapes and is shaped by people establishing shard meanings To develop leadership skills requires an understanding of customs, rights, myths and stories Leaders who establish a strong culture have been much praised. This ignores the dilemma of rigidity inherent in a deeply held symbolic belief system or culture
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9 Smircich & Morgan’s (management of meaning) model Smircich & Morgan relate the general concept of management of to processes of organisation change They represent leadership as a social reality ‘invented’ by the perceptions of the leader & followers Leadership, as symbolism, provides a rationale for framing the experience of those led Leadership for change is about establishing common understanding (shared vision) of a desired future state
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10 Weick and sense-making The leader instils confidence by providing cues for to people to see where they are and where they want to be. This form of map making demonstrates how perceptions have to be respected Weick offers sense making as complimenting theories of symbolism and meanings attached to objects Leaders understanding sense-making processes have more confidence in the power of plausibility in the absence of adequate information and knowledge
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11 Summary Earlier essentialist maps presumed to have a correct reading Constitutive maps influenced through symbolic content are socially constructed and open to more than one reading or interpretation Leadership offers perspectives providing possibilities to group members Maps of a social constructivist kind draw attention to processes involved in establishing personal, group and organizational identities Dilemmas include the difficulty if there are competing maps (beliefs) of ends or means in organisational life
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