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Categories and types of leadership

One can categorize the exercise of leadership as either actual or potential:

  • actual - giving guidance or direction, as in the phrase "the emperor has provided satisfactory leadership".
  • potential - the capacity or ability to lead, as in the phrase "she could have exercised effective leadership"; or in the concept "born to lead".

In both cases, as a result of the constancy of change some people detect within the late 20th and early 21st centuries, the act of learning appears fundamental to certain types of leading and leadership. When learning and leadership coalesce, one could characterize this as "learnership".

Leadership can have a formal aspect (as in most political or business leadership) or an informal one (as in most friendships). Speaking of "leadership" (the abstract term) rather than of "leading" (the action) usually implies that the entities doing the leading have some "leadership skills" or competencies. Several types of entities may provide or exhibit leadership, actual or potential, including:

  • a person in a position or office of authority, such as a President or a chairperson
  • a person in a position or office associated with expertise, skill, or experience, such as a team leader, a ship's captain, a chief engineer, a chief, or a parent
  • a group or person in the vanguard of some trend or movement, as in fashion trend-setters
  • a group of respected people, (called a "reference group" by sociologists) such as business commentators or union spokespersons [1]
  • a product that influences other product offerings in a competitive marketplace

Leadership can come from an individual, a collective group of leaders, or even from the disincarnated — if not mystical — characteristics of a celebrity figurehead (compare hero). Yet other usages have a "leadership" which does little active leading, but to which followers show great (often traditional) respect (compare the courtesy title reverend). Followers often endow the leader with status or prestige. Aside from the prestige-role sometimes granted to inspirational leaders, a more mundane usage of the word "leadership" can designate current front-runners that exercise influence over competitors, for example, a corporation or a product can hold a position of "market leadership" without any implication of permanence or of merited respect. (See also price leadership.) Note that the ability to influence others does form an integral part of the "leadership" of some but not all front-runners. A front-runner in a sprint may "lead" the race, but does not have a position of "leadership" if he does not have the potential to influence others in some way. Thus one can make an important distinction between "being in the lead" and the process of leadership. Leadership implies a relationship of power — the power to guide ot Authors have differentiated in number of type of leaderships but broadly there exists three types of leaderships- authorotarian (which would include feudal and dictatorial type), democratic or participative leader and Laissez Faire or Free Rein.

 
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Categories and types of leadership
The Psychology of Leadership
Leadership amongst primates
Scope of leadership
Orthogonality and leadership
Support-structures for leadership
Determining what makes "effective leadership"
Leadership and vision
Leadership's relation with management
Leadership by a group
Leader relationships with followers
Historical views on leadership
Specific theories of leadership
Alternatives to leadership
Management Jobs News
Leadership News
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