Forbes has this week tweeted that charisma
still matters in business no matter what the level of the leader’s
intelligence, wisdom or constitution is. As we know, charisma is the powerful
personal quality that some people have to attract and impress other people.
With this hypothesis of Forbes, corporate and business leaders are drawn to the
league of charisma which hitherto has been a sole preserve of successful movie
actors and differentiated politicians. There is, of course, truth in the
hypothesis. Not all successful leaders are charismatic but some successful
leaders are, in addition, charismatic too.
There would be general consensus that leaders of India, Inc such as
Ratan Tata and NR Narayana Murthy are not only effective leaders from a
standard leadership criteria template but are, in addition, charismatic leaders
as well.
Charisma could occasionally be a family
legacy but in most cases that does not, by itself, make for sustainable
charisma. Mahatma Gandhi was a charismatic leader but his children did not
become charismatic leaders. Indira Gandhi, as the daughter of charismatic
Jawaharlal Nehru, commenced her political innings with some inherited charisma
but quickly built her own unique charisma. Differentiated performance is a key
aspect of developing charisma to the potential heights. Charisma in one field can lead to success and
additional charisma in other fields too. NT Rama Rao and MG Ramachandran were
charismatic movie hero-actors of Telugu and Tamil cinema respectively, and leveraged
their movie charisma to become the elected chief ministers of their respective
states. This has not always been true either. Amitabh Bachchan, the charismatic
Hindi movie hero, failed to make a success of his organization for a business
venture.
Defining charisma
Charisma is not a skill that can be acquired
or honed. It is an intrinsic aspect of one’s personality that is part genetic
and part gets developed over the years. Most persons as they become successful become
respected and applauded but not necessarily charismatic. The global IT industry
has had several successful CEOs but very few have been successful as Steve
Jobs. Clearly, charisma is a special quality of select leaders that draws
people to them. They are mesmerized by not only their performance but also
their ability to connect themselves with the general population, be it that of
an organization or the society itself. Charismatic leaders connect with the
people on physical (performance) as well as emotional (oneness) plane. Mahatma
Gandhi became the charismatic focal leader for the yearning of the Indian
people for independence. Indira Gandhi’s
Garibi Hatao (Banish Poverty) slogan became a major performance credo that
connected her to the poorer sections of the society.
What leads to charismatic leadership has not
been researched conclusively. It is, however, clear that transactional leaders
cannot be charismatic leaders. Transformational leaders, though not necessarily
all, tend to become charismatic leaders. Charismatic leaders tend to be natural
products of a context in which their capabilities and values resonate with the
larger organization, developing a strong emotional and psychological bond
between the leaders and their followers. Trust and credibility are the key pillars
that reinforce charisma. Charismatic leaders are open to self-sacrifice,
self-evaluation, self-correction and even self-atonement. They choose typically
unique ways to go through these processes as undoubtedly Mahatma Gandhi did. As
a result, charisma is not related to position or power. Charisma endures even
if leaders do not seek power or even if they exit positions of power.
Organizational implications
Charismatic leadership is not essential to
organizational success but charismatic leaders do make iconic firms. Infosys as
the Indian IT bellwether under Narayana Murthy, Tata Group as India’s global
conglomerate under Ratan Tata, Panasonic as the electronics pioneer under
Matsushita, Microsoft as the software giant under Bill Gates, Bose as the pure
audio synthesizer under Amar Bose, Apple as the iconic innovator under Steve
Jobs and scores of such companies illustrate that fact. The alchemy between
performance competencies and charismatic dimensions of a leader are contextual.
Jamshedji Tata, the predecessor to Ratan Tata was a paternalistic leader who
was also a charismatic leader in a regimented, socialistic phase of the Indian
economy. Ratan Tata who succeeded him was less charismatic in comparison to JRD
but had a distinct performance and growth orientation in a rapidly liberalizing
Indian economy. Both had contributed enormously to the growth of the Tata group
in a contextually appropriate fashion. Each built on charismatic aura over the
years.
In the public domain, the negative aspects of
unbridled charisma that were put to negative uses constitute certain dark
chapters of history, with such leaders causing unprecedented human misery
through world wars and other forms of strife. In a corporate context, charismatic
leadership has its own pitfalls, especially in monopolistic, entrepreneurial or
family companies. The sway held by charismatic leaders over their followers and
internal as well as external stakeholders leads to stifling of debate and
concentration of power. Charisma at times leads to perceptions of infallibility
on the part of such leaders and their followers. Companies led negatively by
charismatic leaders with all the attention on themselves eventually become
vulnerable to more nimble and competitive firms led by leaders with more
consensual decision-making. Truly charismatic leaders who keep a watch over
themselves for continuous self-improvement can, however, build truly iconic
firms.
Discovering charisma
While truly charismatic leaders could be few
and far between, it pays for every competent individual to discover the
charismatic components one is blessed with, and work on them. At a genetic
level, these could be the physical personality and the mental intellect. However,
as competencies develop, people tend to acquire certain unique attributes and
competencies that could make them more charismatic than others. These could be differentiated
value system, mesmerizing communication skill, focused execution ability, multi-faceted
conceptual capability and so on. Leaders must utilize these unique attributes
to connect with others and help their teams succeed in shared goals. As a
leader’s canvas expands in line with his or her upward movement in the
organization, the charisma also grows with the leader. Charisma does not mean or
require rabble-rousing or awe-inspiring speeches, delivered with the full force
and power of the leader; rather it involves listening to the multitudes with
empathy and feeling the pulse of the organization and society for the leader to
be able to respond with focus and empathy.
Fundamentally, people are attracted to leaders
by promises and eventually leaders are judged by their people for their
performance. The balance between
promise, performance and charisma tends to be contextual. Charismatic
leadership works to different levels of effectiveness in different settings. Leaders
on the shop floor and in the marketplace preferably need a charismatic
personality to convey their messages with the required degree of impact and
homogeneity. It is perhaps less relevant, even less appropriate, to rely on
charisma when leading a competent peer group or intellectually driven subject
matter experts. There are certain research findings that suggest that a group
of extroverted subjects are, rather surprisingly, led better by an introverted
leader, and vice versa. Such research also suggests that whether the groups are
homogenous or heterogeneous, and whether they are extroverted or introverted,
charisma works. This probably explains why entrepreneurial firms on rapid
scale-up mode, troubled firms facing turnaround situations and conglomerates
with several thousands of employees are drawn to charismatic leadership,
especially.
Responsibility of charisma
There is no doubt that a charismatic leader
can be electrifying and energizing for the organization. Whether he or she
would, in fact, be empowering or enslaving is the determinant of success of organizations
under charismatic leaders. As with most leadership factors which act as strengths
as well as weaknesses, charisma also acts both ways. Charismatic leaders need
to constantly evaluate whether their charisma inspires others to greater
creativity and productivity or just keeps them spellbound, looking for constant
guidance and direction. An organization’s interests are better served when the hope
and energy unleashed by a charismatic leader are channeled systemically and
systematically by a companion leader towards creativity and productivity. Political leaders have, for example,
discovered the need painfully through experience. The spell cast on the
electorate by the charismatic political leader needs to be converted into votes
by a well-oiled election machine.
The charismatic leader has yet another
responsibility; he or she needs to be equally charismatic when leading large
gatherings, managing small teams or interacting individually. The elements of
charisma may vary across the three settings but the core characteristic of leading
based on the leader’s unique differentiators, listening with empathy and
responding with assurance would remain the same. One can only think of Mahatma
Gandhi again for his unflinching and unwavering charisma across widely varying
situations, whether one of inspiring the great Indian masses or debating within the Indian National Congress
leadership team or negotiating with adversaries such as Winston Churchill or
Jinnah. Charisma that is built on competencies and values, and reinforced by
empathy and responsiveness tends to be invigorating and empowering. The journey
of charismatic leaders is a continuous one of self-evaluation and
self-actualization for the broader benefit of organizations and societies they
represent and lead.
Posted by Dr CB Rao on July 14, 2013
2 comments:
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