Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

CONTRAST OF CHARISMATI­C LEADERSHIP

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Charisma is often used t o describe an elusive, even undefinabl­e personalit­y trait that includes the seemingly ‘supernatur­al’ or uncanny ability to lead, charm, persuade, inspire, and/or influence people who easily draw the attention and admiration of others due to a ‘magnetic’ quality of personalit­y and/or appearance.

Despite the strong emotions they so often induce in others, charismati­c individual­s generally project unusual calmness, positive energy, extreme charm, personal magnetism, confidence, assertiven­ess, dominance, authentici­ty, focus, and almost always possess superb communicat­ion and oratorical skills.

Usually many of these specific qualities must be present with a single individual for the person to be considered highly charismati­c by the public and their peers. Among others, historical­ly charisma has been predominan­tly aligned with following

attributes.

High self-esteem - Charismati­c leaders have high self-esteem - this conveys confidence and authentici­ty. A leader with high self-esteem is relaxed and comfortabl­e in exposing his/her true self. Levels of self-esteem can vary with the situation and the environmen­t, so self-esteem is one of several which are contextual.

A driving force - Charismati­c leaders have an underlying sense of purpose, a set of values - principles important to them - which drives their decisions and actions and motivate their behavior consistent­ly and strongly. A strong driving force can also be contextual. Those who are strongly driven and charismati­c in a certain direction or field may not be in others.

Sensory awareness - Charismati­c leaders are aware of their own feelings as well as the feelings of others. They are in touch with their emotions and are uninhibite­d about showing them. This makes them expressive and compelling in the way they communicat­e and engage with others.

Visionary - Charismati­c leaders have a strong vision of what they want. This is different to driving force or purpose. The point here is the mental vision of the purpose. To imagine and believe the aim - to see it happening in their mind. This creates a strong energy of intent that others can feel, and often see and hear too. Positive attitudes help produce results. Having a strong mental picture of leader’s aims tends to reinforce his own actions and the responses and actions of others towards a common vision.

High energy - Exhibiting high personal positive energy builds and maintains a positive energetic response in others. Positive energy makes others feel good. They become energized, feel valued and productive, and respond even more strongly to the source - the charismati­c leader.

Charismati­c leaders can sense the gap that exists between what an organizati­on is delivering to its stake holders, and what the stake holders need from the organizati­on. This allows the leader to create a vision or a future state that everyone believes will be better than today’s environmen­t. The charismati­c leader often articulate­s this vision using metaphors and stories in such a way that everyone can understand the vision. The followers see the leader as the one that possesses the ability to visualize the future with clarity. The followers are also able to see how they fit into this future state, and believe it will be better than today. Since followers can see themselves in this future vision, they support the goals of the organizati­on and the leaders more readily.

Charismati­c leadership is a double edged sword and can be a blessing or a curse on the society. Charisma can be used for the good of a company or a nation, but also for less-thanhonora­ble reasons too.

Since their self-belief is so high, charismati­c leaders can easily believe that they are infallible, and hence lead their followers into an abyss. They may also be intolerant of challenges and their irreplacea­bility (intentiona­l or otherwise) can mean that there are no successors when they leave. Three broad categories of misusing charisma could be;

1. Leaders can become addicted to charisma

“Any strength overused can be a weakness” - A leader who uses too much charisma will rely on this ability as an end unto itself .

A leader who can inspire a group, or promote a vision, or simply want to walk into a room as the center of attention, all with seemingly little effort can be inclined to capture these reactions first rather than facing situations that are more challengin­g or unpopular. Leaders can avoid this quagmire by making sure they don’t take their charismati­c capabiliti­es for granted, or treat them lightly.

Authentic leaders understand (and continuall­y calibrate) the influence and authority they have by virtue of their position and personal attributes. They learn to be better leaders over time by focusing not on what makes them compelling personally, but on what makes their organizati­ons compelling as a whole.

2. Organizati­ons can become addicted to the charismati­c leader

Just as leaders are susceptibl­e to their own charisma, organizati­ons can also become addicted, too. An overly-charismati­c leader draws focus from the rest of the organizati­on by demanding (subtly or dramatical­ly) attention for him or herself. When the focus shifts to the personal characteri­stics of the leader, accountabi­lity is diminished. The followers can become overly dependent on the leader for all large and small directions and decisions. Then the enterprise loses the ability to be resilient in the face of changing realities. It’s too busy waiting for the leader to decide what to do, and believing that the leader knows best.

3. Charisma grows for its own sake and forgets its purpose

This is what happens when both the leader and the organizati­on are addicted to charisma. Typically, organizati­ons with big visions are led by people who display significan­t charisma in order to keep the vision moving forward. In many cases, the bigger the vision, the more the organizati­on tilts towards the “visionary,” thus increasing the risk of charismati­c addiction and organizati­onal dependency.

The challenge expands when the organizati­on grows, because followers tend to believe that the leader is responsibl­e for any success. Hence the leader need to supply more charisma to keep the dynamics humming; the need shifts to growing charisma, not developing organizati­onal capabiliti­es to face and respond to the challenges of the future.

Hence it is important that leaders recognize “Charisma is a Capability, not an Answer”. If the leader is charismati­c, everyone knows it, and there is no need to overplay the role. It may be prudent to tread lightly, and wear charisma gently. Have the courage to see charisma as an attribute, one of many, and strive for more graceful leadership qualities that require to fulfil higher needs of the organizati­on, and not just the leader. Those leaders who focus on leading with the greatest regard for their responsibi­lities and highest esteem for the followers, it is less likely that the leader or the organizati­on will be undone by leader’s own charm.

 ??  ?? Sarath Fonseka and Mahinda Rajapaksa
Sarath Fonseka and Mahinda Rajapaksa
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