The impact of implicit collective leadership theories on the emergence and effectiveness of leadership networks in teams
Leadership
in today's high-performing teams is a relational process best
understood from a multilevel emergent perspective. Implicit theories of
leadership and followership play an important role in predicting leader
emergence in more traditional hierarchical structures, but are
inadequate for understanding and predicting leadership as networks in
teams, as they do not consider the complex dynamics of leading and
following activities inherent in such structures. To address this
theoretical gap, we propose the concept of Implicit Leadership Network
Theories (ILNTs) that integrates implicit leadership and followership
theories with contemporary social network perspectives of leadership in
teams to predict the shape and structure of leadership network emergence
and subsequent team outcomes. More specifically, we propose that the
combination of team member self-ILNTs (i.e., expectations regarding
one's own role within a leadership network) and network-ILNTs (i.e.,
expectations regarding the prototypical team leadership structure) will
shape the emergence and effectiveness of leadership in teams. We
describe several prototypical team configurations of ILNTs and discuss
implications for future research and human resource management.