Product details

By continuing to use our site you consent to the use of cookies as described in our privacy policy unless you have disabled them.
You can change your cookie settings at any time but parts of our site will not function correctly without them.
Published by: MIT Sloan School of Management
Published in: "MIT Sloan Management Review", 1984
Length: 12 pages

Abstract

The authors purport that a new brand of leadership - transformational leadership - is the key to revitalizing large US corporations such as General Motors, AT&T, and General Electric, just to mention a few. Based on the premise that the pressure for basic organizational change will intensify, not diminish, over the years, they argue that transformational leaders must develop a new vision for the organization, mobilize employees to accept and work toward achieving the new vision, and institutionalize the needed changes. Unless the creation of this breed of leaders becomes a national agenda, the authors are not very optimistic about the revitalization of the US economy.

About

Abstract

The authors purport that a new brand of leadership - transformational leadership - is the key to revitalizing large US corporations such as General Motors, AT&T, and General Electric, just to mention a few. Based on the premise that the pressure for basic organizational change will intensify, not diminish, over the years, they argue that transformational leaders must develop a new vision for the organization, mobilize employees to accept and work toward achieving the new vision, and institutionalize the needed changes. Unless the creation of this breed of leaders becomes a national agenda, the authors are not very optimistic about the revitalization of the US economy.

Related