An Investigation of Leadership Skill Differences in Chief Executives of Nonprofit Organizations

Author:

Herman Robert D.1,Heimovics Richard D.2

Affiliation:

1. Robert D. Herman, Professor of Organizational Behavior in the L. P. Cookingham Institute of Public Affairs, University of Missouri-Kansas City, is past president of the Association of Voluntary Action Scholars. His research interests include nonprofit organizations and management. He is coeditor with Jon Van Til of Nonprofit Boards of Directors: Analyses and Applications (Transaction, 1989).

2. Richard D. Heimovics is Professor of Organizational Behavior and former director (1980-1987) of the L. P. Cookingham Institute of Public Affairs, University of Missouri-Kansas City. He is past president of the National Association of Public Affairs and Administration (1986-1987).

Abstract

The increasing recognition of the public nature of nonprofit organizations and the changing relationships between governments and nonprofit organizations provide the context for, and underline the importance of, understanding effective executive leadership in such organizations. A study of 50 nonprofit organization chief executives revealed that reputationally effective executives engaged in more reported leadership behaviors in relationship to their boards of directors than executives not so reputed. No difference was found in reported leadership behaviors directed at staff. The results suggest that “board-regarding behaviors” are an important and distinct cluster of skills for effective leadership by nonprofit chief executives. The results are consistent with a resource-dependence perspective, and the authors argue that effective executives work with and through their boards in order to affect the constraints and dependencies in the nonprofit organization's environment.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Marketing,Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science

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