Conference paper
SELF-LEADERSHIP IN PURPOSE-DRIVEN ORGANIZATIONS: ANALYZING HUMAN PERCEPTION FOR MORE INTEGRATED DECISION-MAKING
Richard Pircher
; Banking and Finance, University of Applied Sciences bfi Vienna, Austria
Abstract
Productive decision-making requires appropriate perception of the facts relevant to the decision. It may be necessary to perceive and integrate diverse and conflicting perspectives appearing inside and outside of the decision-maker. Therefore I scrutinize theoretical and empirical findings on individual human perception as a basis for decision-making and behaviour. Special attention lies on the role of the unconscious (e.g. Bargh, 2006), dual-system approaches (e.g. Kahneman & Frederick, 2002), self-regulation (e.g. Muraven, Baumeister & Tice, 1999, Moffitt et al., 2011), and self-leadership (e.g. Manz, 2013). From this foundation I derive guiding self-leadership guidelines for more sustainable internal balancing and more comprehensive integration of external stimuli. Such self-leadership guidelines allow leaders and organizations to identify blind spots more easily and to improve the perception of the inside and the environment. In purpose-driven organizations with distributed authority, the power to decide is distributed among those employees who appear to be competent for the specific topic. Therefore especially within such organizations this self-leadership competency appears to be crucial for success.
Keywords
leadership; self-leadership; perception; psychology
Hrčak ID:
161623
URI
Publication date:
1.10.2015.
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