Why Remote Work Changes the Nature of Leadership, and the Kinds of Leaders to Recruit in Startups
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Why Remote Work Changes the Nature of Leadership, and the Kinds of Leaders to Recruit in Startups

Erica Brescia, the COO of Github, a company in which 70% of the workforce has worked remotely for a decade, wrote in the Economist about how remote working is different and better. There have been many perspectives shared on remote work, but Erica’s perspective adds an intriguing detail.

Managers tasked with creating a culture of collaboration within a distributed team will find the profile of a leader changes. A recent study found that the skills and traits of successful leaders in an in-person, office-based environment differ from those needed to lead distributed, remote teams. Instead of valuing confidence and charisma, remote teams value leaders who are organised, productive and facilitate connections between colleagues.

This perspective raises the question, should leaders recruit managers with different skill sets depending on the team operates in the office or remotely?

I dug up the paper which you can read here and summarized the findings in a bit more detail below.

Many of our colleagues rise to lead through influence rather than authority, which is called emergent leadership. Typically, there are two ways to do this: by achieving goals or demonstrating leadership traits. These are called achievement and ascriptive leadership.

Ascriptive leadership occurs when a person demonstrates traits that we all typically imagine when conjuring a vision of leadership: being an intelligent, dynamic, and motivated person. The paper calls this ascriptive leadership because others ascribe leadership traits to a person by observing them.

Achievement leadership means someone rises to become a leader in others’ eyes by their accomplishments and their ability to lead the team to attain goals.

In the real world, in the office, in person, a leader has an opportunity to show ascriptive leadership in many different situations, and team members pick up on these. Ascription is more easily noted than achievement.

In the virtual world, studies have shown leaders distinguish themselves “in logistical coordination rather than through expertise…” Monitoring team progress and coordinating team members also buttressed a leader’s standing. Achievement outshines ascription.

As your startup looks to manage the ongoing challenge of remote work, consider the two types of leadership that exist and whether the role is more or less remote. This should change the nature of the questions and potentially the profile of the leaders to recruit.

Lars Schulze ??

Co-Founder UFOstart - building the hub for marketing AI agents

3 年

I think the new leadership skill is great and fast communication and transparent information and knowledge sharing. And yes what you mentioned process management.

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Manuj Aggarwal

Top Voice in AI | CIO at TetraNoodle | Proven & Personalized Business Growth With AI | AI keynote speaker | 4x patents in AI/ML | 2x author | Travel lover ??

3 年

?One of the key players in any startup organization is of course the leader.? To truly be a leader in the startup world, you must set an example for your peers to follow. There are many types of leaders; some are good and some will simply hold you back. To avoid being held back, it is important to find amazing leaders to surround yourself with.?The ability to attract the right people to a startup can make or break its success. Great leaders who are also entrepreneurs are a treasure in the marketplace and can be hard to find. The success of startups is often dependent on the ratio of followers to leaders. The more energetic, creative team members a startup has, the more chance it will succeed. Tomasz Tunguz Thanks for sharing this amazing post.

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Cecilie Berggreen

Director of Cyber Security Sales | Strategy | Growth

3 年

Interesting insights about how remote teams value leaders who are organised, productive and facilitate connections between colleagues - whilest charisma and confidence in a leader is highly important for leading teams face-to-face.

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I do see the need to evaluate the leadership skills necessary to manage dispersed teams. Then we either grow our skills individually and inside the organization or recruit for them. I came across an academic research in the Human Resources journal by Brenda Lautsch, Ellen Ernst Kossek, and Susan C Eaton that was insightful. The study showed that one manager with the highest morale and productive team exhibited this difference from other leaders. This manager had at least 35 quality communication points with his team. I did a self assessment and saw where I needed to step up my comms! Thanks for sharing this Tomasz, good for us to think and plan for.

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