Dr
Neil Béchervaise
NB
Consulting (Australasia) Pty Ltd
Leadership
as intellectual capital in expert communities of practice:
Stereotypes, archetypes and changing organisational demands
Dr
Jillian de Araugo
Principal
Mentone Girls' Grammar School
and
Dr Neil E. Béchervaise
Adjunct
Professor
Australian Graduate School of Entrepreneurship
Swinburne University
of Technology
Abstract
The announcement of the
new Chief Executive is almost inevitably a major pointer towards
imminent organisational change and, the identity of the appointed
CEO is invariably a significant indicator of the desired direction
of the change. In a position of essential instability, the market
value of the organisation is normally adjusted to meet public perceptions
of the match between the incoming leader, the organisation's ability
to meet the challenges of the proposed change and the value of the
change to the principal stakeholders.
This paper explores the
role of the CEO as a key component in assessing the intellectual
capital of a not-for profit organisation operating within an aggressively
competitive marketplace. It observes that governing boards select
leaders on the basis of immediately perceived needs and that, having
done so, they are seldom prepared for the successful implementation
of the change they are seeking.
More importantly, it
is argued, the success of a leader in initiating and then consolidating
change depends more on their ability to change leadership style
than to meet the immediate demands and expectations of either principal
stakeholders or appointing boards.
This paper provides the
compound lens of four archetypal leadership styles through which
it examines the impact of change on the value of the organisation
as it is perceived by the governing boards and the principal stakeholders
of several not-for-profit SMEs in Australia.
In conclusion, the paper
suggests a range of means for supporting the publicly perceived
value of the organisation across leadership change and of supporting
the leader as change implementation changes the demands on their
leadership style.
Key Words: Intellectual
capital, Reputation capital, Leadership, Change Management, Governance,
Not for profit, Communities of practice.
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