The contribution of leadership attributes to large-scale, complex project success

Anne Pisarski, Artemis Chang, Neal Ashkanasy, Roxanne Zolin, Alicia Gilchrist, Peter Jordan, Caroline Hatcher

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

Abstract

Mismanagement of large-scale, complex projects has resulted in spectacular failures, cost overruns, time blowouts, and stakeholder dissatisfaction. We focus discussion on the interaction of key management and leadership attributes which facilitate leaders adaptive behaviors. These behaviors should in turn influence adaptive team member behavior, stakeholder engagement and successful project outcomes, outputs and impacts. An understanding of this type of management will benefit from a perspective based in managerial and organizational cognition. The research question we explore is whether successful leaders of large-scale complex projects have an internal process leading to a display of administrative, adaptive, and enabling behaviors that foster adaptive processes and enabling behaviors within their teams and with external stakeholders. At the core of the model we propose interactions of key attributes, namely cognitive flexibility, affect, and emotional intelligence. The result of these cognitive-affective attribute interactions is leadership leading to enhanced likelihood of complex project success.
Original languageEnglish
Publication statusPublished - 2011
Externally publishedYes
EventAcademy of Management Annual Meeting - United Arab Emirates, United Arab Emirates
Duration: 12 Aug 201116 Aug 2011

Conference

ConferenceAcademy of Management Annual Meeting
Country/TerritoryUnited Arab Emirates
Period12/08/1116/08/11

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