SLIDE 3 8/6/2019 Do Managers and Leaders Really Do Different Things? https://hbr.org/2016/06/do-managers-and-leaders-really-do-different-things 3/4
Attitudes toward delegation and development make this distinction even clearer. “Managers” delegated largely as a way to increase efficiency; “leaders” delegated as a way to empower
- subordinates. Interviewees also mentioned more behaviors that leaders undertook to develop their
employees – 14 behaviors in all. Only five such behaviors emerged for managers, leading me to conclude that employee development is seen as more central to the job of a “leader. ” These five behaviors center on developing staff capability and team coherence to achieve the work goals. In contrast, the 14 leadership behaviors described by the participants focus on staff development for the benefit of the team. Even when talking about their own self-improvement, the view of “managers” is that they’re more focused on themselves and on results, while “leaders” are more other-focused. Specifically, managers were described as focused on autodidactic improvement (i.e., practicing patience, doing self-reflection, having realistic expectations), whereas leaders were described as learned from other people (e.g., through gaining feedback or having mentors). These conversations made clear to me that we think of managers having a different focus from
- leaders. And yet this distinction blurs significantly when we look at the daily activities of these
people in charge. The majority of the activities described were very similar, or even identical — delegating, learning, motivating, and so on. So, are leadership and management different in practice? I’d suggest that they aren’t that different in terms of how they actually play out in organizations. Certain behaviors and activities are common to the effective demonstration of both leadership and
- management. The crucial difference – maybe the only difference — is the focus of the person
carrying them out. Focus more on people and you’ll demonstrate leadership, more on results and you’ll perform management; but what you’re actually doing may not be that different.
John O’Leary has observed and practiced leadership and management in the energy industry for over 30 years. His
interests focus on the development of leadership skills, and their effective use, in large organizations.