What Are The Traits Needed For Leadership Success Within A Recession
The University of Northampton
Northampton Business School
Successful Leadership Traits in Recession
Julie Strafford
07254589
June 2010
Supervisor: [name]
Submitted to The University of Northampton
in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of
BA(Hons) XXXXX
Table of Contents
CHAPTER 1:5
Introduction5
Problem Statement6
Purpose of the Study6
Research Questions6
Aims and Objectives7
Topic Relevancy7
Limitations7
Qualitative Research8
Research Method8
Literature Selection Criteria9
Search Technique9
CHAPTER 2:10
Literature Review10
Characteristics Of A Recession10
Leadership in Recession11
From internally-focused to customer-refocused11
From Contraction to Growth12
From Risk Aversion to Opportunism13
From Isolation to Trust in Others13
From Reactive to Forward-Looking14
Organizational Challenges15
Alternative Leadership Models16
Personal Characteristics16
Leader Behaviors19
Survival: crucial but not sufficient25
Sustainable competitive advantage: adapting in the downturn26
Behavioral strategies26
Social strategies29
Reproductive/regenerative strategies29
Evolutionary strategies31
CHAPTER III31
Research Methods31
Geographically disbursed management teams32
Distributed ownership33
Talent management34
CHAPTER IV36
Research Analysis36
CHAPTER V43
Conclusion43
CHAPTER 1:
Introduction
Background
Business cycles are not a new phenomenon. Downturns and upturns have come and gone as long as economic history research knows. However, the combination of the financial crisis and the downturn of demand in globally strongly interdependent economies, erupting in 2008, is unprecedented. As firms in the Fall of 2008 began to adjust to the quite abrupt downturn of demand for their products and services, they did that in circumstances that were different from those during earlier downturns. The reorganisation of firms, of production systems and of relationships in markets during the last decades in terms of e.g. globalisation, out-sourcing strategies and strategic partnering has mainly occurred during growth periods and has served to increase interdependencies between actors.
Resource adjustments by one actor, therefore to an increasing extent, affect and are affected by adjustment activities by other actors, even those in distant locations and belonging to different industries. The severe problems in the financial sector also support our argument that business practices that were effective during earlier downturns might be less valid in the present situation. We do not aim to answer if a specific resource adjustment practice is more or less effective than another, only to contribute a conceptual framework for understanding how temporal aspects of resource adjustment are constructed by business actors in times of adversity.
By resource adjustment we mean adjustment of the quantity and quality of the firm's own resources as well as of resources supplied by other firms. Since we apply a markets-as-networks perspective on governance of “real markets”, resources controlled by one firm are, directly and indirectly, dependent on and coordinated with resources controlled by other firms. Resource adjustments by individual actors are therefore more or less explicitly coordinated with resource adjustments by other actors, that to an important extent are involved in exchange relationships.
Problem Statement
There is uncertainty about the temporal nature of this specific business cycle and therefore also of temporality of the adjustments, e.g. when, with what speed and for how long resources should be adjusted.
Purpose of the Study
Our purpose is to develop a conceptual framework to analyze temporality of strategic actions aimed at resource adjustments in times of widespread economic adversity (financial crisis and economic recession) and to discuss research and management implications related to this conceptual framework. The disposition of the paper is as ...