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leadeleading

Leadeleading is a neologism used in organizational studies and public discourse to describe a phenomenon in which emphasis is placed on leadership as a self-contained object of attention, sometimes at the expense of substantive outcomes. The term treats leadership as a prominent, recognizable repeated behavior or ritual rather than as a means to achieve concrete results. It is often invoked in discussions about overemphasis on heroic or charismatic leadership in politics, business, and institutions.

The concept rests on the idea that signals about leadership—speaking, messaging, and appearance—can become ends in

Etymologically, leadeleading combines the notions of leading (guiding or directing) and lead in its sense as

In usage, leadeleading is typically invoked as a critique of leader-centric cultures and as a call to

themselves.
In
leadeleading
environments,
institutions
foreground
leadership
development,
leader
branding,
and
public
demonstrations
of
“how
we
lead,”
even
when
performance
metrics
or
objective
goals
lag.
Critics
say
this
can
cultivate
performative
leadership,
where
the
appearance
of
strong
direction
takes
precedence
over
careful
decision-making
or
accountability.
a
unit
of
space
and
emphasis,
though
it
is
not
related
to
typographic
terms
like
the
historical
use
of
lead
in
printing.
The
term
is
not
widely
standardized
and
appears
mainly
in
contemporary
debates
about
organizational
culture
and
governance.
It
is
sometimes
contrasted
with
more
outcome-focused
concepts
such
as
management,
administration,
or
governance,
as
well
as
with
frameworks
that
stress
distributed
or
collective
leadership.
re-balance
attention
toward
results,
systems,
and
inclusive
leadership
practices.
See
also
leadership,
organizational
culture,
performativity,
governance,
and
management.