Addressing the Irony: Three Styles of Leadership
The contingent leader at times can lead through wisdom, and at other times can lead through either courage or vision.
The contingent leader at times can lead through wisdom, and at other times can lead through either courage or vision.
Gary Quehl and William Bergquist [For the complete report on this project see The Sages Among Us: Harnessing the Power of Civic Engagement, available as a link through the LPC Bookstore.] In the four essays provided in this eighth issue of Sage we continue the exploration (that we began in Issue Three, Four, Five, Six and Seven) of the …
What about the senior sage leaders? With more years and a greater diversity of experience, do they see even greater change in their leadership patterns and styles than the emerging sage leaders?
The phenomenon of on-going personal changes especially applies to leadership. Behaviors and practices once considered core to our leadership shift or fall away when we no longer find them effective or desirable.
Given their long experience in leading, senior sages are readily able to identify the qualities they most and least admire in other leaders.
In this essay, emerging sage leaders reflect on the qualities they most admire in other leaders. They also identify what they least admire in other leaders and what the implications are for leadership when the admired qualities are missing.
You have been identified by friends and colleagues as one of our community’s 50 top senior sage leaders.
You have been identified by friends and colleagues as one of our community’s 50 top emerging sage leaders.
Senior sage leaders observe that quick, artificial fixes won’t work. Their reality is that engaging more senior civically must involve a one-on-one approach.
Many emerging sage leaders believe that civic engagement is not for everyone, that it makes little sense to formulate a strategy to promote it for larger numbers of community members if they aren’t already inclined to it.
Janet Locane: Thanks...