Exploring the Relationship Between Personality and Preferred Leadership

Authors

  • Andy Bertsch Minot State University
  • Hanh Thi Hai Nguyen Minot State University
  • Andrew Alford Minot State University
  • Wojciech Baran Minot State University
  • Jacob Reynen Minot State University
  • M. Saeed Minot State University
  • James Ondracek Minot State University

Keywords:

Leadership, Ethics, Personality, Management

Abstract

We explore the relationship between the Big Five personality indicators of employees and their respective preferred leadership style of management. We sampled employees in a city in the Midwest USA. The results include a profile of personality traits and how those traits relate to preferred leadership styles. We borrowed the Big Five and measures of three models of leadership: Participative, Autocratic, and Laissez-Faire. The results show people who are extroverted also prefer a participative style leader, those who are open to new experience do not prefer an autocratic style leader, and female employees prefer laissez-faire leadership style.

Downloads

Published

2017-03-01

How to Cite

Bertsch, A., Nguyen, H. T. H., Alford, A., Baran, W., Reynen, J., Saeed, M., & Ondracek, J. (2017). Exploring the Relationship Between Personality and Preferred Leadership. Journal of Leadership, Accountability and Ethics, 14(1). Retrieved from https://articlegateway.com/index.php/JLAE/article/view/1612

Issue

Section

Articles