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Journal article 706 views 90 downloads

Entrepreneurial leadership: An experimental approach investigating the influence of eye contact on motivation.

Thomas Maran, Sascha Kraus, Marco Furtner, Simon Liegl, Paul Jones Orcid Logo

Journal of Small Business Strategy, Volume: 29, Issue: 3, Pages: 16 - 32

Swansea University Author: Paul Jones Orcid Logo

Abstract

Small, new firms lack the resources of most larger, established firms, which makes effectively motivating employees challenging. Charismatic leadership is effective in increasing the performance of both groups and entire organizations. Specifically, the impact of charismatic leadership practices on...

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Published in: Journal of Small Business Strategy
ISSN: 1081-8510 2380-1751
Published: USA 2019
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa52657
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Abstract: Small, new firms lack the resources of most larger, established firms, which makes effectively motivating employees challenging. Charismatic leadership is effective in increasing the performance of both groups and entire organizations. Specifically, the impact of charismatic leadership practices on followers stems from nonverbal communication and construed immediacy. The purpose of this study is to investigate the impact of an entrepreneurial leader’s eye contact and smiling on followers’ objective motivation in an experimental leadership situation. A sample of 129 young adults was tested in a 2×2 (nonverbal tactics: high eye contact/low eye contact × high smile/low smile) experimental design. Motivation was measured by objective performance in a motoric reaction time task. The conditions were operationalized by manipulating gaze behavior and facial expressions of the leader in a staged instructional video, showing a start-up entrepreneur attempting to enhance the performance of his employees as part of a competitive comparison. Regardless of whether the leader smiled or not, participants showed faster responses and therefore performed more effectively when the leader maintained high eye contact.These findings support the hypothesis that increased eye contact is a strong nonverbal signal, which in the immediate context of leader-follower interactions, stimulates an increase in performance. In fact, eye contact could induce an increased level of motivational arousal in followers, resulting in improved confidence and self-reference when taking instructions. This study advances the existing research on learnable skills that can be used to appear more charismatic and thus potentially increasing follower performance by adopting simple nonverbal rules in communication behavior. This offers an invaluable and low-cost tool for leaders founding a start-up business.
Keywords: Entrepreneurial leadership, Charismatic leadership, Motivation, Communication
College: Professional Services
Issue: 3
Start Page: 16
End Page: 32