Altruistic leadership and job performance: a Darwinian evolutionary perspective

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18226/25253824.v6.n11.04

Keywords:

Altruistic Leadership, Selfish Leadership, Evolutionary Biology, Path Modeling, Population Genetics

Abstract

This paper presents an altruistic leadership theory based on evolutionary concepts. The theory proposes that natural processes selected for selfish behaviors, and that these selfish behaviors continue in modern humanity. However, while these selfish tendencies provided positive survival traits among ancestral populations, they induce negative behavioral traits in modern times in most organizational situations. We argue that altruistic behavior – placing followers’ needs before one’s own – elicits increases in follower performance by increasing their commitment and job satisfaction. However, it seems that the same forces that led to the spread of selfish leadership traits among ancestral humans also inhibit the spread of altruistic leadership traits today. As such, we can expect few naturally altruistic leaders to be available, and we can also expect that organizations must nurture such behaviors to develop trained altruistic leaders. These trained altruistic leaders may have advantages if they can draw upon training to behave altruistically with followers, and selfishly to deal with external competition. We develop these ideas by presenting mechanisms for how selfish leadership traits developed and spread through ancestral humans, what role altruism plays in enhancing follower outcomes, and suggestions for future theoretical development.

Author Biographies

Ned Kock, Texas A&M International University

Ned Kock is Texas A&M Regents Professor and Chair of the Division of International Business and Technology Studies, in the Sanchez School of Business, at Texas A&M International University. He holds degrees in electronics engineering (B.E.E.), computer science (M.S.), and management (Ph.D.). Ned has authored and edited several books, including the Sage Publications book titled Systems Analysis and Design Fundamentals: A Business Process Redesign Approach. He has published his research in a number of high-impact journals including Communications of the ACM, Decision Support Systems, European Journal of Information Systems, European Journal of Operational Research, IEEE Transactions (various), Information & Management, Information Systems Journal, Journal of the Association for Information Systems, Journal of Management Information Systems, MIS Quarterly, and Organization Science. He is the developer of media naturalness theory, a communications theory building on evolutionary biology that has been extensively cited by researchers in a variety of fields. He is also the developer of WarpPLS, a widely used structural equation modeling software.

Milton Mayfield, Texas A&M International University

Milton Mayfield is Emeritus Professor of Management in the A. R. Sanchez Jr. School of Business at Texas A&M International University. He has authored the book Motivating Language Theory: Effective Leader Talk in the Workplace. Milton has also published over 50 journal articles, conference proceedings, and encyclopedia chapters. These manuscripts have been published in such outlets as the Creativity Research Journal, Human Resource Management, International Journal of Business Communication, The Encyclopedia of Creativity (2nd ed.), and Development and Learning in Organizations. He specializes in the areas of leadership communication, international management research, and creativity and innovation, and has done consulting and training work with such organizations as the US State Department, Sony Mexico, Texas Department of Transportation, Virginia Tech University, and the Callahan Ranch. He is Co-Editor of the International Journal of Business Communication.

Jacqueline Mayfield, Texas A&M International University

Jacqueline Mayfield is Emeritus Professor of Management in the A. R. Sanchez Jr. School of Business at Texas A&M International University. She has authored the book Motivating Language Theory: Effective Leader Talk in the Workplace. Jacqueline has also published over 50 journal articles and conference proceedings. These manuscripts have been published in such outlets as the International Journal of Business Communication, Creativity Research Journal, Human Resource Management, and Development and Learning in Organizations. She specializes in the areas of leadership communication, international management research, and human resource management, and has done consulting and training work with such organizations as the US State Department, Sony Mexico, Texas Department of Transportation, Virginia Tech University, and the Callahan Ranch. She is Co-Editor of the International Journal of Business Communication.

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Published

2022-05-05

How to Cite

Kock, N., Mayfield, M., & Mayfield, J. (2022). Altruistic leadership and job performance: a Darwinian evolutionary perspective. Interdisciplinary Journal of Applied Science, 6(11), 28–39. https://doi.org/10.18226/25253824.v6.n11.04