Research News

Three ways to build shared leadership in teams

Members of a team sitting around a conference table.

By KEVIN MANNE

Published June 3, 2022

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headshot of Paul Tesluk.
“Widely distributing leadership, supporting those with less dominant personalities and building member credibility are the most effective ways to increase engagement — and improve team performance. ”
Paul Tesluk, professor and dean
School of Management

Tapping into the leadership skills of employees who don’t have managerial titles is critical for team success, and new research from the School of Management reveals how organizations can do so successfully.

Available online ahead of publication in The Leadership Quarterly, the research offers a nuanced understanding of shared leadership, in which multiple members assume leadership roles to lead each other — either simultaneously or on a rotating basis.

“Shared leadership generally develops as roles transition across team members, especially when their expertise fits the needs of the team,” says James Lemoine, associate professor of organization and human resources. “But the exact process has yet to be discovered, which has limited our ability to put it into practice.”

To address this concern, the researchers conducted a study of 450 participants in 90 teams. Each team was challenged with a simulated climb to the top of Mount Everest, which included three critical challenges: the allocation of medical supplies, assessment of weather conditions and distribution of oxygen containers.   

Their findings reveal three key ways managers can develop shared leadership:

  • Distribute even minor leadership responsibilities widely to grow robust networks.
  • Encourage and support those who have low motivation to lead by underscoring the importance of their skills and expertise.
  • Help team members identify, acknowledge and leverage one another’s strengths.

“Organizations might typically focus on just a few members as potential leaders who might be strongly extraverted or match stereotypical ideas of leadership,” says Paul Tesluk, professor and dean of the School of Management. “But widely distributing leadership, supporting those with less dominant personalities and building member credibility are the most effective ways to increase engagement — and improve team performance.”

Lemoine and Tesluk collaborated on the study with UB graduates Hamed Ghahremani, PhD ’19, assistant professor of management and marketing at the University of New Orleans, and Ning Xu, PhD ’18, assistant professor of organizational behavior at the Stockholm School of Economics.