Leader Behaviors and the Work Environment for Creativity: Perceived Leader Support
Amabile, T., Schatzel, E., Moneta, G. & Kramer, S. (2004). Leadership Quarterly. Vol. 15, No. 1.
This exploratory study investigated leader behaviors related to perceived leader support, encompassing both instrumental
and socioemotional support. The study first established that leader support, proposed to be a key feature of the work
environment for creativity, was positively related to the peer-rated creativity of subordinates working on creative
projects in seven different companies. Then, to identify the specific leader behaviors that might give rise to perceived
support, two qualitative analyses were conducted on daily diary narratives written by these subordinates. The first, which
focused on specific leader behaviors that had significantly predicted leader support in a preliminary quantitative analysis,
illuminated both effective and ineffective forms of leader behavior. In addition, it revealed not only subordinate perceptual
reactions to this behavior (their perceptions of leader support), but affective reactions as well. The second qualitative
analysis focused on the behavior of two extreme team leaders in context over time, revealing both positive and negative
spirals of leader behavior, subordinate reactions, and subordinate creativity.
