Managers and Leaders: Are They Different?
Zaleznik, A. (2004). Harvard Business Review.
Managers and leaders are two very different types of people. Managers' goals arise out of necessities
rather than desires; they excel at defusing conflicts between individuals or departments, placating
all sides while ensuring that an organization's day-to-day business gets done. Leaders, on the other
hand, adopt personal, active attitudes toward goals. They look for the opportunities and rewards that
lie around the corner, inspiring subordinates and firing up the creative process with their own energy.
Their relationships with employees and coworkers are intense, and their working environment is often
chaotic. In this article, first published in 1977, the author argues that businesses need both managers
and leaders to survive and succeed. But in the larger U.S. organizations of that time, a "managerial
mystique" seemed to perpetuate the development of managerial personalities--people who rely on, and
strive to maintain, orderly work patterns. The managerial power ethic favors collective leadership and
seeks to avoid risk. That same managerial mystique can stifle leaders' development--How can an
entrepreneurial spirit develop when it is submerged in a conservative environment and denied personal
attention? Mentor relationships are crucial to the development of leadership personalities, but in
large, bureaucratic organizations, such relationships are not encouraged. Businesses must find ways to
train good managers and develop leaders at the same time.
