Narcissistic force meets systemic resistance: The Energy Clash Model
Narcissistic force meets systemic resistance: The Energy Clash Model
This article focuses on the interplay between narcissistic leaders and organizations. It attempts to capture the gist of this interplay with a model outlining the narcissistic organizational trajectory. The Energy Clash Model borrows and adapts a phase/state physics metaphor to conceptualize narcissism as a force that enters or emerges in a stable system (i.e., organization) as a leader, destabilizes it, and stabilizes it at a different state or is expelled. The model consists of three time-contingent phases: perturbation, conflict, and resolution. Narcissists create instability through waves of excitement, proposed reforms, and an inspiring vision for organization’s future (perturbation). With the passage of time, though, systemic awareness and alertness intensify, as organizational costs—in terms of human resources and monetary losses—accrue. Narcissistic energy clashes directly with the organization (conflict), a clash likely to restabilize the system eventually. The conflict may provoke the exit of the narcissistic leader or his or her accommodation, that is, steps or controls negotiated between the system and the leader (resolution). Although narcissism is subject to organizational liability, narcissistic energy, when managed and directed properly, may contribute to organizational innovation and evolution. Thus, several interventions for working with narcissistic leaders are discussed.
400-421
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Campbell, W. Keith
b2b89c15-61d6-4683-aeb7-ff9674ac82c3
May 2017
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Campbell, W. Keith
b2b89c15-61d6-4683-aeb7-ff9674ac82c3
Sedikides, Constantine and Campbell, W. Keith
(2017)
Narcissistic force meets systemic resistance: The Energy Clash Model.
Perspectives on Psychological Science, 12 (3), .
(doi:10.1177/1745691617692105).
Abstract
This article focuses on the interplay between narcissistic leaders and organizations. It attempts to capture the gist of this interplay with a model outlining the narcissistic organizational trajectory. The Energy Clash Model borrows and adapts a phase/state physics metaphor to conceptualize narcissism as a force that enters or emerges in a stable system (i.e., organization) as a leader, destabilizes it, and stabilizes it at a different state or is expelled. The model consists of three time-contingent phases: perturbation, conflict, and resolution. Narcissists create instability through waves of excitement, proposed reforms, and an inspiring vision for organization’s future (perturbation). With the passage of time, though, systemic awareness and alertness intensify, as organizational costs—in terms of human resources and monetary losses—accrue. Narcissistic energy clashes directly with the organization (conflict), a clash likely to restabilize the system eventually. The conflict may provoke the exit of the narcissistic leader or his or her accommodation, that is, steps or controls negotiated between the system and the leader (resolution). Although narcissism is subject to organizational liability, narcissistic energy, when managed and directed properly, may contribute to organizational innovation and evolution. Thus, several interventions for working with narcissistic leaders are discussed.
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Accepted/In Press date: 18 December 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 25 May 2017
Published date: May 2017
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Local EPrints ID: 404441
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/404441
ISSN: 1745-6916
PURE UUID: 9e344091-f6eb-4807-971a-d2294f882449
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Date deposited: 16 Jan 2017 14:05
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:08
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W. Keith Campbell
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