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Which leadership style do more narcissistic subordinates prefer in supervisors?

Which leadership style do more narcissistic subordinates prefer in supervisors?
Which leadership style do more narcissistic subordinates prefer in supervisors?

Background and Objective: Subordinates in Western cultures generally prefer supervisors with a democratic rather than autocratic leadership style. It is unclear, however, whether more narcissistic subordinates share or challenge this prodemocratic default attitude. On the one hand, more narcissistic individuals strive for power and thus may favor a democratic supervisor, who grants them power through participation. On the other hand, similarity attracts and, thus, more narcissistic subordinates may favor an autocratic supervisor, who exhibits the same leadership style that they would adopt in a leadership position. Method: Four studies (N total = 1284) tested these competing hypotheses with two narcissism dimensions: admiration and rivalry. Participants indicated the leadership style they generally prefer in a supervisor (Study 1), rated their own supervisor's leadership style (Study 2a: individual ratings; Study 2b: team ratings), and evaluated profiles of democratic and autocratic supervisors (Study 3). Results: We found a significantly weaker prodemocratic default attitude among more narcissistic subordinates: Subordinates' narcissism was negatively related to endorsement of democratic supervisors and positively related to endorsement of autocratic supervisors. Those relations were mostly driven by narcissistic rivalry rather than narcissistic admiration. Conclusion: The results help clarify the narcissistic personality and, in particular, how more narcissistic subordinates prefer to be led.

Leadership Styles, Narcissism, Narcissistic Admiration, Narcissistic Rivalry, Similarity-Attraction Principle, narcissistic admiration, narcissism, leadership styles, narcissistic rivalry, similarity-attraction principle
0022-3506
Eck, Jennifer
9f76ee10-9970-4159-b2df-6d4f8bc445be
Schoel, Christiane
68fbe01d-b23f-4ed4-bc79-467c67632cfd
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Gebauer, Jochen E.
c3f6fa1b-f962-45e9-b46b-0a32efadf9ac
Stahlberg, Dagmar
3e2afe07-7ca6-42b8-9714-ee436c8c4d6f
et al.
Eck, Jennifer
9f76ee10-9970-4159-b2df-6d4f8bc445be
Schoel, Christiane
68fbe01d-b23f-4ed4-bc79-467c67632cfd
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Gebauer, Jochen E.
c3f6fa1b-f962-45e9-b46b-0a32efadf9ac
Stahlberg, Dagmar
3e2afe07-7ca6-42b8-9714-ee436c8c4d6f

Eck, Jennifer, Schoel, Christiane and Sedikides, Constantine , et al. (2024) Which leadership style do more narcissistic subordinates prefer in supervisors? Journal of Personality. (doi:10.1111/jopy.12950). (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background and Objective: Subordinates in Western cultures generally prefer supervisors with a democratic rather than autocratic leadership style. It is unclear, however, whether more narcissistic subordinates share or challenge this prodemocratic default attitude. On the one hand, more narcissistic individuals strive for power and thus may favor a democratic supervisor, who grants them power through participation. On the other hand, similarity attracts and, thus, more narcissistic subordinates may favor an autocratic supervisor, who exhibits the same leadership style that they would adopt in a leadership position. Method: Four studies (N total = 1284) tested these competing hypotheses with two narcissism dimensions: admiration and rivalry. Participants indicated the leadership style they generally prefer in a supervisor (Study 1), rated their own supervisor's leadership style (Study 2a: individual ratings; Study 2b: team ratings), and evaluated profiles of democratic and autocratic supervisors (Study 3). Results: We found a significantly weaker prodemocratic default attitude among more narcissistic subordinates: Subordinates' narcissism was negatively related to endorsement of democratic supervisors and positively related to endorsement of autocratic supervisors. Those relations were mostly driven by narcissistic rivalry rather than narcissistic admiration. Conclusion: The results help clarify the narcissistic personality and, in particular, how more narcissistic subordinates prefer to be led.

Text
Eck et al., 2023, Journal of Personality - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 7 May 2026.
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 7 May 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Author(s). Journal of Personality published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.
Keywords: Leadership Styles, Narcissism, Narcissistic Admiration, Narcissistic Rivalry, Similarity-Attraction Principle, narcissistic admiration, narcissism, leadership styles, narcissistic rivalry, similarity-attraction principle

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 490077
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490077
ISSN: 0022-3506
PURE UUID: 3e4e84d8-5e57-4bdd-9c3d-20e88808d874
ORCID for Constantine Sedikides: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4036-889X

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Date deposited: 14 May 2024 16:41
Last modified: 28 Jun 2024 01:36

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Contributors

Author: Jennifer Eck
Author: Christiane Schoel
Author: Jochen E. Gebauer
Author: Dagmar Stahlberg
Corporate Author: et al.

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