Image and Symbolic Leadership: Using Focus Group Research to Bridge the Gaps
- 1 April 1993
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Public Relations Research
- Vol. 5 (2) , 95-125
- https://doi.org/10.1207/s1532754xjprr0502_04
Abstract
Through an exploration of the scholarly and professional literature, this article investigates the concepts of symbolic leadership and organizational image. A critical analysis of the literature establishes that symbolic leaders, especially chief executive officers (CEOs), may operate either symmetrically or asymmetrically. As leader and spokesperson, the CEO personifies the company to its key constituencies. Effective leaders give people power. This empowerment of strategic publics, both external and internal, suggests a symmetrical world view. It replaces the asymmetrical assumptions more characteristic of the autocratic leadership espoused in the management theory of the 1950s. A modest case study of focus group research illustrates the role of public relations in exploring, defining, and communicating image. This counseling or managerial role is critical in helping the organization be, rather than seeming to be—a key philosophical tenet of contemporary public relations. The theoretical frame for this ...Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- On the Effects of Marketing, Media Relations, and Public Relations: Images, Agendas, and RelationshipsPublished by Springer Nature ,1993
- Matching Public Relations Research to the Problem: Conducting a Special Focus GroupJournal of Public Relations Research, 1992
- Conceptual differences in public relations and marketing: The case of health-care organizationsPublic Relations Review, 1991
- Routine testing for HIV at infertility clinics.BMJ, 1991
- Comparative Theory Reconceptualized: From Entities and States to Processes and DynamicsCommunication Theory, 1991
- Users as Research Inventions: How Research Categories Perpetuate InequitiesJournal of Communication, 1989
- Contemporary trends in the analysis of leadership processes.Psychological Bulletin, 1969
- ImagePublished by University of Michigan Library ,1956