Effective Leadership Behavior by Means of Acculturation: Cultural Differences and Learning Strategies
Streszczenie
Leadership behavior is acquired through acculturation from the earliest childhood
and very stable over time. This first acculturation creates habits that are applied unconsciously
throughout life and are hard to change. Different learning strategies have the potential to mitigate
individual habits when individuals are confronted with an intercultural experience, for example as
expatriates. We examine the role of imitation/vicarious learning, learning through cognitive
reflection in a training program, and learning through changing the organizational structure on
adapting leadership behavior. Imitation/vicarious learning showed cultural adjustment but did not
improve a manager’s leadership effectiveness in the sample of German and US expatriates.
Learning during a training program that focuses on self-reflection of personal behavior patterns
can change the original acculturation and increase leadership effectiveness. The implementation of
a matrix-structure during an organizational integration process challenged the diverse cultural
habits and stimulated new acculturation within a company merger across cultures.
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