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Christopher Newport University: Effective Leadership Isn't What You Might Think
The power balance in leadership is changing, according to visiting scholar and world-renowned leadership expert, Dr. Barbara Kellerman. ...

Kelley McGee
March 2, 2022
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The power balance in leadership is changing, according to visiting scholar and world-renowned leadership expert, Dr. Barbara Kellerman. Followers, she believes, are becoming as powerful β perhaps even more powerful β than leaders.
βBecause of this growing, global trend weβre experiencing right now, leadership approaches that worked 10 or even five years ago wonβt work today,β said Kellerman. βItβs old-fashioned to think in leader-centric terms. Itβs dated.β
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Kellerman, a distinguished thought-leader, author and speaker, is visiting leadership scholar for the spring 2022 term. Over the semester, students have had the opportunity to meet with her in small groups for conversations and mentoring, and to attend her series of lectures on leadership and followership. She recently addressed students from the Presidentβs Leadership Program as well as faculty and community members. She urged students to study followership with the same passion they would apply to leadership β words that resonated with freshman Christina Richardson β24.
βI wholeheartedly agree that followership is just as important as leadership,β Richardson said. βToo often leadership is over-emphasized, especially in our country, where we know leaders are often more successful than their followers. But we also need to understand how to be a quality follower ourselves, since everyone is a follower to someone.β
Kellerman pointed out that this shift in power to followers isnβt new. Historically speaking, she said, it tends to occur during tumultuous political eras or periods of conflict.
βItβs something we see in times of change or uprising, such as colonialism, apartheid, the fight for womenβs rights, civil rights and LGBTQ rights. Really, itβs what resistance movements are all about β followers stop following. Or, at least, theyβre no longer willing to follow in the same way. Thatβs why I tell my students followership is critically important to study, even if many donβt want to. At Harvard, I created a course around followership and assumed everyone would be intellectually interested,β Kellerman recalled. βGuess what? Students didnβt come. They figured, βI came to Harvard to be a leader, not to learn how to be a follower.β They didnβt even want to learn about followership.β
But understanding followership will give leaders insight, Kellerman argues, to navigate this current trend where both leadership and expertise are less valued. βWeβre in a period where people donβt care much about credentials. I often tell the story of what happens when I walk into a classroom these days. I used to be called Professor Kellerman. Or Dr. Kellerman. Now my students call me Barbara. This is a perfect example of how followers now bring me down and elevate themselves. What theyβre saying is, 'So what if you have a PhD from Yale and teach at Harvard. That doesnβt matter to us. Youβre just another person, and you need to prove to us that youβre worthy of our attention.' My power as a leader has declined, and Iβm just one of a billion examples.β
βHaving Dr. Kellerman here to talk with students, faculty and staff highlights a need to return to a conversation of what true leadership is and how we engage others in the leadership process," said Dr. Kathleen Callahan, professor of Leadership and American Studies. "She has challenged us to rethink our own understandings, and more importantly, to be involved in the process of leadership and followership during times of crisis."
Kellerman concluded by urging students to be agile, not discouraged, by the new challenges of leading. βEven though Iβve spent the last 30 minutes telling you how leaders have diminished in power and followers are more powerful, I need to undercut my own argument and remind you that leaders, good leaders, still matter.β
This press release was produced by Christopher Newport University. The views expressed here are the authorβs own.