Reference no: EM132223895
You have recently become CEO of a corporation with offices in three countries: the U.S., Mexico, and India. You have begun to plan your first annual conference with all managers and supervisors/team leads from your three locations. It will be held in a central location (face-to-face) and you wish to share many things with your leadership team.
One of the things you wish to share is that of various leadership styles they may wish to consider as they work in their respective locations. Not all leadership styles are appropriate for all situations or all cultures.
Instructions
Create a PowerPoint presentation that includes the following (in addition to a title and references slide):
An introductory slide citing the need for strong leadership within the organization;
The definition of leadership (in your own words) and how it differs from management;
A concise description of nine leadership styles (see below) with a brief paragraph or bullets on each style identifying its key traits, strengths or weaknesses, and the situations / industries in which It should / could be best utilized. Provide researched information on the following:
Transformational leadership.
Transactional leadership.
Servant leadership.
Autocratic leadership.
Laissez-faire leadership.
Democratic leadership.
Bureaucratic leadership.
Charismatic leadership.
Situational leadership.
A concluding / summary slide summing up the importance of leadership style knowledge to your multi-national management team.
Tips for Success
Presentations are best when they are clean, concise, consist of phrases or bullets (not heavily worded), with a consistent font size (minimum 18 pt) and professional slide design. They must contain in-line citations just like a written paper. Therefore, cite any outside references right on the slide at the end of your phrase or bullet like this (Richards, 2017) and include that citation source on the References slide.
Do not copy from outside sources. Use outside sources by reading them, rewriting them in your own words, and then citing the author and date right on the slide. Do not use wikis, dictionaries, blogs, LinkedIn, etc. See syllabus section "Other Course Materials" for legitimate research sources.