Gender‐typicality of economic sectors and gender‐composition of working groups as moderating variables in leadership research
Abstract
Purpose
Meta‐analytic evidence exists that the numerical dominance of one gender group among employees can affect the behaviour of female and male leaders. The purpose of this paper is to hypothesis that leaders will show more transformational behaviour when they hold a minority status. Transformational behaviour might help to mitigate discrepancies between male leaders' gender and the feminine context, as well as between female leaders' gender and the masculine leadership role.
Design/methodology/approach
N1=455 team members answered questionnaires about their work satisfaction and their team leaders' transformational leadership, whilst N2=142 team leaders answered questions regarding their teams' goal fulfillment.
Findings
Female and male leaders are rated more transformational in economic sectors and working groups where they hold a minority status. The paper finds a positive interrelation between transformational leadership and followers' work satisfaction for male leaders, but not for female leaders.
Research limitations/implications
Future research should compare female and male leaders from extremely gender‐typed economic sectors and from higher levels of the organisational hierarchy. This would provide evidence whether the findings could be generalised to other samples.
Practical implications
The findings point to the potential advantage of being a high‐transformational male leader in female‐dominated contexts. Irrespective of the numerical dominance of one gender group, followers of low‐transformational female leaders are more satisfied than those of low‐transformational male leaders.
Originality/value
The paper uses sector‐level (gender‐typicality of economic sectors) as well as group‐level data (gender‐composition of working groups) to account for the numerical dominance of female and male employees.
Keywords
Citation
Wolfram, H. and Mohr, G. (2010), "Gender‐typicality of economic sectors and gender‐composition of working groups as moderating variables in leadership research", Gender in Management, Vol. 25 No. 4, pp. 320-339. https://doi.org/10.1108/17542411011048182
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2010, Emerald Group Publishing Limited