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Executive coaching: a personal and professional leadership (PPL) perspective

D.Phil. / There is an unprecedented crisis in the leadership of contemporary large-organizations. Real leadership is rare – that is, leadership which is effective and authentic, having the courage to serve others even under trying circumstances. Perhaps the prime reason for this is that management and leadership per sé, have never been professionalized, in that there is no definite body of theory and knowledge which leaders must understand and use. There are no entry requirements, expectations or professional standards. There is no continuing learning and no competence reviews. The evidence of this is overwhelming – at individual, relationship and team levels of the organization – but ultimately, it is apparent at the organizational level where culture and character exist, which, if research is correct, is the single biggest determinant in any organization’s success or failure. In the executive leader realm, things move at warp speed. Things are changing at such a dizzying rate, and there are so many stakeholders competing for the leader’s time and energy, that there is any wonder there are in fact any healthy, effective executives around. Unfortunately, many of them fall prey to the myriad challenges, dilemmas and struggles that confront them, and the result is an abundance of dysfunctional, distressed and impaired executives, the effects of which ripple throughout the company; as the Spanish saying goes, “Fish start to smell at the head.”

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:uj/uj:8304
Date21 April 2009
CreatorsVerrier, Derek Robert
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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