To read this content please select one of the options below:

Empathic organizational culture and leadership: conceptualizing the framework

Vishal Arghode (Organisational Behaviour and Human Resource Management Area, Indian Institute of Management Nagpur, Nagpur, India)
Ann Lathan (St. George Catholic School, Erie, PA, USA)
Meera Alagaraja (Department of Educational Leadership, Evaluation and Organizational Development, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY, USA)
Kumaran Rajaram (Nanyang Business School, NTU, Singapore, Singapore)
Gary N. McLean (PhD Program in OD, Assumption University Bangkok, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA)

European Journal of Training and Development

ISSN: 2046-9012

Article publication date: 26 August 2021

Issue publication date: 24 January 2022

3516

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to conceptualize and discuss empathic organizational culture and leadership along with organizational implications.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors reviewed literature to conceptualize empathic organizational culture and leadership. They referred to Hofstede’s organizational culture concept and studies on empathy to explore how leader–follower relationships are influenced by a leader’s empathic disposition.

Findings

Organizational leadership is instrumental in shaping employee performance. While work design, culture, peer support and resource accessibility are discernible, leadership style, control and others are covert. Leaders’ empathic attitudes and dispositions can positively influence organizational functions for improved performance. This review suggests that organizational culture should support growth, proper functioning and effective coordination between employees for improved organizational effectiveness.

Research limitations/implications

The authors conducted searches in leadership and management journals to help conceptualize leaders’ empathic disposition. Future researchers may explore other bodies of literature and the cultural demographic differences in exhibiting empathic leadership and its effectiveness. Researchers can explore how empathic culture relates to job motivation, satisfaction and commitment. The authors suggest that future research may explore how employees’ and supervisors’ behaviors and interactions can create an empathic organizational culture.

Practical implications

The authors identify the characteristics in an empathic leader to articulate the role of empathy in leadership. Alignment between person, group norms and organizational values is more important than the existence of culture.

Originality/value

Empathy is studied by researchers from various disciplines. Similarly, employee well-being has received attention from organizational researchers from many fields. However, researchers have given inadequate attention to conceptualizing an empathic organizational culture and its interrelationship with leadership. The authors offer a more positive perspective to the leader-member exchange (LMX) research by describing how leaders can sustain positive relationships with employees rather than the purely transactional exchanges that characterize LMX.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to the reviewers, the journal editors, and the support staff for their critical feedback and prompt support.

Citation

Arghode, V., Lathan, A., Alagaraja, M., Rajaram, K. and McLean, G.N. (2022), "Empathic organizational culture and leadership: conceptualizing the framework", European Journal of Training and Development, Vol. 46 No. 1/2, pp. 239-256. https://doi.org/10.1108/EJTD-09-2020-0139

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles