Thursday, June 25, 2026

Management and Leadership are Two Different Things



There is a difference between "leadership" and "management." Most of us work for managers, most of the time. What we often want are leaders, even if some elements of both arguably are needed some of the time. 


Leadership might be said to be about influencing people, while management  might be said to be about control and creating predictable results.

source: Researchgate


Not all managers exercise leadership. Sometimes they don't have to do so. A manager possesses formal authority over resources, budgets, schedules, or people, but not every situation calls for exercise of leadership skills. 


Role

Why Management Matters More Than Leadership

Why Leadership Is Less Critical

Payroll manager

Accuracy, compliance, deadlines, controls

Processes are highly standardized

Accounts payable supervisor

Transaction processing and auditability

Little need to create organizational change

Air traffic control shift supervisor

Strict adherence to procedures

Innovation can be undesirable during operations

Nuclear power plant operations manager

Safety and process discipline dominate

Consistency outweighs vision

Warehouse scheduling manager

Resource allocation and throughput optimization

Employees typically follow established procedures

Regulatory compliance manager

Monitoring, reporting, and enforcement

Persuasion plays a smaller role than compliance

Manufacturing line supervisor

Quality, efficiency, staffing

Limited need for strategic transformation


Conversely, not all leaders manage. A leader possesses influence, whether or not formal authority exists. The examples include leadership in a combat situation.


Role

Leadership Characteristics

Management Authority

Scientific thought leader

Shapes research agenda through expertise

Often has no line authority

Distinguished engineer

Influences technical direction through credibility

May manage no employees

Open-source software creator

Mobilizes contributors around a vision

Usually lacks formal authority

Social movement organizer

Creates commitment and purpose

Few formal management responsibilities

University professor

Influences students and colleagues

Typically manages little organizational infrastructure

Industry analyst

Influences strategic decisions across firms

No direct authority over followers

Religious leader of a voluntary group

Influence depends largely on trust and shared values

Limited formal managerial control


One classic formulation is that managers do things right; leaders do the right things


The terms “leader” and “manager,” like the terms “leadership” and “management,” often are used interchangeably, and probably should not be, as they are very different things.


Dimension

Management

Leadership

Primary Purpose

Create order, consistency, and predictability

Create change, adaptation, and movement

Core Question

"How do we execute efficiently?"

"Where should we go next?"

Focus

Processes, systems, resources

People, purpose, direction

Time Horizon

Short- to medium-term

Long-term

Key Activities

Planning, budgeting, organizing, staffing, controlling

Vision-setting, aligning, motivating, inspiring

Relationship to Change

Minimizes unnecessary variation

Initiates and guides change

Source of Authority

Formal position and organizational role

Influence, credibility, and followership

Success Measure

Efficiency, reliability, consistency

Commitment, adaptation, transformation

View of Risk

Reduce and manage risk

Accept calculated risk for future gains

Communication Style

Instructions, coordination, monitoring

Inspiration, persuasion, meaning-making

Primary Resource Managed

Tasks, budgets, schedules, assets

Human energy, attention, commitment

Organizational Outcome

Stability and operational effectiveness

Renewal and strategic effectiveness


The classic example is combat leadership in a small team and bureaucratic management of the whole army, navy or air force. In combat, leadership is not so much exercised by the leader as assented to by the followers. In other words, you might say leaders are made by their followers. 


Managers and executives, on the other hand, never are really made by their followers. They hold positions or offices that confer authority. Bureaucratic authority, the holding of an office, is not the same thing as leadership. 


With the caveat that the balance could well be different in a fast-moving Internet business compared to a factory, a classic statement might be that “the manager’s job is to plan, organize and coordinate. The leader’s job is to inspire and motivate.”


The degree of predictability and time frames often dictate when management is key and when leadership is more important. Highly-predictable scenarios do not require leadership. 


On the other hand, any institution that expects to last over multiple human lifetimes is going to rely on management rather than leadership, for the most part, as it is necessary to create stable structures over long periods of time.


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Management and Leadership are Two Different Things

There is a difference between "leadership" and "management." Most of us work for managers, most of the time. What we oft...