Publication

To balance or not to balance? Relating perceptions of work-life balance to leader outcomes (Poster presentation)

De Hauw, Sara
De Stobbeleir, Katleen
De Vos, Ans
Citations
Altmetric:
Publication Type
Conference Presentation
Editor
Supervisor
Publication Year
2013
Journal
Book
Publication Volume
Publication Issue
Publication Begin page
Publication End page
Publication NUmber of pages
Abstract
The present study investigates how self- and other-perceptions of a leader’s work-life balance impact the leader’s perceived leadership skills and motivation. Using a multi-source feedback tool, we collected data from 182 managers with supervisory responsibilities, as well as their supervisors and direct reports. Within-source analyses showed that supervisors and direct reports tend to evaluate balanced leaders better on cognitive and interpersonal skills, suggesting that these raters use perceptions of the leader’s work-life balance to infer information about the leader’s skills. Within- and multi-source analyses also showed that leaders who see themselves as more balanced tend to be seen as less ambitious, not only by themselves but also by their supervisors. Moderating effects were found for the position of the rater, but not for the gender of the leader.
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Keywords
People Management & Leadership
Citation
Knowledge Domain/Industry
DOI
Other links
Embedded videos