Case Study: Waiting For Clearance

1877 Words4 Pages

Waiting for Clearance-A Case Study in Followership
The case study, ‘Waiting for Clearance’, concentrates on the leadership concept of followership and how it affects followers and leaders within an organization. The company involved in the case study is Alvon Biometrics. The case study and analysis by our virtual team is about the relationship between CEO Tony Bussard, and his COO, Juan Carlos De La Vega. The case study questions concentrate on exploring followership concepts relating to how COO Juan De La Vega’s handling of repairing the follower-leadership relationship that he has with CEO Bussard a year after being hired by the Alvon Biometrics Company. The next several sections of this paper will answer key questions, followed by identifying …show more content…

The CEO raved about how knowledgeable De La Vega was when he was hired as the new COO. Our group agreed that he would tried to use the expert power that De La Vega had to get the subordinates to come to him instead of going straight to Bussard for direction. De La Vega was not sure that he had any legitimate power with his new position, but he could have used his knowledge of bio metrics to have expert power that would have helped him have his subordinates shift their attention from Bussard to him. Expert power is “…power resulting from a leader’s special knowledge or skill regarding tasks performed by followers” and “…when a leader is a true expert, subordinates go along with recommendations because of his or her superior knowledge” (Daft, 2015, p. 372). We believe that De La Vega could have used this to get his subordinates to stop ‘by-passing’ him and going to the CEO for …show more content…

Managing ‘up’ “…means consciously and deliberately developing a meaningful task-related, mutually respecting relationship with one’s direct superiors” (Daft, 2015, p. 196). De La Vega should have strived to gain a clearer understanding of what his role would be as the ‘day-to-day’ operational leader. He could have employed the five principles of followership to establish a successful relationship with Bussard as CEO. The CEO failed to ‘manage up and down’ the hierarchal scale of his own organization as a leader and would not relinquish power. The CEO was dependent upon De La Vega to be his key “point man” in day-to-day operations. The follower-leader relationship is important to both the leader and the follower because “…Leaders of higher organizational levels depend upon their subordinates for information, support, and assistance in accomplishing the organization’s goals” (Daft, 2015, p. 197). Had the principles and strategies of effective followership, combined with the desirable followership traits of “cooperation, honesty, dependability and competency” (Daft, 2015, p. 211) been utilized by the CEO and COO, the outcome of the case study would have been

Open Document