Elizabeth I – leadership and exchange theory

THE SEMINAR FOCUSES ON ENDURING THE LEADER ROLE AND HERE THERE IS NO BETTER EXAMPLE THAN ENGLAND’S GREAT SOVEREIGN: ELIZABETH I. FEW LEADERS HAVE HAD SO MANY ODDS STACKED AGAINST THEM OR MET WITH THE PRESSURE OF SO MANY CONFLICTING EXPECTATIONS. SHE SUCCEEDS IN MEETING THESE EXPECTATIONS, NOT THROUGH REACTIONARY ACCEPTANCE BUT INSTEAD THROUGH THE PROACTIVE CREATION OF HER ROLE. ELIZABETH I ASSUMES THE ROLE OF LEADER AND SOVEREIGN. SHE ENDURES ADVERSITY AND CONFLICTING PRESSURES. GUIDED BY HER HAND ENGLAND BECOMES A WORLD POWER.

 

 

We explore the role of a leader in detail, viewing it in terms of the expectations at work in the organization and how to address these. Through this perspective, leadership becomes an exchange between leaders and co-workers. You do not become a leader as a matter of course; you must make yourself worthy of the calling.

We will also learn from Elizabeth’s antithesis, the most well-known character of the theatre, Shakespeare’s Hamlet. Hamlet is the prince who under insane and conflicting pressures never manages to make up his mind, and therefore ends up with a solution which many leaders have chosen both before and after him – he plays a madman. 

The seminar is held in London where we benchmark a time adjacent to our own, but which to an even larger degree was fraught with upheaval and challenges. You will experience a completely different London when we use it as a classroom in this seminar.

Sir Roy Strong about creating a leader brand: «The cult of Gloriana was skilfully created to buttress public order and, even more, deliberately to replace the pre-Reformation externals of religion, the cult of the Virgin and saints with their attendant images, processions, ceremonies and secular rejoicing»

KEIRON’s unique approach of using history as a basis for management reflection is both effective and enjoyable and is contributing to proven high quality strategic outcome.

Prof. Göran Roos, FTS Economic Development Board of South Australia