Abstract:
Purpose – This paper aims at investigating the effect of emotional intelligence on the leader’s
applied leadership style (mediator) and the effect of this style on the employees’ organizational
citizenship (responsibility, reward, and warmth and support).
Design/methodology/approach – The researchers are proposing a model that highlights the
mediating role of leadership style on the relationship between leaders’ emotional intelligence and
employees’ feeling of organizational climate. The study follows the quantitative process. A
survey is prepared for data collection and for statistically testing the proposed model.
Findings – The results show that the leaders’ EI does affect his/her leadership style. Moreover,
the leaders’ style affects directly the respective employees’ feeling of organizational climate to
varying levels. The variance between different styles is found to be small.
Research limitations – The limitations of this study include the minimal crosscheck interviews.
The sample size’s limitation resulted in the researchers inability to compare the different subsectors
of the economy (labelled as the type of work of the firm) in order to derive deeper
conclusions by economic/business sector.
Practical implications – The study reveals a number of practical implications affecting
communication, performance, stability and tenure, and thereby lower turnover.
Social implications – The social implications of this study include the social relationships within
the work-setting, higher empathy and higher levels of norming as a direct result of improving the
leader’s emotional intelligence level.
Originality/value - The paper is based on a sample of respondents with a new model suggested
and tested scientifically, following a rigorous process. It assesses the impact of both emotional
intelligence and organizational climate with leadership style.
Citation:
Maamari, B. E., & Majdalani, J. F. (2017). Emotional intelligence, leadership style & organizational climate. International Journal of Organizational Analysis, 25(2), 327-345.