Leaders are Managers but Managers are not necessarily Leaders
Leader definition
A leader is a person who holds a dominant position in a given
field and has the ability to influence a group of people towards achievement of
objectives.
“The process of leadership, whereby an individual influences a
group of individuals to achieve a common goal” (Rost, 1991) .
Manager definition
A manager is someone who is in-charge of the organization
and has a group of subordinates who reports to him about the day to day
operations.
"The management is the process of working with and
through others to achieve organizational objectives" (Gilley, 2005) .
Leader vs Manager
Managers
frequently depend on implementing procedures and they are executors of policies
to interconnect employees to produce best outcome, meanwhile leaders are
visionaries, who can inspire people or a group of
people to achieve a common goal with the cooperation of all members in a team.
Figure 1: Leader vs Manager
All managers are not good leaders. Leadership carries vision
along with the skill to motivate people to claim a superior achievement, but
management sets operation procedures to bring the vision to reality. Hence, to
implement policies managers need a vision from a leader.
Differences between Manager and Leader based on similar goals
Manager will count value, which means he will measure the value
created by the employee by asking reports. This action can actually discourage
the value-adding employees. In contrast, leaders will always involve in
creating value. Moreover, managers have subordinates who are compelled to work
under him and the flow of communication is one way, while leaders have
followers where the flow of information is two-way. A manager controls a group
to complete the goals. However, leaders will influence others to contribute to
achieve the success (Daily
mirror, 2017) .
When considering the real world scenario, we can name many
leaders at a glance.For example, Barack Obama, Mahatma Gandhi and Richard
Branson are well known famous leaders with proven managerial skills. But, it is
quiet difficult to point out successful managers without any leadership
quality. So, it clearly proves that leaders are managers but all managers are not
necessarily leaders.
Reference
Gilley, A. (2005). The
Manager as Change Leader. (J. W. Gilley, Ed.) Westport, Connecticut, United
States of America: Praeger.
Rost, J. C. (1991). Leadership
for the Twenty First Century. Westport, Connecticut, United States of
America: Praeger.
Daily mirror. (2017, April 24). Home/ Columns. Retrieved August 08,
2019, from Daily mirror:
http://www.dailymirror.lk/print/columns/Understanding-people-will-help-you-make-the-shift-from-managing-to-leading-a-business/235-127643



Difference between Leaders & Managers explained in a simple manner. This clearly shows that every manager is not a leader & the special skills that leaders needs to develop rather than a managers. Good job Jinendran.
ReplyDeleteThank you Jehan for your comments.
DeleteA nicely structured article Jinendran. Very attractively presented using graph and images. How does a leader differentiate from a manager is explained interestingly. Good job.
ReplyDeleteThank for your obersation Upendra.
ReplyDeleteHi. LOOKING GOOD
ReplyDeleteThank you sir.
DeleteGood article, you have explained the difference of Leader and Manager and the different responsibilities well. Thanks Jinendran.
ReplyDeleteThank you Achala for your comments.
DeleteTable descriptions should be written above the table.
ReplyDeleteThank you sir, changed as instructed.
Deletenicely structured and clear nice article
ReplyDeleteThank you Malitha.
Deletegood explain we can get more information in your article
ReplyDeleteThank you Wasantha.
DeleteInteresting topic & well explain using graphs & tables .Thank you for sharing your knowledge Jinendran ..
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comment.
DeleteCommunication way difference between manager & a leader is new fact that I've learn from your blog. Good one
ReplyDeleteThank you Shamina.
DeleteNice article on identifying leader and manager. Cheers !
ReplyDeleteThank you for the comment.
DeleteVery interesting article. Nice flow which make more attractive to read. The conclusion is really inspired me on that your explain on how you pointed out a leader with managerial skills and how difficult to point out successful managers without any leadership quality. Good job. Keep it up.
ReplyDeleteThank you Prasanna for your valuable comments.
DeleteInteresting topic and indeed it is true. Actually we can identify the deference of leaders and manager when they deriving their team to achieve goals.
ReplyDeleteThank you Kasun for your comments.
Delete