Strengths-Based Leadership Theory

What Is Strengths-Based Leadership Theory?

Strengths-Based Leadership Theory (also known as Strengths-Based Organizational Management or SBOM) is a method of maximizing the efficiency, productivity, and success of an organization by focusing on and continuously developing the strengths of organizational resources, such as computer systems, tools, and people. At the core of the strengths-based leadership is the underlying belief that people have several times more potential for growth building on their strengths rather than fixing their weaknesses. A strength is defined as the ability to exhibit near-perfect performance consistently in a given activity. Strengths-based organizations don’t ignore weaknesses, but rather, focuses on building talents and minimizing the negative effects of weaknesses. Strengths-based leaders are always investing in their strengths and the strengths of individuals on their team. Rath and Conchie put forth three tenants of Strengths-based leadership: (1) Effective leaders invest in their followers’ strengths, (2) Effective leaders build well-rounded teams out of followers who are not, and (3) Effective leaders understand the needs of followers.

Strengths-based leadership theory is supported by over 30 years of research from the Gallup Organization and others. In addition, its core beliefs overlap a variety of other developing theories in personal and organizational psychology including positive psychology and appreciative inquiry. However, many have criticized the fundamental assessment tool of the Gallup Organization, StrengthsFinder 2.0, as unreliable. Recent research has found that when leading teams, strengths-based leadership causes individual team member efficacy to increase, but collective team efficacy to decrease, suggesting that it is not an optimal method for leading teams where cohesion is necessary.


More Articles in This Series:

HOME_AboutDavidBurkus

About the author

David Burkus is an organizational psychologist, keynote speaker, and bestselling author of five books on leadership and teamwork.

Recommended Reading

How To Make People Feel Heard [5 Ways]

One of the most common complaints among disengaged employees is about not feeling heard, not being seen or recognized for what they do, who they are, and what they are experiencing. As a leader, a lot of this frustration may stem from you. When people approach you with their problems and you jump right to […]

What Most Leaders Get Wrong About Culture

“Culture eats strategy for breakfast.” And maybe accounting and legal for lunch. I’ve never actually heard anyone try and complete that quote. And I’ve never really figured out why any leader would want strategy masticated by anything. Let alone culture. But the idea behind the quote is that culture is paramount. The success or failure […]

No One Wants To Eat Your Compliment Sandwich

Have you ever eaten a compliment sandwich? You know what I’m talking about. Sandwiching a piece of negative feedback between two pieces of unrelated positive feedback—between two compliments. Somewhere, in some corporate training manual or some class on business communications, this idea of the compliment sandwich was created. The idea was that people would be […]

Scroll to Top