Arvonen (1995) emphases the needs for the leader to serve as an
example, to be a visionary and to be able to create a working en-
vironment that motivates personnel in an organisational culture
that is guided by the vision of the organisation.
Intentionally or unintentionally harmless and even more ma-
licious acts, thoughts and feelings form a pattern that becomes
prevalent for a group and thereby for the group’s members, both
for management employees and others. Together they shape a
workplace’s organisational culture and they affect the results of
emergency response operations, whether or not this is the inten-
tion. Organisational culture refers to the sum of what an organisa-
tion has learned and that is now taken for granted as to how one
deals with the surrounding environment and internal collabora-
tion. Organisational culture is regulated by written and unwritten
rules, norms and behaviour (Schein, 1992). An important duty for
an incident commander is therefore to describe and explain how
a fire brigade crew is to collaborate during an emergency response
operation, to set limits for certain tasks and to clarify how the
group’s members are to evaluate one another during and after a
response operation.
Let-it-go
Leadership
development
Conventional leadership
Non-leadership
Organisational results
Favourable
Individual
development
Favourable
Control
Over control
Demands and assessments
Whip and carrot
Control
Take necessary measures
Demands and assessments
Strive for agreement
Exemplary conduct
Values, role model and responsibility
Personal concern
Give support and confront
Inspiration and motivation
Encourage participation and creativity
Leadership style model,
from Larsson et al.
(2003).