Coaching World Issue 17: February 2016 | Page 7

email may affect your recipient’s perceived email pressure and state of well-being. MacKinnon presented these findings at the British Psychological Society’s Division of Occupational Psychology annual conference on January 7, 2016. Shutterstock.com/lassedesignen —Lisa Cunningham Leadership with Muscle When you consider the qualities a good leader embodies, words like “honest,” “committed” and “eloquent” likely come to mind. One word that probably doesn’t make your list: “muscular.” However, new research from the University of California, Berkeley’s, Haas School of Business shows that physical strength matters when it comes to people’s perception of leaders. Study participants in a series of experiments conducted by Cameron Anderson, a UC Berkeley professor of management, and Aaron Lukaszewski, an assistant professor at Oklahoma State University, overwhelmingly equated physical strength with higher status and leadership qualities. In one experiment, groups of men and women were shown photos of “The physically strong men in the pictures were given higher status because they are perceived as leaders,” Anderson said. In another experiment, the researchers used photo-editing software to switch the bodies of strong and weak subjects (e.g., depicting a weak man’s head on a strong man’s body). Participants rated the weak men with stronger, superimposed bodies higher in status and leadership qualities. The final experiment focused on height differences, with participants indicating their perception that men of taller stature had more strength; as in the other experiments, they were also rated higher in leadership and status. The phenomenon doesn’t appear to apply to women: There was little effect on participants’ perception of leadership skills when they were shown physically strong versus weak women. “Perceived strength does give people an advantage, but it’s not make or break,” Anderson said. “If you’re behaving in ways that demonstrate you are a leader or not a leader, strength doesn’t matter.” Anderson and Lukaszewski’s paper is forthcoming in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. —Abby Tripp Heverin ICF BUSINESS PARTNERS ICF partners with various groups through the ICF Media Partner and ICF Business Solutions Partner programs to offer discounts or special pricing to ICF Members on goods and services. Learn more at icf.to/partners. Annuity Managers Agency, LLC Assessments 24x7 AudioAcrobat choice Coaching at Work Coaching Websites Forward Metrics Hogan Assessments Nationwide Refer.com Soffront Staples TranscribeMe The Coaching Show The Coaching Tools Company.com VideoBio Westminster Indemnity Zoom Don’t forget to renew your membership! ICF Memberships expire March 31, 2016. Renew today at Coachfed \