TY - JOUR
T1 - Can Leadership Improve Interorganizational Collaboration?
T2 - Field-Experimental Evidence From a Team-Based Leadership Training Intervention
AU - Grøn, Anders Barslund
AU - Hvilsted, Line
AU - Ingerslev, Karen
AU - Jacobsen, Christian Bøtcher
AU - Bech, Mickael
AU - Holm-Petersen, Christina
PY - 2024/7
Y1 - 2024/7
N2 - The delivery of coherent public services often depends on collaboration across organizations and organizational units, which is challenging and necessitates effective leadership. This article advances our knowledge about the value of leadership training for interorganizational collaboration. In a field experiment, 122 public healthcare managers from 68 organizational units were randomly assigned to a treatment or a control group. The treatment included a 10-month interorganizational team-based leadership training program, which focuses on establishing and sustaining shared direction, alignment, and commitment across organizational boundaries. The results from our analytic approach—including survey responses from the participating managers and more than 3,000 of their subordinates (frontline managers and employees) and 32 interviews before and after training—show that training has positive effects on relational coordination, structural coordination mechanisms, and overall collaborative quality as assessed by the participating managers and their frontline managers. We do not find significant effects among the frontline employees. We discuss our findings in relation to the literature on leadership training, nuances to existing theory, and implications for practice.
AB - The delivery of coherent public services often depends on collaboration across organizations and organizational units, which is challenging and necessitates effective leadership. This article advances our knowledge about the value of leadership training for interorganizational collaboration. In a field experiment, 122 public healthcare managers from 68 organizational units were randomly assigned to a treatment or a control group. The treatment included a 10-month interorganizational team-based leadership training program, which focuses on establishing and sustaining shared direction, alignment, and commitment across organizational boundaries. The results from our analytic approach—including survey responses from the participating managers and more than 3,000 of their subordinates (frontline managers and employees) and 32 interviews before and after training—show that training has positive effects on relational coordination, structural coordination mechanisms, and overall collaborative quality as assessed by the participating managers and their frontline managers. We do not find significant effects among the frontline employees. We discuss our findings in relation to the literature on leadership training, nuances to existing theory, and implications for practice.
KW - coordination mechanisms
KW - field experiment
KW - healthcare
KW - interorganizational collaboration
KW - leadership training
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85186239178&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/02750740241232681
DO - 10.1177/02750740241232681
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0275-0740
VL - 54
SP - 421
EP - 440
JO - American Review of Public Administration
JF - American Review of Public Administration
IS - 5
ER -