Body Word Count: 597
Florete Motarua
Introduction
The analysis in this field has already demonstrated what it is like to be a good leader, one capable of delegating, with strategic vision, capacity to manage and motivate people, and training in the area and accurate perception of the company in which it operates. But being a good leader in another country is more complex and requires an extra dose of humility and willingness to learn. Therefore, even with the demand of companies by executives who have a global profile, able to act and do business in an increasingly connected and internationalized market, the qualities valued in a leader still vary from country to …show more content…
"It's not just about 'obeying' the local culture, it's about understanding it. Knowing why processes and customs are different. When you understand it, it adapts effortlessly. For some characteristics are universal, but how much the professional must use or measure comes from the cultural intelligence that he has, that is, knowing what is most important in each country. Thus, you will have opportunities to grow and win the local market.
So today the greatest challenge of being a global leader is learned from day to day, in practice. However there is no program that forms that leader. It must be worked out like motivating, leading, virtually assigning tasks, and engaging different people.
In fact, many quoted finding from Morgan McCall in High Flyers: 70 percent of learning comes from experience, 20 percent comes from co-workers, and only 10 percent come from traditional training and development …show more content…
So the main mistake is going to a country with stereotypes and closed vision. However, Starr-Glass, D. (2011), suggests that "deeper explorations of national culture might reduce stereotyping." However, local characteristics need to be studied. So definitive for good deals. In other countries, everything can be different: the tone of voice, gestures, type of negotiation.
Conclusion
Finally the point of view of global leadership: challenges and opportunities, because despite the recent popularity of cross-cultural management studies, the existing literature has conceptual and methodological problems. The conceptual delimitation itself in the area precedes studies of this nature and must taken into account in works dealing with "post-conceptual" themes. So helps in the configuration of its historical and theoretical ballast on the one hand. Even at the current stage of leadership studies and the recognition of the need to seek more universal, operational and culturally-based concepts, there is a lack of a theoretical model explaining the relationship between social culture and leadership effectiveness whether local or global, on the other