Finding a Personal Management Style
(Published in Leadership Handbook of Practical Theology, 1994)
 

What is meant by management style, and how can we know what ours is and how to use it? The following exercises identify management styles and the typical behaviors that accompany each. Completing the exercises will help us characterize our personal management styles.
 

Ministry Style Assessment

Using a five-point assessment scale, describe to what extent the 40 attributes below characterize your ministry style. Choose two or three people who know you well to help you think through your answers as objectively as possible. Use a scale of 1-5, where 1 means "very uncharacteristic of me" and 5 means "very characteristic of me."

 
____ 1. Decisive ____ 21. Perfectionist
____ 2. People-pleasing ____ 22. Accommodating
____ 3. Organized ____ 23. Planner
____ 4. Change-oriented ____ 24. Questioning
____ 5. Exhorter ____ 25. Confrontational
____ 6. Spontaneous ____ 26. Procrastinating
____ 7. Efficient ____ 27. Formal
____ 8. Innovative ____ 28. Long-run focused
____ 9. Controlling ____ 29. Results-focused
____ 10. Informal ____ 30. Emotional
____ 11. Politically sensitive ____ 31. Detached
____ 12. Persuasive ____ 32. Experimental
____ 13. Competitive ____ 33. Power-conscious
____ 14. Sharing and participative ____ 34. Conflict-avoiding
____ 15. Closure-oriented ____ 35. Information-focused
____ 16. Visionary ____ 36. Activist
____ 17. Demanding ____ 37. Dominating
____ 18. Sensitive ____ 38. Contemplative
____ 19. Concern for routine ____ 39. Detail-intensive
____ 20. Nontraditional ____ 40. Controversial
 

The 40 style attributes are regrouped into four columns below. Please transfer your numerical responses to the questions and total the four columns.
 
I
II
III
IV
1. ____
2. ____
3. ____
4. ____
5. ____
6. ____
7. ____
8. ____
9. ____
10. ____
11. ____
12. ____
13. ____
14. ____
15. ____
16. ____
17. ____
18. ____
19. ____
20. ____
21. ____
22. ____
23. ____
24. ____
25. ____
26. ____
27. ____
28. ____
29. ____
30. ____
31. ____
32. ____
33. ____
34. ____
35. ____
36. ____
37. ____
38. ____
39. ____
40. ____
Total: ____
Total: ____
Total: ____
Total: ____
 

Enter your total score for columns I-IV in the corresponding boxes on the matrix. The ministry style with the highest point total signals your dominant, or preferred, ministry-management style. The higher the score for your preferred style relative to the other three styles, the more that style probably dominates your ministry behavior. More than one high score among the four shows you have a broad managerial-style repertoire--the capacity to utilize more than one ministry style.
 
  Ministry Style Matrix  
Relational
I
Commander
II
Shepherd
Independent
III
Bureaucrat
IV
Entrepreneur
 
Directive
Facilitative
 

Understanding Styles

Consider the following descriptions of management styles:

Style Effectiveness

Which of the four ministry styles is most effective? That all depends on circumstances. Each style has unique strengths and weaknesses, depending on the needs of the particular ministry.

The table below provides insight into the situational effectiveness of each style for the ten most common managerial challenges.
 
Management Style Situational Effectiveness
  Commander Shepherd Bureaucrat Entrepreneur
Stimulating productivity
A
D
B
C
Defusing conflict
A
B
C
D
Fostering change
D
B
C
A
Bolstering morale
A
B
C
D
Implementing routine work
B
C
A
D
Implementing new projects
C
D
B
A
Building relationships
D
A
C
B
Managing a crisis
A
D
B
C
Goal setting
B
D
A
C
Keeping in touch with people's feelings
D
A
C
B
A = Style of greatest potential

B = Style of second greatest potential

C = Style of third preference

D = Style with least potential

Management-style flexibility is a cardinal virtue. We need to strive to utilize our preferred style (the one God has especially suited us for) in as many situations as possible that benefit from its strengths. We should also use any strong subordinate styles in a similar fashion.

It's important to know where our style strengths are relatively ineffective and seek out partnership opportunities with other leaders who hold complementary style strengths. Ultimately all Christian ministry is a partnership between interdependent team members empowered by God to do his kingdom work.

  • Finding A Personal Management Style © by Phil Van Auken