While many aspects of the dramatic shifts caused by digital government have made enormous progress, the leadership of those who serve the public via electronic means has yet to take a significant step forward. This article addresses three questions: How significant has e-leadership become? What are the challenges in trying to create a more comprehensive model of defining and measuring e-leadership? And, based on current knowledge, what skill and behavioral elements are candidates for a concrete e-leadership model? The authors develop and test an original model that focuses on e-leadership as a competence in virtual communications (i.e., the use of ICT-mediated communications) and the digital opportunities and challenges that are created. The results provide strong support for the proposed model. The article concludes with a discussion of a future agenda for e-leadership research that can be developed in a manner that is fruitful for theory and practitioners.
Evidence for Practice• Leadership is as much virtual as it is face-to-face today; e-leadership is an important and distinctive ability in organizational management that can lead to more effective organizational functioning. • An effective e-leader communicates clearly, provides adequate social interaction, and demonstrates technological know-how through and within virtual environments. • In the long term, effective e-leadership builds responsible teams, sets effective accountability processes, inspires change, and develops trust virtually. • E-leadership is a set of technology-mediated social influencing processes intended to change attitudes, feelings, thinking, behavior, and performance within organizations. • Six competencies lead to effective e-leadership: e-communication, e-social skills, e-change skills, e-team skills, e-tech savvy, and e-trustworthiness.