Open Access

Evolution of the Classical Leadership Styles in a Digital Environment

  
Jul 24, 2025

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This study explores the evolution and the applicability of the classical leadership theories in the context of digital and virtual environments, focusing on six prominent frameworks: Trait, Behavioural, Situational, Transactional, Transformational, and Charismatic leadership theories. The current literature indicates that traditional leadership models, characterized by hierarchical structures and top-down communication, are evolving in response to the digital environment. This shift emphasizes agile, inclusive, and collaborative leadership styles, where leaders engage teams democratically, fostering participation and valuing diverse perspectives. The digital era necessitates that leaders not only manage change but actively drive it, promoting a culture of continuous innovation and adaptability. Consequently, the leadership approaches are transitioning from authoritative to more responsive and participative models, aligning with the dynamic demands of the digital landscape. Through a mixed-methods approach, combining a quantitative survey of 381 employees across multinational organizations, and qualitative interviews with 22 team members, the research examines how these styles influence employee engagement and effectiveness. The findings reveal that Transactional leadership is the most effective in enhancing both engagement and effectiveness, particularly when paired with relationship-oriented Behavioural styles. Conversely, Trait and Transformational leadership exhibit negative correlations with performance metrics, while Situational and Charismatic styles show minimal impact. The analysis also highlights the potential of multi-theory approaches, with combinations like ”Behavioural and Transactional”, and ” Behavioural, Transactional, and Transformational”, emerging as particularly impactful. Qualitative insights further underscore the value of integrating contemporary paradigms, such as Emotional Intelligence-based, Authentic, Servant, and Distributed leadership, to address the unique challenges of virtual teams. These styles enhance morale, trust-building, and shared responsibility, offering a nuanced and adaptive framework for leadership in digital workplaces. The study concludes by emphasizing the need for further exploration into hybrid leadership models to better align with the complexities of the modern organizational dynamics in the digital era.