Purpose This commentary aims to examine how relational energy, the psychological resource generated through leader–employee interactions, functions as a strategic driver of engagement, resilience and operational performance. Drawing on empirical evidence, it argues that relational energy must become an explicit priority within HR strategy, leadership development and workforce system design. Design/methodology/approach Insights are derived from a multiphase qualitative study conducted within a distributed healthcare organization, integrating leader interviews, subordinate perspectives, observational data and performance indicators to identify how distinct leadership behaviors shape relational energy dynamics. Findings The study demonstrates that relationally attuned, context-responsive leadership produces energizing interactions that enhance psychological availability, motivation and performance. Conversely, high-control, metrics-driven leadership behaviors correspond with relational energy depletion, emotional strain and lower operational outcomes. These patterns reveal relational energy as a mechanism linking leadership behavior to organizational effectiveness. Practical implications The study provides guidance for embedding relational energy into HR systems, including competency frameworks, selection and promotion criteria, development programs, performance management and organizational design. It outlines how HR leaders can cultivate energizing leadership climates to strengthen engagement and outcomes across distributed teams. Originality/value This commentary advances understanding of relational energy as a leadership-generated resource with strategic implications for HR. It positions relational energy not as a soft interpersonal construct but as a core element of leadership capability and a measurable contributor to organizational performance.
Douglas et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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