Leadership research has long focused on the “high-visibility, high-responsibility” heroic leadership paradigm, while systematically neglecting the critical quadrant of “low-visibility, high-responsibility” (HRLV) leadership. Through ethnographic observation and in-depth interviews with Chinese dragon-boat helmsters as an extreme case, this study constructs a Helmsmanship Leadership theoretical framework, revealing the core operating mechanisms of HRLV leadership. The framework comprises 3 interlocking dimensions: Fade—achieving silent coordination through sub-threshold interventions, decoupling influence from visibility; Fail-safe—safeguarding the system’s floor through preventive authority, with success marked by the “absence of disaster”; Fit—situational attunement and going with the flow, serving as a conduit for environmental forces rather than a controller. The systemic coupling of these 3 dimensions enables helmsters to sustain collective survival under extreme conditions of zero-error tolerance and high interdependence. This study decouples leadership from visibility, revealing how influence is generated under conditions of “not being seen.” It expands the theoretical boundaries of relational leadership, extending relationality from interpersonal interaction to the leader’s relationship with the system, with risk, and with the environment. It contributes to leadership theory a “visibility-responsibility” analytical framework, revealing the core characteristics and operating logic of the long-overlooked leadership form of “high-responsibility, low-visibility.” In doing so, it provides new analytical tools for understanding governance in high-risk, highly interdependent systems.
Liu et al. (Tue,) studied this question.