e-Leadership during COVID-19: Challenges for Municipal
Administration Employees
Vita Jukneviciene
1
, Rita Toleikiene
1
and Irma Rybnikova
2
1
Institute of Regional Development, Siauliai Academy, Vilnius University, P. Visinskio 25, Siauliai, Lithuania
2
Hamm-Lippstadt University of Applied Sciences, Marker Allee 76-78, Germany
Keywords: e-Leadership, Administration, Municipality, Leaders, Employees, Covid-19.
Abstract: e-Leadership was a practice of the business sector and just recently it found the applicability in
organizations of the public sector. For a long period e-leadership was rather a random case than a common
practice in municipalities. Covid-19 pandemic has affected the change of organizational practices globally,
forcing even municipal administrations to look for ICT tools helping them to keep their internal processes
continuing. Laws and regulations have been changed to legalize remote work, therefore, e-leadership as a
common practice gained the peak of practical importance. The aim of the article is to reveal main challenges
of e-leadership for municipal administration employees during Covid-19. The article is based on the
summarizing of empirical results of the case study, conducted in Lithuanian municipal administration. The
sudden turn to e-leadership required leaders and employees of municipal administration to adapt new tools,
time planning and working culture, which had some positive and negative effects on leaders and employees
in municipal administrations. It influenced the decrease of time wasting, increased rational and targeted
communication, and the careful and trustful control of tasks’ implementation. On the other hand, the
changed situation and leadership methods had a negative impact on the psychology of employees (constant
tense and uncertainty), increased work-life imbalance, etc.
1 INTRODUCTION
E-leadership as the phenomenon was caused by the
development of information and communication
technologies (hereinafter ICT) and their integration
to various organizational processes (including
relations between the leader and employees). E-
leadership is understood as the leadership of
employees using digital, virtual channels and media,
such as e-mail, video conferencing and virtual task
implementation platforms (Lexa, 2021). Social
influence on employees and such processes as
communication, motivation, transmission of values
and formation of attitudes, influenced by the leader,
are going using ICT (Avolio et al., 2014; Kahai et
al., 2017; Van Wart et al., 2019). It started the
existence in business companies (Torre, Sarti, 2020),
which were quite open for different ways of acting
to reach their goals, enabling the remote work as
acceptable form, and it has reached its popularity in
the period of Covid-19 pandemic in all sectors,
including the public one.
Due to legal regulations, the traditional way of
the performance (face-to-face) in municipal
administrations was a common practice. Integration
of ICT was gaining popularity in relations between
governmental organizations and clients (citizens,
institutions or business companies) - e-democracy,
e-government, e-services, e-citizen, etc.
(Twizeyimana, Andersson, 2019). However, the
organizational process of leadership was based on
the direct communication between the leader and
employees.
The Covid-19 pandemic made a huge impact and
it has affected the change of organizational practices
globally, forcing organizations to look for ICT tools
helping them to keep their performance continuing.
In the majority of cases, the public sector
organizations (including municipalities) had to
change their regulations to legalize remote work. As
the pandemic period was challenging, the e-
leadership process has been expanded and it had a
huge effect on employees’ working style,
communication and even motivation. As there is still
a lack of scientific knowledge about how the
Jukneviciene, V., Toleikiene, R. and Rybnikova, I.
e-Leadership during COVID-19: Challenges for Municipal Administration Employees.
DOI: 10.5220/0011073100003168
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Finance, Information Technology and Management (ICFITM 2021), pages 33-37
ISBN: 978-989-758-576-0
Copyright
c
2022 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
33
pandemic has affected the leadership in public sector
organizations (especially, municipal
administrations), this research has been conducted.
The aim of this article is to reveal main
challenges of e-leadership for municipal
administration employees during Covid-19. The
qualitative research was based on the case study (in
Lithuanian municipal administration). Due to
limitations of the article scope, it presents just
summarized results of the research
2 THEORETICAL
BACKGROUND
To analyze challenges of e-leadership on employees
during the Covid-19, e-leadership phenomenon has
to be explained and its specifics in municipal
administration identified.
2.1 The Concept of e-Leadership
e-Leadership refers to leadership processes,
including communication, social influence and
motivation, through ICT (Van Wart et al., 2019;
Avolio et al. 2014). The leader and employees use
ICT for the communication as well as for the
collection and dissemination of information,
required to support organizational duties, tasks’
implementation, monitoring and controlling
(DasGupta, 2011).
e-Leadership focuses on personal traits and
social skills, such as willingness to learn and relearn,
responsiveness, honesty, interaction, and trust-
building, etc., e-leaders have to possess (Annunzio,
2001; Savolaine, 2013). Leaders play several roles in
an organization: interpersonal roles (the head figure,
leading person (directing, ordering, guiding, etc.),
liaison); decision making roles (entrepreneur,
disturbance handler, resource allocator, negotiator);
informational roles (monitor and denominator,
spokesperson) (Satriadi, Agusven, 2021). In the
context of ICT usage, e-leaders must focus on such
roles as: visionary (seeing the big picture and
translating it to organization, representing the
organization in public), convener (managing
differences of a team and bringing towards clear
goads and decisions, solving conflicts), manager
(allocating organizational resources with
responsibility, ensuring the supply of needed
equipment for employees), sponsor (forming and
directing real and virtual teams), innovator (finding
new ways or tools of working), and mentor (guiding
and directing prospects of new leaders, showing the
personal example, encouraging others to use ICT)
(Satriadi, Agusven, 2021; Venus et al., 2019; Ford et
al., 2017; Han et al., 2020).
According to Montgomery et al. (2016), e-
leadership is affected by some factors such as
leader’s characteristics, situational factors, virtual
design characteristics, subordinate characteristics,
task characteristics, alignment with ethical values
and citizen trust, legal basis and requirements on the
performance of the sector. Therefore, specifics of the
work in municipal administration may affect the
success of e-leadership in it.
2.2 Specifics of e-Leadership in a
Municipal Administration
Municipality as the governmental institution is
considered to be the closest one to citizens. Every
decision is reviewed by community members or
organizations, discussed in public. So even internal
processes such as leadership are monitored. Turning
to e-leadership requires special attentiveness and
responsibility, ensuring the continuity of the
performance as well as satisfaction of citizens’
expectations on effective and trustful management
of human resources in the municipality. Municipal
administration has to be prepared to respond to any
challenge (Bryson et al., 2014) and to continue its
activity even under circumstances of uncertainty or
crisis.
It has to perform in the context of dichotomy of
politics and administration (Overeem, 2005).
Therefore, even internal processes such as leadership
and e-leadership may be affected by conditions and
requirements of both - policy making and policy
implementation structures. Besides, as the
governmental institution it has less possibilities to be
flexible and adapt new practices even to internal
processes (in majority of cases, any change has to be
approved by some entities or regulations). The
bureaucratic tradition of public administration (strict
rules, limited managerial flexibility, steady and
routine processes) may impede the e-leadership
(more flexible, innovative, non-traditional way of
acting) acceptance as the normal practice in the
municipality.
The cyber security can become another challenge
for e-leadership in municipalities, especially in the
crisis-induced situation, since social networks, free
software and open source have become popular
instruments for management processes in public
administration, with local public administrations
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rapidly becoming an attractive target for
cybercriminals (Montgomery et al., 2016).
E-leadership in municipal administration may be
affected by some challenges, which are similar to
those from other sectors. E-leaders are expected to
work openly, inspire individuals and teams to
mobilize, concentrate on problems and results, guide
rather than control, and concentrate on motivating
rather than directing; they have to find effective
ways to manage the collaboration and
communication between team members, to develop
employees’ self-management capabilities, to solve
interpersonal conflicts, to deal with isolation and
confusion of employees (DasGupta, 2011; Kapucu,
Ustun, 2018).
Leaders are dependent on getting institutional
support, such as needed equipment and license,
training, decision support system, and simulation
(Van Wart et al., 2017) to improve their ICT usage
and decision making skills, especially in the crisis
context. The lack of such institutional support may
become one more challenge for e-leadership in the
crisis-induced situation.
Consequently, it should be emphasized that e-
leadership in municipalities can be affected by
various tensions connected to the nature of public
administration and challenges rising due to human-
machine interactions.
3 EMPIRICAL RESULTS
The analysis of the e-leadership practice in a
particular public administration institution under the
real crisis-induced situation may reveal what kind of
additional challenges the e-leadership has for
municipal administration employees. Therefore,
qualitative research in Lithuanian municipality as a
case study was conducted.
3.1 Method of the Research
Seeking to disclose the real situation of e-leadership
practice in municipal administration, the empirical
research as a case study (a qualitative research
strategy) has been chosen. Two semi-structured
interviews with two representatives of municipal
administration in Lithuania (both in supervisory
positions, the second interviewee has changed her
position from an employee to a vice-chairperson of
the section just recently) were conducted during the
pandemic situation in July 2020. It was a part of a
bigger research project, conducted in 2019-2020, so
interviews were the follow-up type. The interview
guide (the research instrument) was validated before
and it focused on leadership processes under
conditions of teleworking and changes in leadership
experienced by municipal employees. Both
interviews took place face-to face in the offices of
the interviewees. Both interviewed persons
represented one Lithuanian medium-size
municipality that was selected purposefully because
in 2015 it was acknowledged as the most successful
municipality implementing e-democracy in
Lithuania (Information Society Development
Committee, 2015). Their recordings were
transcribed. The summarizing results of this research
are presented in this article.
3.2 Results of the Case Study
3.2.1 Specifics of e-Leadership in
Lithuanian Municipal Administration
The Covid-19 pandemic situation has changed the
work of the municipal administration fundamentally.
During the quarantine, the form of teleworking
became mandatory for all municipal employees in a
very short two-week period. This was stressful for
the employees, as they had to learn to use various e-
tools (platforms) on their own to guarantee the
smooth operation of organizational duties.
Employees had to learn new ICT tools in a very short
period too. Due to the lack of timely institutional
support, they became self-taught experts of some
tools and even consulted each other. Leaders had to
transfer the leadership process online and to start
guiding virtual teams. They had to master ICT
specific tools, quite new in their daily performance,
and to become mentors (examples and guides) for
their employees.
It should be emphasized that during the
pandemic, the attitude of municipal leaders towards
the form of teleworking changed significantly. It
became clear that it is not as a privilege or a non-
effective time, but just another way of working. This
has increased the mutual trust between leaders and
employees; it helped to transfer the greater
responsibility and autonomy for employees, and
increased their self-confidence. Employees accepted
teleworking as the only way to continue their duties
in the crisis context. Leaders had to adapt to the role
of the mentor or guide rather than to stay the main
leading (head) person.
During this period, the municipal agenda was
complemented by “extra” issues that had to be
addressed “here and now”. Leaders and employees of
the municipal administration had to solve them in a
e-Leadership during COVID-19: Challenges for Municipal Administration Employees
35
short time by adopting non-standard decisions
requiring team approach and responsibility. Virtual
teams were organized for the search, adoption and
implementation of solutions, consultations and
collective decision making. Leaders had to develop
competences needed to become good conveners and
sponsors.
Such a situation required greater planning, time
management from leaders as well as from employees.
During the quarantine, there was an agreement
between leaders and employees that everyone should
be available all the time, thus extending working
hours to 24/7. The purpose of this agreement was the
need to respond quickly to “extra” (unplanned) issues
and the need for urgent decisions. Moreover, such a
requirement has helped to address the issue of
employees’ control. Leaders even preferred to
organize meetings in the very early morning or late
evening, on weekends to avoid problems of internet
connection overloads (so they have improved their
managing skills). Employees accepted this new
organizational behavior due to perceived complexity
of the situation. They started to plan their free time
according to new rules, even though it has increased
the work-life imbalance.
Responsibilities of different departments have
been redistributed: some departments worked
minimally because their activities were suspended,
others - worked day and night. During the quarantine,
there were a number of cases, when heads of other
administrative divisions (leaders) helped for other
leaders and took additional activities and functions
(not provided in the terms of their responsibilities).
So, leaders accepted new circumstances as the need
to show their organizational citizenship. Those
personal examples inspired other employees to help
colleagues too.
Working places moved to employees’ homes, and
it caused additional challenges for employees and
leaders, structuring the rhythm of the work. The
Covid-19 pandemic situation forced the Government
to close many organizations, including schools.
Teleworking from home has been hampered by the
coordination of family members’ working and
studying activities, the need for support to children
for their distance learning and the lack of suitable
ICT equipment. Parents (employees) had to develop
their competencies of time planning as well as
multitasking to do their operational tasks on time and
to take care of home duties. Leaders had to become
more patient and understanding as the majority of
them struggled with the same issues at home.
Leaders moved to constant performance of multi-
tasking. This required them to pay more attention
(and time) to the detailed and clear content of the
task, delivered to the employee. Therefore, the
competences of good communication (a
spokesperson) had to be improved.
Leaders even started to use multiple devices at
once to satisfy the need of participation in several
activities (meetings with other leaders, Government
representatives or even politicians, members of the
municipal council), to become fully reachable in a
case of “extra” issues. In the very beginning of the
quarantine, they had to look for best ICT tools and
platforms to work with their virtual teams, as the
institutional support came just later. So, they had to
strengthen their role as innovators.
Such a drastic change has raised some
psychological issues for employees too. The stress
caused by the isolation and the lack of live
communication has manifested in a form of the
willingness to talk to colleagues (on the phone) for
longer than usual, expressions of emotions
(including negative ones) and fears. As a result,
leaders had to spend more time listening to
employees and motivating them to perform assigned
activities. This required them to strengthen
competences and to enable their roles of the
convener and mentor. Moreover, colleagues had to
find ways to help each other psychologically too as
the implementation of the majority of tasks were
dependent on the readiness to act of all employees.
4 CONCLUSIONS
E-leadership as the process of social influence
towards employees using ICT in the public sector is
multidimensional. E-leadership in municipal
administrations can be affected by various tensions
connected to the nature of public administration and
challenges rising due to human-machine as well as
interpersonal interactions.
During the Covid-19 the performance of employees
(both leaders and their team members) in Lithuanian
municipal administration and the practice of e-
leadership was affected by some challenges:
organizational challenges: changes of
regulations on teleworking; unplanned relocation of
activities to virtual space; acquisition and
development of ICT, adapted for teleworking;
(non)organizing of training for employees on the
management of new ICT tools and programs; new
rules for the administration of activities under
conditions of uncertainty;
job-based challenges: between leaders and
employees: increased level of uncertainty of cared-
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36
out activities; creation of new traditions (work
rhythm, routine, activity structuring); greater
concentration to deal with crisis situations; increased
working days and hours; making quick decisions
“here and now”; deterioration of emotional health;
leadership-based challenges: more emphasis on
task delivery; the need for better planning of time
and tasks working from home; constant multi-
tasking; better management of e-meetings’ flow.
The sudden turn (on a broad scale) to e-leadership
due to Covid-19 pandemic had both positive and
negative effects in the municipal administration. It
has led to a more efficient time use, as perceived by
the study participants, and increased the rational and
targeted communication between leaders and
employees. It has encouraged careful, but trustful
control of tasks’ implementation. On the other hand,
the changed situation and leadership methods had a
negative impact on employees: it increased the
work-life imbalance, the constant tense and
uncertainty has increased psychological issues,
which had to be handled with the support from
leaders as well as colleagues.
The research has some limitations. As the empirical
research (case study) is based on few interviews that
have been conducted in one Lithuanian municipality,
results cannot be generalized. However, results
contribute to the better understanding of the e-
leadership phenomenon and challenges of municipal
administration employees in the context of Covid-19
pandemic.
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