• Governance

Leadership Models in the
Animal Kingdom:
Inspiration for Modern Leaders

26.11.2025
  • Governance

What does lead­er­ship look like when posi­tion is irrel­e­vant? When titles don’t count – and only behav­iour matters? How does orien­ta­tion arise when it is not power but pres­ence that is decisive?

And what can we learn from systems that have been func­tion­ing stably for millen­nia – with­out organ­i­sa­tion­al charts, with­out KPIs, with­out lead­er­ship programmes?

This arti­cle explores what lioness­es, elephants and bono­bos can teach us about effec­tive lead­er­ship and the strate­gies that managers can adopt.

These key ques­tions run like a thread through our previ­ous Lead­er­ship Impulse arti­cles – from Lead­ing sustain­abil­i­ty to Lead­ing in success . And there is hard­ly a place that provides clear­er answers to these ques­tions than nature. There, lead­er­ship does not arise from posi­tion or status, but from lived behav­iour: from clar­i­ty, orien­ta­tion, pres­ence, rela­tion­ship and the abil­i­ty to make deci­sions at the right moment. This is precise­ly where its power lies – and its value for modern leadership.

Current behav­iour­al biol­o­gy stud­ies from Vien­na, Berlin and inter­na­tion­al research teams confirm this picture: Animal commu­ni­ties often live by key lead­er­ship prin­ci­ples more precise­ly and consis­tent­ly than we know from organ­i­sa­tion­al struc­tures. They demon­strate clear role defi­n­i­tions (lioness­es), stable orien­ta­tion in uncer­tain­ty (elephants), rela­tion­ship-orient­ed conflict reso­lu­tion (bono­bos), situ­a­tion­al distri­b­u­tion of compe­tence (wolves) and lead­er­ship that works through atti­tude rather than words (hors­es).

Our latest arti­cle in the Lead­er­ship­Im­pulse series picks up on these find­ings and shows how managers can inte­grate these natur­al mech­a­nisms into their own lead­er­ship prac­tice – not as a metaphor, but as concrete behav­iour­al impuls­es for effec­tive leadership:

Clar­i­ty & orien­ta­tion: creat­ing struc­ture instead of controlling

Nature impres­sive­ly demon­strates that lead­er­ship is effec­tive where there is clar­i­ty. Lioness­es lead their pride by distrib­ut­ing tasks accord­ing to indi­vid­ual strengths and ener­gy profiles – not accord­ing to tradi­tion, hier­ar­chy or dominance.

The coop­er­a­tive hunt­ing commu­ni­ties of octo­pus­es and fish also clear­ly demon­strate that success comes when roles are clear­ly defined and commu­ni­ca­tion signals are precise­ly coordinated.

For organ­i­sa­tions, this means that

roles should not be under­stood as stat­ic, but should be regu­lar­ly reviewed, conscious­ly formu­lat­ed and clear­ly delin­eat­ed from one anoth­er. Orien­ta­tion comes from clear respon­si­bil­i­ties – not from tight control. A brief role reset at the start of new projects or when market condi­tions change reduces fric­tion loss­es and notice­ably increas­es collec­tive effectiveness.

Stabil­i­ty & self-regu­la­tion: calm­ness as a lead­er­ship quality

Herds of elephants demon­strate how stable lead­er­ship is based on inner calm and expe­ri­en­tial knowl­edge. The matri­arch leads not through pres­sure, but through assess­ment, fore­sight and an atti­tude that radi­ates confi­dence. In moments of high complex­i­ty, it is not volume that decides – but regulation.

For managers, this means:

In chal­leng­ing phas­es, your own emotion­al and cogni­tive stabil­i­ty is the strongest point of refer­ence for teams. Those who embody calm­ness create trust, espe­cial­ly when dynam­ics become confus­ing. Self-regu­la­tion is thus becom­ing one of the most impor­tant lead­er­ship skills of our time – across all industries.

Rela­tion­ships & psycho­log­i­cal safe­ty: lead­er­ship as social architecture

A direct compar­i­son between bono­bos and chim­panzees shows how strong­ly lead­er­ship styles shape culture. Bono­bos ensure cohe­sion through close­ness, diplo­ma­cy and social intel­li­gence – chim­panzees through domi­nance and compe­ti­tion. The 2024/2025 pet study confirms that social bonds have a profound influ­ence on behaviour.

For lead­er­ship real­i­ty, this means:

Rela­tion­ship orien­ta­tion is not a ‘soft factor’ but a strate­gic lead­er­ship tool. Short, regu­lar discus­sions with­out any inten­tion of control strength­en psycho­log­i­cal secu­ri­ty – the basis for inno­v­a­tive strength, commit­ment and team stabil­i­ty. Culture is not creat­ed through programmes but through consis­tent rela­tion­ship building.

Situ­a­tion­al compe­tence: lead­er­ship as a flex­i­ble system, not a title

Dr Jennifer Hatlauf’s wolf research (BOKU Vien­na, 2025) exem­pli­fies how situ­a­tion­al lead­er­ship works: respon­si­bil­i­ty shifts to where the high­est level of compe­tence lies. Exper­tise instead of status – context instead of position.

For organ­i­sa­tions, this means:

Lead­er­ship is a dynam­ic process. Teams become faster, clear­er and more respon­si­ble when managers allow situ­a­tion­al compe­tence and open­ly iden­ti­fy who has the best basis for deci­sion-making on which issues. This creates owner­ship and increas­es the qual­i­ty of joint decisions.

Impact & pres­ence: atti­tude as a lead­er­ship tool

Hors­es in equicoach­ing do not respond to words, but to ener­gy, body language and inner align­ment. Chameleons remind us how power­ful non-verbal commu­ni­ca­tion can be when used conscious­ly. Impact comes before argu­ments – and often inde­pen­dent­ly of them.

 

For managers, this means:

A sharp­ened impact profile is essen­tial. Ques­tions such as ‘How do I come across when I am calm? Under pres­sure? When uncer­tain?’ form the basis for a pres­ence that provides orien­ta­tion. An authen­tic atti­tude and clear body language are among the most effec­tive – and at the same time under­es­ti­mat­ed – lead­er­ship tools.

Role inno­va­tion & flex­i­bil­i­ty: strength­en­ing struc­tures instead of hold­ing on to them

The role model of seahors­es shows that systems become stable when roles are designed to be func­tion­al rather than tradi­tion­al. Nature does not follow conven­tions – it follows the prin­ci­ple of effectiveness.

For modern lead­er­ship, this means:

The courage to inno­vate roles, conscious rota­tion and shared respon­si­bil­i­ty strength­en resilience, creativ­i­ty and adapt­abil­i­ty. It is not the usual roles that create success – but the right ones.

Conclu­sion: Behav­iour beats position

These insights are much more than biolog­i­cal­ly inspir­ing obser­va­tions – they confirm funda­men­tal lead­er­ship prin­ci­ples that we have repeat­ed­ly empha­sised in our previ­ous lead­er­ship impuls­es: clar­i­ty, inter­per­son­al skills, situ­a­tion­al sensi­tiv­i­ty and a consis­tent­ly prac­tised lead­er­ship attitude.

Effec­tive lead­er­ship does not come from formal power, but from behav­iour. Nature impres­sive­ly shows us how lead­er­ship works when it focus­es on clar­i­ty, atti­tude, rela­tion­ships, percep­tion and situ­a­tion­al compe­tence. Animals lead through behav­iour – and create orien­ta­tion because they embody calm­ness, use exper­tise, form bonds or conscious­ly assign roles.

For modern organ­i­sa­tions, this means that

lead­er­ship is less about what we say and more about what we do, radi­ate and enable. This is precise­ly the differ­ence between manage­ment and true leadership.

Sources

Stud­ies & scien­tif­ic papers

      1. Study by BOKU Vien­na – Wolf behav­iour & conflict management
      2. Prof. Dr. Jan Wirsam, HTW Berlin – Social-coop­er­a­tive lead­er­ship styles
      3. Pet study 2024/2025 – HorseFuturePanel
      4. https://hunderunden.de/artikel/haustierstudie-2425
      5. https://www.lifepr.de/inaktiv/takefive-media-gmbh/haustier-studie-2024–2025-erforscht-trends-rund-um-heimtierhaltung-nachhaltigkeit-und-das-einkaufsverhalten/boxid/991191
      6. Study on coop­er­a­tive hunt­ing commu­ni­ties of octo­pus­es and fish (2024)

Further read­ing and articles

    1. Lead­er­ship inspi­ra­tion: impact and personality
    2. https://grundl.de/blog/wirkungspersoenlichkeiten-fuehrung/
    3. Beck eLibrary – Publi­ca­tions on leadership
    4. https://www.beck-elibrary.de/document/download/pdf/uuid/a30927e8-6c99-32a6-9908–1d47b352882a

ntschei­dungs­grund­lage hat. Das schafft Owner­ship und erhöht die Qual­ität gemein­samer Entscheidungen.

Wirkung & Präsenz: Haltung als Leadership-Werkzeug

Pferde im Equicoach­ing reagieren nicht auf Worte, sondern auf Energie, Körper­sprache und innere Ausrich­tung. Chamäleons erin­nern daran, wie mächtig nonver­bale Wirkung ist, wenn sie bewusst einge­set­zt wird. Wirkung entste­ht vor Argu­menten – und oft unab­hängig von ihnen.HR Manag­er – Animal metaphors in leadership

  1. https://www.humanresourcesmanager.de/content/der-rat-der-tiere-wie-hr-von-tieren-lernen-kann/
  2. Foran – Lead­er­ship lessons from the animal world
  3. https://foran.ch/news/blog/detail/von-loewen-bis-bonobos-was-wir-in-der-tierwelt-ueber-leadership-lernen-koennen/

(Image sources: dream­stime, istockphotos)

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