followership


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Related to followership: leadership

fol·low

 (fŏl′ō)
v. fol·lowed, fol·low·ing, fol·lows
v.tr.
1.
a. To come or go after; proceed behind: Follow the usher to your seat.
b. To go after in pursuit: would follow his enemy to the ends of the earth.
c. To keep under surveillance: The agent followed the suspect around town.
2.
a. To move along the course of; take: We followed the path.
b. To move in the direction of; be guided by: followed the sun westward; followed the signs to the zoo.
c. To lie in the same path as: The road follows the old trading route.
d. To be parallel to: The road follows the river.
3. To accept the guidance, command, or leadership of: follow a spiritual master; rebels who refused to follow their leader.
4. To adhere to; practice: followed family traditions.
5. To take as a model or precedent; imitate: followed my example and resigned.
6.
a. To act in agreement or compliance with; obey: follow the rules; follow one's instincts.
b. To keep to or stick to: followed the recipe; follow a diet.
7. To engage in (a trade or occupation); work at.
8. To come after in order, time, or position: Night follows day.
9. To bring something about at a later time than or as a consequence of: She followed her lecture with a question-and-answer period. The band followed its hit album with a tour.
10. To occur or be evident as a consequence of: Your conclusion does not follow your premise.
11.
a. To watch or observe closely: followed the bird through binoculars.
b. To be attentive to; pay close heed to: too sleepy to follow the sermon.
c. To keep oneself informed of the course, progress, or fortunes of: follow the stock market; followed the local teams.
12. To grasp the meaning or logic of; understand: Do you follow my argument?
v.intr.
1. To come, move, or take place after another person or thing in order or time.
2. To occur or be evident as a consequence; result: If you ignore your diet, trouble will follow.
3. To grasp the meaning or reasoning of something; understand.
n.
Games A billiards shot in which the cue ball is struck above center so that it follows the path of the object ball after impact.
Phrasal Verbs:
follow along
To move or proceed in unison or in accord with an example: followed along with the song.
follow through
1. Sports To carry a stroke to natural completion after hitting or releasing a ball or other object.
2. To carry an act, project, or intention to completion; pursue fully: followed through on her promise to fix the oven.
follow up
To increase the effectiveness or enhance the success of by further action: followed up her interview with an email.
Idioms:
as follows
As will be stated next. Used to introduce a specified enumeration, explanation, or command.
follow (one's) nose
1. To move straight ahead or in a direct path.
2. Informal To be guided by instinct: had no formal training but became a success by following his nose.
follow suit
1. Games To play a card of the same suit as the one led.
2. To do as another has done; follow an example.

[Middle English folowen, from Old English folgian.]

fol′low·er·ship′ n.
Synonyms: follow, succeed, ensue, result
These verbs mean to come after something or someone. Follow, the most general, refers to people or things that come after another in time or order or as a consequence or result: You go first, and we'll follow. He disregarded doctor's orders, and a relapse soon followed. To succeed is to come next after another, especially in planned order determined by considerations such as rank, inheritance, or election: The heir apparent succeeded to the throne. Ensue and result are used only of events or conditions that follow another in time. Ensue usually applies to what is a consequence: After the government was toppled, chaos ensued. Result implies that what follows is caused by what has preceded: Driving over the speed limit can result in a fine.
Usage Note: As follows (not as follow) is the established form of the idiom regardless of whether the noun that precedes it is singular or plural: The regulations are as follows.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

followership

(ˈfɒləʊəˌʃɪp)
n
the act of following rather than leading
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

fol•low•er•ship

(ˈfɒl oʊ ərˌʃɪp)

n.
1. the ability or willingness to follow a leader.
2. a group of followers or supporters.
[1925–30]
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive ?
Furthermore, he bemoaned that recklessness in leadership and followership was because several Nigerians were not spiritually grounded, stressing the need for the nation's leaders to work with the church to restore the nation's fortunes.
Social media could be cult-like in its followership. Sometimes, an "influencer" may have thousands of followers, but for the wrong reasons.
Followership has been studied in leadership development.
We know this intuitively, but we spend much more time thinking about leadership than we do followership. A simple Google search of the word leadership yields 3.8 billion hits while searching followership brings up only a mere 1.1 million hits.
Robert Kelly, in his book "The Power of Followership," writes that in any corporate organization, leaders contribute on the average no more than 20 percent of the success of the organization.
After surpassing popular Urdu channels like Zee Salaam, Munsif TV and iPlus TV in terms of social media followership and engagement, Tehzeeb TV is now giving a tough fight to News18 Urdu on Facebook that owned the industry of Urdu channels in India from past 18 years.
However, for the research to be more valuable, studies on followership from the employee perspective should be based on the common taxonomy of central tendency prototypes (i.e., how employees are) or goal-derived ideal prototypes (i.e., how employees should be; Schyns & Meindl, 2005).
As such, followership of the newspaper's Pakistan social media account has quickly ballooned.
According to locals, Zubair Virk,55, is Zulfikar Ali Bhutto look-alike as he often draws public attention and appreciation while walking on city roads, streets and attending functions, for bearing great resemblance to the late charismatic leader who has left behind a strong legacy of followership. 'I feel much pleasure and proud when hear to the people chant slogans of 'Zinda Hey Bhutto Zinda Hey' and 'Jiey Bhutto' after seeing him everywhere', he expressed.
Juliet Ibrahim obviously is doing something right that is keeping her followership base on Instagram on a steady rise.
He said that rather than formal working relationship with employees, he wanted to develop followership among them.
For his part, Botswana Cycling Association representative, Kagiso Potongwane said cycling was experiencing growth in followership and participation.