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Big Shot Online

Author: Dr. A. Sterling Journal: Journal of Organizational Behavior & Social Dynamics (Vol. 14, Issue 2) Accepted: October 2023 Abstract The term "Big Shot" is commonly used to describe an individual of exceptional influence, wealth, or talent within a given field. Despite its colloquial familiarity, the construct lacks rigorous academic definition. This paper synthesizes literature from social psychology, network theory, and organizational behavior to propose a tripartite model of the Big Shot: (1) Structural Power (position in a hierarchy), (2) Performative Visibility (public demonstration of competence), and (3) Attributional Exaggeration (social overestimation of agency). Through a mixed-methods analysis—including case studies of corporate CEOs, celebrity scientists, and political leaders—we identify the "Big Shot Paradox": the very traits that elevate an individual to Big Shot status (decisiveness, charisma, risk-tolerance) are the same traits that precipitate their most spectacular failures. Findings suggest that Big Shots function as both organizational assets and systemic liabilities, with implications for leadership evaluation, succession planning, and cultural critique.

Existing literature on leadership tends to focus on traits (e.g., narcissism, charisma) or outcomes (e.g., firm performance, innovation). We argue that the Big Shot is a unique category defined not by output but by perceived causal centrality —the belief that the individual, rather than context or team, is the prime mover of events. This perception is socially constructed, yet it has very real material effects. We propose three necessary and sufficient conditions for Big Shot status: Big Shot

Big Shot, power dynamics, social perception, leadership paradox, hubris syndrome 1. Introduction In popular discourse, the "Big Shot" is an unmistakable figure: the hedge fund manager who moves markets with a single trade, the tech founder who unveils a world-changing product, the celebrity director whose name alone guarantees box office returns. Yet, as Merton (1968) noted in his work on the Matthew Effect, the accumulation of status often decouples from actual merit. This paper asks: What distinguishes a Big Shot from merely a successful person? And what are the organizational and psychological consequences of becoming one? Author: Dr