Influence of Leadership Commitment on the Implementation of Performance Contracting Among Private Universities in Nakuru County, Kenya
Date
2025-08Author
Linda Mwendwa, Mwirigi
Vivian, Cherono
Abel, Moguche
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Private universities in Nakuru County, Kenya, continued to face challenges in effectively
implementing performance contracting due to limited leadership commitment, unclear
communication, and weak feedback mechanisms. This undermined institutional alignment with
strategic goals and compromised accountability frameworks. The purpose of this study was to
assess the influence of leadership commitment on the implementation of performance
contracting in private universities in Nakuru County. The study was grounded in the
Transformational Leadership Theory by Burns (1978) and Bass (1985), which emphasizes
vision-driven and participatory leadership. A descriptive research design was adopted,
targeting a population of 616 academic and non-academic staff from Kabarak University,
Mount Kenya University (Nakuru Campus), and St. Paul’s University (Nakuru Campus). The
study used proportionate simple random sampling, and the sample size of 243 respondents was
determined using Yamane’s formula. Sample sizes per institution were distributed
proportionally across clusters. Data were collected through structured self-administered
questionnaires and analyzed using SPSS Version 25. Descriptive statistics summarized
leadership behaviors, while inferential techniques such as Pearson correlation and multiple
regression analysis examined relationships between variables. The findings revealed high
levels of agreement among respondents on leadership vision, accountability, and participatory
decision-making. Pearson’s correlation indicated a statistically significant moderate positive
relationship between leadership commitment and performance contracting (r = 0.482, p <
0.01). Regression analysis showed that leadership commitment significantly predicted
performance contract implementation (? = 0.563, p = 0.000), with an R2 of 0.232, indicating
that 23.2% of the variance was explained by the predictor. The study contributes to existing
knowledge by confirming that transformational leadership behaviors play a pivotal role in
enhancing performance-based management systems in higher education institutions.
Subject
Leadership CommitmentPerformance Contracting
Transformational Leadership
Private Universities
