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Leadership

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Title: Fiedler s LPC Octants Author: Western Oregon University Last modified by: Western Oregon University Created Date: 11/25/2001 12:05:04 AM Document ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Leadership


1
Leadership
2
Leadership
  • What is it?
  • Hard to define
  • We know it when we see it
  • General Definition
  • Social influence in an organizational setting,
    the effects of which are relevant to or have an
    impact on the achievement of organizational goals

3
Leader Effectiveness
  • How can we tell a good leader from a poor
    leader? (What results would we expect to see from
    a good leader?)
  • Performance (the job gets done)
  • Motivation (followers are energized)
  • Effort (followers try hard)
  • Satisfaction (followers are happy)

4
Focus of Trait Approach
Personality Assessments
Leader
  • Focuses exclusively on leader
  • What traits leaders exhibit
  • Who has these traits
  • Organizations use personality assessments to
    find Right people
  • Assumption - will increase organizational
    effectiveness
  • Specify characteristics/traits for specific
    positions
  • Personality assessment measures for fit

5
Strengths
  • Highlights leadership component in the leadership
    process
  • Deeper level understanding of how
    leader/personality related to leadership process
  • Provides benchmarks for what to look for in a
    leader
  • Intuitively appealing
  • Perception that leaders are different in that
    they possess special traits
  • People need to view leaders as gifted
  • Credibility due to a century of research support

6
Criticisms
  • Fails to delimit a definitive list of leadership
    traits
  • Endless lists have emerged
  • Doesnt take into account situational effects
  • Leaders in one situation may not be leaders in
    another situation
  • List of most important leadership traits is
    highly subjective
  • Much subjective experience observations serve
    as basis for identified leadership traits
  • Research fails to look at traits in relationship
    to leadership outcomes
  • Not useful for training development

7
Application
  • Provides direction as to which traits are good to
    have if one aspires to a leadership position
  • Through various tests and questionnaires,
    individuals can determine whether they have the
    select leadership traits and can pinpoint their
    strengths and weaknesses
  • Can be used by managers to assess where they
    stand within their organization and what is
    needed to strengthen their position
  • Leadership Traits
  • Intelligence
  • Self-Confidence
  • Determination
  • Integrity
  • Sociability
  • Adaptability

8
Style Approach Description
Perspective
Definition
  • Comprised of Two Kinds of Behaviors
  • Task behaviors
  • Facilitate goal accomplishment
  • Relationship behaviors
  • Help subordinates feel comfortable with
    themselves, each other, and the situation
  • Leader-focused perspective
  • Emphasis on what leaders do and how they act

9
Style Approach
Focus
Overall Scope
  • Primarily a framework for assessing leadership in
    a broad way as behavior with a task and
    relationship dimension
  • Offers a means of generally assessing the
    behaviors of leaders

10
Strengths
  • Style Approach marked a major shift in leadership
    research from exclusively trait focused to
    include behaviors and actions of leaders
  • Broad range of studies on leadership style
    validates and gives credibility to the basic
    tenets of the approach
  • At conceptual level, a leaders style is composed
    of two major types of behaviors task and
    relationship
  • Based on style approach, leaders can assess their
    actions and determine how to change to improve
    their leadership style

11
Criticisms
  • Research has not adequately demonstrated how
    leaders styles are associated with performance
    outcomes
  • No universal style of leadership that could be
    effective in most situations
  • Implies that the most effective leadership style
    is High-High style (i.e., high task/high
    relationship) research finding support is limited

12
Leadership as Behavior
  • 100s of studies examined the effects of leader
    behavior on employees.
  • Results were mixed, inconclusive (Bass, 1990).
  • Fleishman and Harris (1962) found that initiating
    structure was positively related to employee
    grievances and turnover.
  • House, Filley, and Kerr (1971) found evidence
    suggesting initiating structure was positively
    related to employee satisfaction.

13
Leadership as Behavior
  • Fleischman Harris
  • The effects of IS on grievances depends on
    Consideration
  • The effects of both traits and behavior on leader
    effectiveness depends on the situation

14
Contingency Theory Approach
Leaders match their style to the competence and
commitment of subordinates.
Perspective
Definition
  • Contingency theory is a leader-match theory
    (Fiedler Chemers, 1974)
  • Tries to match leaders to appropriate situations
  • Leaders effectiveness depends on how well the
    leaders style fits the context
  • Fiedler et al.s generalizations about which
    styles of leadership are best and worst are
    empirically grounded
  • Effective leadership is contingent on matching a
    leaders style to the right setting

15
Leadership Styles
Definition
Dimension Definitions
  • Leadership styles are described as
  • Task motivated
  • Relationship motivated
  • Task-motivated leaders -Concerned primarily with
    reaching a goal
  • Relationship-motivated leaders - Concerned with
    developing close interpersonal
    relationships

Leader Style Measurement Scale
Least Preferred Co-Worker (LPC) Scale
High Relationship-motivated leader Low
Task-motivated leader
16
Situational Variables
Situational Factors
Definition
  • LMR - Refers to the group atmosphere and the
    degree of confidence, loyalty, and attraction of
    followers for leader
  • TS - Concerns the degree to which requirements of
    a task are clear and spelled out
  • PP - Designates the amount of authority a leader
    has to reward or punish followers
  • Leader-Member Relations
  • Task Structure
  • Position Power

Determine Favorableness of Situations in
Organizations
17
Contingency Model
18
Strengths
  • Empirical support. Contingency theory has been
    tested by many researchers and found to be a
    valid and reliable approach to explaining how to
    achieve effective leadership.
  • Broadened understanding. Contingency theory has
    broadened the scope of leadership understanding
    from a focus on a single, best type of leadership
    (e.g., trait approach) to emphasizing the
    importance of a leaders style and the demands of
    different situations.
  • Predictive. Because Contingency theory is
    predictive, it provides relevant information
    regarding the type of leadership that is most
    likely to be effective in particular contexts.
  • Not an all-or-nothing approach. Contingency
    theory contends that leaders should not expect
    to be effective in every situation thus
    companies should strive to place leaders in
    optimal situations according to their leadership
    style.
  • Leadership profiles. Contingency theory supplies
    data on leadership styles that could be useful to
    organizations in developing leadership profiles
    for human resource planning.

19
Criticisms
  • Fails to fully explain why leaders with
    particular leadership styles are more effective
    in some situations than others (Black Box
    problem)
  • Criticism of LPC scale validity as it does not
    correlate well with other standard leadership
    measures
  • Cumbersome to use in real-world settings
  • Fails to adequately explain what should be done
    about a leader/situation mismatch in the
    workplace

20
Path-Goal Theory Approach
Perspective
Definition
  • Goal - To enhance employee performance and
    satisfaction by focusing on employee motivation
  • Premise - Subordinates will be motivated if they
    believe (a) they are capable of performing their
    work (b) that their efforts will be rewarded
    and (c) that the payoff will be worthwhile
  • Challenge - To use a leadership style that best
    meets subordinates motivational needs
  • Path-goal theory centers on how leaders motivate
    subordinates to accomplish designated goals

21
Conditions of Leadership Motivation
Leadership generates motivation when
  • It increases the number and kinds of payoffs
  • Path to the goal is clear and easily traveled
    with coaching and direction
  • Obstacles and roadblocks are removed
  • The work itself is personally satisfying

22
Path-Goal Theory Approach
Focus
Overall Scope
  • Path-goal theory is a complex but also pragmatic
    approach
  • Leaders should choose a leadership style that
    best fits the needs of subordinates and their
    work
  • Path-goal theory provides a set of assumptions
    about how different leadership styles will
    interact with subordinate characteristics and the
    work situation to affect employee motivation

23
Situational Theories of Leadership
  • Path-Goal Theory hypothesizes that effects of
    leader behavior on employee performance and
    satisfaction depend on how leader behavior
    affects employee motivation.

Directive - Providing guidelines on how to
perform tasks..  Supportive - demonstrating
concern for subordinates well being and must be
supportive of them as individuals.  Participative
- leader must solicit ideas and suggestions from
subordinates and directly invite their
participation.  Achievement - leader sets
challenging goals, emphasizing improvements in
work performance, and encouraging high levels of
goal attainment.  Effective leaders need all
four of these styles since each produces
different results. 
24
Strengths
  • Useful theoretical framework. Path-goal theory is
    a useful theoretical framework for understanding
    how various leadership behaviors affect the
    satisfaction of subordinates and their work
    performance.
  • Integrates motivation. Path-goal theory attempts
    to integrate the motivation principles of
    expectancy theory into a theory of leadership.
  • Practical model. Path-goal theory provides a
    practical model that underscores and highlights
    the important ways leaders help subordinates.

25
Criticisms
  • Interpreting the meaning of the theory can be
    confusing because it is so complex and
    incorporates so many different aspects of
    leadership consequently, it is difficult to
    implement.
  • Empirical research studies have demonstrated only
    partial support for path-goal theory.
  • It fails to adequately explain the relationship
    between leadership behavior and worker
    motivation.
  • The path-goal theory approach treats leadership
    as a one-way event in which the leader affects
    the subordinate.

26
Application
  • PGT offers valuable insights that can be applied
    in ongoing settings to improve ones leadership.
  • Informs leaders about when to be directive,
    supportive, participative, or achievement
    oriented
  • The principles of PGT can be employed by leaders
    at all organizational levels and for all types of
    tasks

27
Situational Theories of Leadership
  • Vroom-Yetton Normative Model
  • Leadership as decision making
  • Decision-situation model
  • Theorized that performance was affected by the
    process leaders use to make decisions

28
Vroom-Yetton Normative Model
  • Process used to make decision affects
  • Decision quality
  • Decision acceptance
  • The effectiveness of any decision making process
    depends on several situational factors

29
Decision Making Example
  • You are the head of a personnel department which
    reports to the company president. The president
    has asked you to make recommendations on how to
    change and update the performance appraisal
    system. You are not sure about the approach to
    take. Your specialty is selection and you desire
    more information on performance appraisal.
    Fortunately, three members of your staff are
    experienced with the various aspects of
    performance appraisal. However, they rarely agree
    with each other on the best way to achieve
    something when it comes to performance appraisal.
    Fortunately, for this project, these employees
    will not implement the recommendations.

30
Leadership as Power
  • Agent exerts more influence on a target than a
    target can resist.
  • Possible outcomes of using power
  • Resistance
  • Compliance
  • Commitment
  • Sources of Power
  • Reward
  • Coercive
  • Legitimate
  • Expert
  • Referent

31
Likely Outcomes of Using Power
32
LMX Theory Approach Description
Perspective
Definition
  • Development - LMX theory first described by
    Dansereau, Graen, Haga (1975), Graen Cashman
    (1975), and Graen (1976)
  • Revisions - Theory has undergone a number of
    revisions since its inception and continues to be
    of interest to researchers
  • Assumption - LMX theory challenges the assumption
    that leaders treat followers in a collective way.
  • LMX theory conceptualizes leadership as a process
    centered in the interactions between leaders and
    followers.

33
Later Studies
  • Initial research primarily addressed differences
    between in-groups and out-groups later research
    addressed how LMX theory was related to
    organizational effectiveness
  • Researchers (Graen Uhl-Bien, 1995) found that
    high-quality leader-member exchanges resulted in
  • Less employee turnover
  • More positive performance evaluations
  • Higher frequency of promotions
  • Greater organizational commitment
  • More desirable work assignments
  • Better job attitudes
  • More attention and support from the leader
  • Greater participation
  • Faster career progress

34
Phases in Leadership MakingGraen Uhl-Bien
(1995)
Phase 1
Phase 2
Phase 3
35
Phase 1Graen Uhl-Bien (1995)
Phase 1
Stranger
  • Interactions rule bound
  • Rely on contractual relationships
  • Relate to each other within prescribed
  • organizational roles
  • Experience lower quality exchanges
  • Subordinate motives directed
  • toward self-interest

36
Phase 2Graen Uhl-Bien (1995)
Phase 2
Acquaintance
  • Offer by leader/subordinate for improved
  • career-oriented social exchanges
  • Testing period of taking on new roles and
  • leader providing new challenges
  • Shift from formalized interactions to
  • new ways of relating
  • Quality of exchanges improve along with
  • greater trust and respect
  • Less focus on self-interest, more on goals of
  • the group

37
Phase 3Graen Uhl-Bien (1995)
38
LMX Theory Approach
Descriptive
Prescriptive
  • Essential to recognize existence of in-groups
    out-groups
  • Significant differences in how goals are
    accomplished using in-groups vs. out-groups
  • Relevant differences in in-group vs. out-group
    behaviors
  • Best understood within the Leadership Making
    Model
  • Leader forms special relationship with each
    subordinate
  • Leader should offer each subordinate an
    opportunity for new roles/responsibilities
  • Leader should nurture high-quality exchanges
    with all subordinates
  • Rather than concentrating on differences, leader
    should focus on ways to build trust

39
Strengths
  • LMX theory validates our experience of how people
    within organizations relate to each other and the
    leader
  • LMX theory is the only leadership approach that
    makes the dyadic relationship the centerpiece of
    the leadership process
  • LMX theory directs our attention to the
    importance of communication
  • Solid research foundation on how the practice of
    LMX theory is related to positive organizational
    outcomes

40
Criticisms
  • Inadvertently supports the development of
    privileged groups in the workplace appears
    unfair and discriminatory
  • The basic theoretical ideas of LMX are not fully
    developed
  • Because of various scales and levels of analysis,
    measurement of leader-member exchanges is being
    questioned

41
Application
  • Applicable to all levels of management and
    different types of organizations
  • Directs managers to assess their leadership from
    a relationship perspective
  • Sensitizes managers to how in-groups and
    out-groups develop within their work unit
  • Can be used to explain how individuals create
    leadership networks throughout an organization

42
Model of Transformational LeadershipBass (1985)
Transformational Leadership
Transactional Leadership
Laissez-Faire Leadership
  • TL motivates followers beyond the expected by
  • raising consciousness about the value and
    importance of specific and idealized goals
  • transcending self-interest for the good of the
    organization
  • addressing higher-level needs

43
Transformational Leadership Factors
Factor 4 Individualized Consideration
Factor 6 Mgmt. by Exception Active
Passive Corrective Transactions
Lassiez-Faire
Transformational
Transactional
  • Leaders who exhibit TL
  • have a strong set of values ideals
  • are effective in motivating followers to support
  • greater good over self-interest

44
Transformational Leadership FactorsThe 4 Is
Idealized Influence
Describes leaders who act as strong role models
for followers
Inspirational Motivation
Leaders who communicate high expectations to
followers, inspiring them through motivation to
commitment and engagement in the shared vision of
the organization
Intellectual Stimulation
Stimulates followers to be creative and
innovative challenges their own beliefs and
values and those of leader and organization
Individualized Consideration
Leaders who provide a supportive climate in which
they listen carefully to the needs of followers
45
Transactional Leadership Factors
Contingent Reward
The exchange process between leaders and
followers in which effort by followers is
exchanged for specified rewards
Management by Exception
  • Leadership that involves corrective criticism,
    negative feedback, and
  • negative reinforcement
  • Two forms
  • Active - Watches follower closely to identify
    mistakes/rule violations
  • Passive - Intervenes only after standards have
    not been met or
  • problems have arisen

46
Nonleadership Factor
Laissez-Faire
The absence of leadership. A hands-off,
let-things-ride approach. Refers to a leader who
abdicates responsibility, delays decisions, gives
no feedback, and makes little effort to help
followers satisfy their needs.
47
Transformational Leadership Approach
Focus of Transformational Leaders
Overall Scope
  • Describes how leaders can initiate, develop, and
    carry out significant changes in organizations
  • TLs empower and nurture followers
  • TLs stimulate change by becoming strong role
    models for followers
  • TLs commonly create a vision
  • TLs act as change agents
  • TLs are social architects

48
Strengths
  • Broadly researched. TL has been widely
    researched, including a large body of qualitative
    research centering on prominent leaders and CEOs
    in major firms.
  • Intuitive appeal. People are attracted to TL
    because it makes sense to them.
  • Process-focused. TL treats leadership as a
    process occurring between followers and leaders.
  • Expansive leadership view. TL provides a broader
    view of leadership that augments other leadership
    models.
  • Emphasizes follower. TL emphasizes followers
    needs, values, and morals.
  • Effectiveness. Evidence supports that TL is an
    effective form of leadership.

49
Criticisms
  • Lacks conceptual clarity
  • Dimensions are not clearly delimited
  • Parameters of TL overlap with similar
    conceptualizations of leadership
  • Measurement questioned
  • Validity of MLQ not fully established
  • Some transformational factors are not unique
    solely to the transformational model
  • TL treats leadership more as a personality trait
    or predisposition than a behavior that can be
    taught
  • TL is elitist and antidemocratic
  • Suffers from heroic leadership bias
  • TL is based primarily on qualitative data
  • Has the potential to be abused

50
Application
  • Provides a general way of thinking about
    leadership that stresses ideals, inspiration,
    innovations, and individual concerns
  • Can be taught to individuals at all levels of the
    organization
  • Able to positively impact a firms performance
  • May be used as a tool in recruitment, selection,
    promotion, and training development
  • Can be used to improve team development,
    decision-making groups, quality initiatives, and
    reorganizations
  • The MLQ helps leaders to target areas of
    leadership improvement
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