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Leadership In

Organizations

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Leadership

 The ability to influence people toward the attainment


of organizational goals.
 Leadership is reciprocal, occurring among people.
 Leadership is a “people” activity, distinct from
administrative paper shuffling or problem-solving
activities.
 Leadership is dynamic and involves the use of power.

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Leadership versus Management

The major differences between the leader and the manager relate to their source
of power and level of compliance.

Management Power:
 Comes from organizational structure.
 Promotes stability, order, and problem solving within the structure.
Leadership Power:
 Comes from personal sources, such as personal interests, goals, and
values.
 Promotes vision, creativity, and change.

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Leader and Manager Qualities

SOURCE: Based on Genevieve


Capowski, “Anatomy of a Leader:
Where Are the Leaders of Tomorrow?”
Management Review, March 1994, 12.

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Forms of Position Power

 Legitimate Power: power coming from a formal management


position.
 Reward Power: stems from the authority to bestow rewards on
other people.
 Coercive Power: the authority to punish or recommend
punishment.

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Forms of Personal Power

 Expert Power: leader’s special knowledge or skill regarding the


tasks performed by followers.
 Referent Power: personality characteristics that command
subordinates’ identification, respect, and admiration so they wish
to emulate the leader.

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Personal Characteristics
of Leaders
Physical characteristics Personality Social characteristics
Activity Alertness Ability to enlist cooperation
Energy Originality, creativity Popularity, prestige
Personal integrity Sociability, interpersonal skills
Self-confidence Social participation
Tact, diplomacy

Social background Work-related characteristics


Mobility Achievement drive
Drive for responsibility
Responsibility in pursuit of goals
Task orientation
Intelligence and ability
Judgment, decisiveness
Knowledge
Fluency of speech
Source: Adapted from Bernard M. Bass, Stogdill’s Handbook of Leadership, rev. Ed. (New York: Free Press, 1981), 75-76. This adaptation appeared in
R. Albanese and D. D. Van Fleet, Organizational Behavior: A Managerial Viewpoint (Hinsdale, III.: The Dryden Press, 1983).

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Leadership Continuum

SOURCE: Reprinted by permission of Harvard Business Review. An exhibit from Robert Tannenbaum and Warren Schmidt, “How to Choose a Leadership Pattern” (May-June 1973). Copyright ©
1973 by the president and Fellows of Harvard College, all rights reserved.

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Behavioral Approaches that Help
Determine Leadership Effectiveness

Consideration:
– Is mindful of subordinates.
– Establishes mutual trust.
– Provides open communication.
– Develops teamwork.
Initiating Structure:
– Is task oriented.
– Directs subordinate work activities toward goal attainment.
– Typically gives instructions, spends time planning, and emphasizes deadlines.
– Provides explicit schedules of work activities.

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The Leadership Grid Figure
High 1,9 9,9
Country Club Management Team Management
Thoughtful attention to the Work accomplishment is from
needs of people for satisfying committed people; interdependence
relationships leads to a com- through a “common stake” in
fortable, friendly organization organization purpose leads to
atmosphere and work tempo. relationships of trust and respect.
Concern for People

5,5
Middle-of-the-Road Management
Adequate organization performance is
possible through balancing the necessity
to get out work with maintaining morale of
people at a satisfactory level.
Impoverished Authority-Compliance
Management Efficiency in operations results
Exertion of minimum effort from arranging conditions of
to get required work done work in such a way that human
is appropriate to sustain elements interfere to a
Low organization membership. minimum
1,1 degree. 9,1
Low Concern for Production High
Source: The Leadership Grid Figure from Robert R. Blake and Anne Adams McCanse, Leadership Dilemmas-Grid Solutions (Houston: Gulf, 1991), 29.
Copyright 1991, by Scientific Methods, Inc. Reproduced by permission of the owners.
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Three Elements of
Leadership Situations

 Leader-member relations: refers to group atmosphere and


members’ attitude toward and acceptance of the leader.
 Task structure: refers to the extent to which tasks performed
by the group are defined, involve specific procedures, and have
clear, explicit goals.
 Position power: is the extent to which the leader has formal
authority over subordinates.

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Hersey and Blanchard’s
Situational Theory

• A contingency approach to leadership that links the leader’s


behavioral style with the task readiness of subordinates.
• Levels of readiness:
– Low
– Moderate
– High
– Very high

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Path-Goal Theory

Contingency approach, the leader’s responsibility is to


increase subordinates’ motivation to attain personal and
organizational goals through:
 Clarifying the paths to rewards.
 Increasing the rewards that the subordinate values and
desires.

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Leader Roles in the
Path-Goal Model

SOURCE: Based on Bernard M. Bass,


“Leadership: Good, Better, Best,”
Organizational Dynamics 13 (Winter
1985),26-40

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Path-Goal Classification of
Leader Behaviors
 Supportive leadership:
… Leader behavior that shows concern for subordinates.
… Open, friendly, and approachable.
… Creates a team climate.
… Treats subordinates as equals.
 Directive leadership:
… Tells subordinates exactly what they are supposed to do.
… Planning, making schedules, setting performance goals, and behavior standards.
 Participative leadership:
… Consults with his or her subordinates about decisions.
 Achievement-oriented leadership:
… Sets clear and challenging goals for subordinates.
… Behavior stresses high-quality performance.
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Situational Contingencies
Two important situational contingencies
in the path-goal theory.

 The personal characteristics of group members.


 The work environment.

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Path-Goal Situations and
Preferred Leader Behaviors

SOURCE: Adapted from Gary A. Yukl, Leadership in Organizations (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall 1981), 146-152.

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Change Leadership

Charismatic Leaders:
 The ability to inspire.
 Motivate people to do more than they would normally do.
 Tend to be less predictable than transactional leaders.
 Create an atmosphere of change.
 May be obsessed by visionary ideas.
Transactional Leaders:
 Clarify the role and task requirements of subordinates.
 Initiate structure.
 Provide appropriate rewards.
 Try to be considerate.
 Meet the social needs of subordinates.

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New Workplace & Leadership

Four areas of interest

Level 5 leadership

Women’s ways of leading

Virtual leadership

Servant leadership

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