Chapter 08
Chapter 08
Leadership
8
LEARNING OUTLINE
Follow this Learning Outline as you read and study this chapter.
Source: S. A. Kirkpatrick and E. A. Locke, “Leadership: Do Traits Really Matter?” Academy of Management
Executive, May 1991, pp. 48–60; T. A. Judge, J. E. Bono, R. llies, and M. W. Gerhardt, “Personality and
Leadership: A Qualitative and Quantitative Review,” Journal of Applied Psychology, August 2002, pp. 765–780.
Exhibit 17–2 Behavioral Theories of Leadership
Exhibit 17–2 (cont’d) Behavioral Theories of Leadership
Early Leadership Theories (cont’d)
• Behavioral Theories
University of Iowa Studies (Kurt Lewin)
Identified three leadership styles:
– Autocratic style: centralized authority, low participation
– Democratic style: involvement, high participation, feedback
– Laissez faire style: hands-off management
Research findings: mixed results
– No specific style was consistently better for producing better
performance
– Employees were more satisfied under a democratic leader
than an autocratic leader.
Early Leadership Theories (cont’d)
• Behavioral Theories (cont’d)
Ohio State Studies
Identified two dimensions of leader behavior
– Initiating structure: the role of the leader in defining his
or her role and the roles of group members
– Consideration: the leader’s mutual trust and respect for
group members’ ideas and feelings.
Research findings: mixed results
– High-high leaders generally, but not always, achieved high
group task performance and satisfaction.
– Evidence indicated that situational factors appeared to
strongly influence leadership effectiveness.
Early Leadership Theories (cont’d)
• Behavioral Theories (cont’d)
University of Michigan Studies
Identified two dimensions of leader behavior
– Employee oriented: emphasizing personal relationships
– Production oriented: emphasizing task accomplishment
Research findings:
– Leaders who are employee oriented are strongly
associated with high group productivity and high job
satisfaction.
The Managerial Grid
• Managerial Grid
Appraises leadership styles using two dimensions:
Concern for people
Concern for production
Places managerial styles in five categories:
Impoverished management
Task management
Middle-of-the-road management
Country club management
Team management
Exhibit 17–3
The
Managerial
Grid
Source: Reprinted by permission of Harvard Business Review. An exhibit from “Breakthrough in Organization Development” by Robert R. Blake, Jane S. Mouton,
Louis B. Barnes, and Larry E. Greiner, November–December 1964, p. 136. Copyright © 1964 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College. All rights reserved.
Contingency Theories of Leadership
• The Fiedler Model (cont’d)
Proposes that effective group performance depends
upon the proper match between the leader’s style of
interacting with followers and the degree to which the
situation allows the leader to control and influence.
Assumptions:
A certain leadership style should be most effective
in different types of situations.
Leaders do not readily change leadership styles.
– Matching the leader to the situation or changing the
situation to make it favorable to the leader is required.
Contingency Theories… (cont’d)
• The Fiedler Model (cont’d)
Least-preferred co-worker (LPC) questionnaire
Determines leadership style by measuring
responses to 18 pairs of contrasting adjectives.
– High score: a relationship-oriented leadership
style
– Low score: a task-oriented leadership style
Situational factors in matching leader to the situation:
Leader-member relations
Task structure
Position power
Exhibit 17–4 Findings of the Fiedler Model
Contingency Theories… (cont’d)
• Hersey and Blanchard’s Situational Leadership
Theory (SLT)
Argues that successful leadership is achieved by
selecting the right leadership style which is contingent
on the level of the followers’ readiness.
Acceptance: leadership effectiveness depends on
whether followers accept or reject a leader.
Readiness: the extent to which followers have the
ability and willingness to accomplish a specific
task.
Leaders must relinquish control over and contact with
followers as they become more competent.
Contingency Theories… (cont’d)
• Hersey and Blanchard’s Situational Leadership
Theory (SLT)
Creates four specific leadership styles incorporating
Fiedler’s two leadership dimensions:
Telling: high task-low relationship leadership
Selling: high task-high relationship leadership
Participating: low task-high relationship leadership
Delegating: low task-low relationship leadership
Contingency Theories… (cont’d)
• Hersey and Blanchard’s Situational Leadership
Theory (SLT)
Posits four stages follower readiness:
R1: followers are unable and unwilling
R2: followers are unable but willing
R3: followers are able but unwilling
R4: followers are able and willing
Contingency Theories… (cont’d)
• Leader Participation Model (Vroom and Yetton)
Posits that leader behavior must be adjusted to reflect
the task structure—whether it is routine, nonroutine,
or in between—based on a sequential set of rules
(contingencies) for determining the form and amount
of follower participation in decision making in a given
situation.
Contingency Theories… (cont’d)
• Leader Participation Model Contingencies:
Decision significance
Importance of commitment
Leader expertise
Likelihood of commitment
Group support
Group expertise
Team competence
Exhibit 17–5 Leadership Styles in the Vroom Leader Participation Model
Practice openness.
Be fair.
Speak your feelings.
Tell the truth.
Show consistency.
Fulfill your promises.
Maintain confidences.
Demonstrate competence.
Providing Ethical Leadership
• Ethics are part of leadership when leaders
attempt to:
Foster moral virtue through changes in attitudes and
behaviors.
Use their charisma in socially constructive ways.
Promote ethical behavior by exhibiting their personal
traits of honesty and integrity.
• Moral Leadership
Involves addressing the means that a leader uses to
achieve goals as well as the moral content of those
goals.
Empowering Employees
• Empowerment
Involves increasing the decision-making discretion of
workers such that teams can make key operating
decisions in develop budgets, scheduling workloads,
controlling inventories, and solving quality problems.
Why empower employees?
Quicker responses problems and faster decisions.
Addresses the problem of increased spans of
control in relieving managers to work on other
problems.
Cross-Cultural Leadership
• Universal Elements of
Effective Leadership
Vision
Foresight
Providing encouragement
Trustworthiness
Dynamism
Positiveness
Proactiveness
Exhibit 17–10 Selected Cross-Cultural Leadership Findings
Source: Based on J. C. Kennedy, “Leadership in Malaysia: Traditional Values, International Outlook,” Academy of Management Executive, August
2002, pp. 15–17; F.C. Brodbeck, M. Frese, and M. Javidan, “Leadership Made in Germany: Low on Compassion, High on Performance,”
Academy of Management Executive, February 2002, pp. 16–29; M. F. Peterson and J. G. Hunt, “International Perspectives on International
Leadership,” Leadership Quarterly, Fall 1997, pp. 203–31; R. J. House and R. N. Aditya, “The Social Scientific Study of Leadership: Quo Vadis?”
Journal of Management, vol. 23, no. 3, (1997), p. 463; and R. J. House, “Leadership in the Twenty-First Century,” in A. Howard (ed.), The
Changing Nature of Work (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1995), p. 442.
Gender Differences and Leadership
• Research Findings
Males and females use different styles:
Women tend to adopt a more democratic or
participative style unless in a male-dominated job.
Women tend to use transformational leadership.
Men tend to use transactional leadership.
Exhibit 17–11 Where Female Managers Do Better: A Scorecard
Source: R. Sharpe, “As Leaders, Women Rule,” BusinessWeek, November 20. 2000, p. 75.
Basics of Leadership
• Give people a reason to come to work.
• Be loyal to the organization’s people
• Spend time with people who do the real work of
the organization.
• Be more open and more candid about what
business practices are acceptable and proper
and how the unacceptable ones should be fixed.
Leadership Can Be Irrelevant!
• Substitutes for Leadership
Follower characteristics
Experience, training, professional orientation, or
the need for independence
Job characteristics
Routine, unambiguous, and satisfying jobs
Organization characteristics
Explicit formalized goals, rigid rules and
procedures, or cohesive work groups
Terms to Know
• leader • least-preferred co-worker
• leadership (LPC) questionnaire
• behavioral theories • leader-member relations
• autocratic style • task structure
• democratic style • position power
• laissez-faire style • situational leadership theory
• (SLT)
initiating structure
• readiness
• consideration
• leader participation model
• high-high leader
• path-goal theory
• managerial grid
• transactional leaders
• Fiedler contingency
model
Terms to Know (cont’d)
• transformational leaders
• charismatic leader
• visionary leadership
• legitimate power
• coercive power
• reward power
• expert power
• referent power
• credibility
• trust
• empowerment