© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-1 ORGB2 Chapter 12 Leadership and...
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Transcript of © 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-1 ORGB2 Chapter 12 Leadership and...
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-1
ORGB2
Chapter 12
Leadership and Followership
Leadership & Followership
Leadership - the process of guiding & directing the behavior of people in the work environment
Formal leadership - the officially sanctioned leadership based on the authority of a formal position
Informal leadership - the unofficial leadership accorded to a person by other members of the organization
Followership - the process of being guided & directed by a leader in the work environment
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-3
Leadership
An influence relationship among leaders and followers who intend real changes that reflect their shared purpose. (Daft, 2002)
Purpose: the missing factor
Vision – where we are goingMission – who, when, how we will
get thereValues – rules of engagement
and norms of behaviorPurpose – why we do what we do
What is the purpose of UNR?
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-5
Examples of Purpose
University of Texas Austin:
To transform lives for the benefit of society
Mary Kay Cosmetics:
Enhancing the lives of women around the world
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-6
Fundamental Act of Leadership
The leader’s fundamental act is to induce people to be aware or conscious of what they feel – to feel their true needs so strongly, to define their values so meaningfully, that they can be moved to purposeful action
(James MacGregor Burns, Leadership, p. 44).
To manage means “to bring about, to accomplish, to have charge of or responsibility for, to conduct.” Leading is “influencing, guiding in direction, course, action, opinion.” The distinction is crucial. Managers are people who do things right and leaders are people who do the right thing. The difference may be summarized as activities of vision and judgment – effectiveness versus activities of mastering routines – efficiency.
(Bennis & Nanus, 1997)
WSJ Articles: Lt. Withers, Col. Dowdy
Leadership vs. Management
To do the right thing, a leader needs to understand what it takes to do things right
(Bob Sutton)8
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-9
Action Memo
Leadership is an everyday way of acting and thinking that has little to do with a title or formal position in an organization.
Recognize the opportunities for leadership all around you and act like a leader to influence others and bring about changes for a better future.
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-10
Leadership vs. Management
Leadership & management are distinct, yet complementary systems of action
Effective leadership + good management = healthy organizations
Effective leadership + good management = healthy organizations
Effective leadership produces useful
change
Effective management
controls complexity
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-11
Management Process
Reduces uncertainty Provides stability Components
Planning & budgeting Organizing and staffing Controlling & problem
solving
Manager – an advocate for stability and the
status quo
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-12
Leadership Process
Creates uncertainty Creates change Components
Setting organizational direction Aligning people with the
direction via communication Motivating people to action
Empowerment Gratify needs
Leader – an advocate for change and new approaches to
problems
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-13
Table 11.1 Leaders and Managers
Nelson Table 11.1.CLP
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-14
Trait Theories of Leadership
Attempted to identify what physical attributes, personality characteristics, and abilities distinguished leaders from other members of a group.
Some evidence that leaders are more intelligent, verbal, cooperative, and have higher level of scholarship.
Very few valid generalizations can be made, however.
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-15
Behavioral Theories of Leadership
Autocratic Style A style of leadership in which the leader uses strong,
directive, controlling actions to enforce the rules, regulations, activities, and relationships in the work environment. Can have a benevolent dictator.
Democratic Style A style of leadership in which the leader takes
collaborative, responsive, interactive actions with followers concerning the work and the work environment.
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-16
Leadership Behavioral Theory: Ohio State Studies
Initiating Structure – Leader behavior aimed at defining and organizing work relationships and roles; establishing clear patterns of organization, communication, and ways of getting things done.
Consideration – Leader behavior aimed at nurturing friendly, warm working relationships, as well as encouraging mutual trust and interpersonal respect within the work unit.
Leadership Behavioral Theory: Michigan Studies
Production-Oriented Leader• Constant leader influence
• Direct or close supervision• Many written or unwritten rules and
regulations• Focus on getting work done
Employee-Oriented Leader• Relationship-focused environment
• Less direct/close supervision• Fewer written or unwritten rules and
regulations• Focus on employee concern and needs
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-18
Figure 11.1 The Leadership Grid
Nelson Figure 11.1 Part A.CLP
Traits and Behaviors
Derue, D.S. et al. (2011). Trait and behavioral theories of leadership: An integration and meta-analytic test of their relative validity. Personnel Psychology, 64: 7-52.
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-19
Traits and Behaviors
Although having certain traits may predispose individuals to certain behaviors, behaviors are the more important predictor of leadership effectiveness.
Individuals who are high in Conscientiousness and Extraversion are more likely to be evaluated as effective leaders, and individuals high in Conscientiousness and Agreeableness tend to improve the performance of the groups they lead. (pp. 40-41). Overall, Conscientiousness was the most consistent trait predictor of leadership effectiveness
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-20
Traits and Behaviors
Within the behavioral approach, transformational leadership was the most consistent predictor across a variety of effectiveness criteria (p. 37). Effective leaders must plan and schedule work, support and help their followers, and encourage and facilitate change (p. 41).
The largely negative relationship found between passive leadership behavior and effectiveness suggests that even engaging in suboptimal leadership behaviors is better than inaction. Thus, leadership development initiatives should encourage individuals to proactively assume their leadership responsibilities rather than passively waiting to act until problems develop (p. 41).
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-21
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-22
Contingency Theories
… involve the belief that leadership style must be appropriate for the particular situation.
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-23
Four Contingency Theories
1. Fiedler’s contingency theory
2. Path-goal theory
3. Normative decision theory
4. Situational leadership theory
Fiedler’s Contingency Theory
Fiedler’s Contingency Theory - classifies the favorableness of the leader’s situation
Least Preferred Coworker (LPC) - the person a leader has least preferred to work with over his or her career
Task Structure - degree of clarity, or ambiguity, in the group’s work activities
Position Power - authority associated with the leader’s formal position in the organization
Leader-Member Relations – quality of interpersonal relationships among a leader and group members
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-25
Figure 11.2 Leadership Effectiveness in the Contingency Theory
Nelson Figure 11.2.CLP
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-26
Fiedler’s theory
Fit between leader’s style (task or relationship) and the situation (favorable or unfavorable)
Both relations and task oriented leaders can be effective in the right situation.
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-27
Figure 11.3 The Path-Goal Theory of Leadership
Nelson Figure 11.3.CLP
Contingency
Expectancy Theory of Motivation
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-28
Figure 11.4The Situational Leadership ® Model: The Hersey-Blanchard Model
Nelson Figure 11.4.CLP
Vroom-Yetton-Jago Normative Decision Model
Consult individually
Consult group
Decide
Facilitate
Delegate
Use the decision method
most appropriate for a given decision situation
Developments in Leadership Theory
In-groups Members similar to
leader Given greater
responsibilities, rewards, attention
Within leader’s inner circle of communication
High job satisfaction and organizational commitment, low turnover
Stress from added responsibilities
Out-Groups Managed by formal
rules and policies Less attention; fewer
rewards Outside the circle More likely to
retaliate against the organization
Stress from being left
out of communication
network
Leader-Member Exchange
Build a positive, individualized relationship with each follower rather than treating people as members of an in-group or out-group.
Forge a unique, constructive partnership with each person to create an equitable work environment and provide greater benefits to yourself, followers, and the organization.
Beware of forming in-groups and out-groups. You will often be self-deceived into not believing that they exist.
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-32
New Research in Leadership
Transformational Leaders Leaders who inspire followers to transcend their self-
interests and achieve exceptional performance. Charismatic Leadership
A leader’s use of personal abilities and talents in order to have profound and extraordinary effects on followers.
Authentic Leader A leader who is guided by explicit values that emphasize
collective interest (shared purpose?), enabling them to operate at high levels of moral integrity. Not egocentric.
Authentic Leadership
Authentic leaders show to others that they genuinely desire to understand their own leadership to serve others more effectively.
They act in accordance with deep personal values and convictions to build credibility and win the respect and trust of followers.
By encouraging diverse viewpoints and building networks of collaborative relationships with followers, they lead in a manner that followers perceive and describe as authentic.
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-33
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-34
Figure 11.5 Five Types of Followers
Nelson Figure 11.5.CLP
Leaders usually lead as they are led.
You will probably lead the way that you follow.
Is it OK to offer work related, policy or performance based praise or constructive criticism in the following exchanges?
Praise Constructive Criticism
Manager to an employee, about that employee
Manager to other managers, about an employee
Manager to other employees, about an employee
Manager to other managers, about another manager
Manager to her/his employees, about another manager
Manager to her/his employees, about customers or suppliers outside of the organization
Employee to other employees, about an employee
Employee to a manager, about another employee
Employee to a manager, about him/herself
Employee to a manager, about the manager
Employee to a manager, about other managers
Employee to a manager, about customers or suppliers outside of the organization
Effective Followers
Effective followers are active, responsible, autonomous in their behavior, and critical in thinking without being disrespectful (?) or insubordinate (?)
Effective followers share four essential qualities: Self-management and self-responsibility. Do not
require close supervision. Other-centered, committed to the organization and its
purpose. Not self-centered or self-aggrandizing. Invest in competence and professionalism (they
assume the responsibility to develop themselves) Courageous, honest, credible
As a follower, you are responsible for your behavior, not the reaction of your leaders and peers. Do the right thing.
Loyalty of a follower
Both leaders and followers are entering into a contract to pursue the common purpose within the context of their values. The loyalty of each is to the purpose and to helping each other stay true to that purpose.
Followership (extra)
A willingness to take risks, to challenge authority, and to believe one’s own ideas are equal to or better than one’s superiors typically marks a follower as a future leader (Daft, 2002).
Effective followership requires the courage (Chaleff, 1998): To assume responsibility To serve To challenge To participate in transformation To take moral action, and possibly even leave Effective leadership requires the courage to listen to
followers
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-40
Courage: The ability to step forward through fear
•Courage means accepting responsibility•Courage often means nonconformity•Courage means pushing beyond the comfort zone•Courage means asking for what you want and saying what you think•Courage means fighting for what you believe
Whether leading or following, strive to encourage, not discourage, those
around you.
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-41
Excellence is a form of Deviance From Robert Quinn’s Deep Change:
Excellence is a form of deviance. If you perform beyond the norms, you will disrupt all the existing control systems. Those systems will then alter and begin to work to routinize your efforts. That is, the systems will adjust and try to make you normal. The way to achieve and maintain excellence is to deviate from the norms. You become excellent because you are doing things normal people do not want to do. You become excellent by choosing a path that is risky and painful, a path that is not appealing to others. (p. 176, emphasis added).
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-42
Courageous followership
Courageous followership is built on the foundation of courageous relationship The danger in the leader-follower relationship is
the assumption that the leader’s interpretation must dominate
View of hero-leaders/villain leaders vs. view of common person heroes who stay true to their own lights while helping leaders follow theirs.
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-43
Courage of the follower
An individual who is not afraid to speak and act on the truth as she perceives it, despite external inequities, is a force to be reckoned with.
Because courage implies risk, you should develop contingency plans
“Courage muscle” develops to the degree that we exercise it.
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-44
Courage to assume responsibility
Assume responsibility for themselves and the organization
Do not hold a paternalistic image of the leader or the organization
Initiate values-based, purposeful action to improve processes
The “authority” to initiate comes from the courageous follower’s understanding and ownership of the common purpose, and from the needs of those the organization serves.
Assume Responsibility
Unless and until you assume full responsibility for yourself, you force others to assume responsibility for you.
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-45
Courage to serve the leader (look inside yourself first)
Assume new or additional responsibilities to unburden the leader and serve the organization
Stand up for the leader and the tough decisions a leader must make for the org. to achieve its purpose
Are as passionate as the leader in pursuing the common purpose
Stay alert for areas in which their strengths complement the leader’s and assert themselves in these areas.
Courage to challenge
Give voice to the discomfort they feel when the behaviors or policies of the leader or group conflict with their sense of what is right
Willing to stand up, stand out, to risk rejection, to initiate conflict in order to examine the actions of the leader and group when appropriate
Willing to deal with the emotions their challenge evokes in the leader and group
Value organizational harmony, but not at the expense of the common purpose and their integrity
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-48
Courage to participate in transformation of the leader
When behavior that jeopardizes the common purpose remains unchanged, courageous followers recognize the need for transformation
Have to examine our own collusion with the leader’s behavior, what we do that allows it to continue.
The leader may be surrounded with advisors who have a strong vested interest in the leader not changing the status quo that is lining their pockets. They may attack the follower who is championing change.
Examine our own need for transformation and become full participants in the change process
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-49
Courage to take moral action
Know when it is time to take a stand that is different than that of the leader’s. They answer to a higher set of values.
Taking a stand may involve refusing to obey a direct order, appealing to the next level of authority, or tendering one’s own resignation
These and other forms of moral action involve personal risk, but service to the common purpose justifies and sometimes demands acting.
Followership style Resource: low support, low challenge
Present, uncommitted, executes minimum requirements, makes complaints to third parties, avoids the attention of authority.
Individualist: low support, high challenge Confrontational, self-assured, independent thinker,
self-marginalizing, unintimidated by authority Implementer: high support, low challenge
Dependable, supportive, defender, team oriented, compliant, respectful of authority
Partner: high support, high challenge Risk taker, purpose driven, holds self and others
accountable, confronts sensitive issues, peer relations with authority
Partner followers don’t “dump” on leaders “This sucks (and so do you) and YOU need to fix
it. What’s wrong with you?” Partner followers challenge the leader, but also
try to share responsibility with the leader for correcting the situation “This does not seem to be working and I think we
can do better. Have you considered these alternatives/options? Here is what I would be willing to do to help.”
Effective followers think for themselves and carry out assignments with energy and enthusiasm. They are committed to something outside their own self-interest, and they have the courage to stand up for what they believe. Good followers are not “yes people” who blindly follow a leader (Daft, 2002)
At its best, leadership is shared among leaders and followers, with everyone fully engaged and accepting higher levels of responsibility and accountability to each other (Daft, 2002)
Followers and leaders both orbit around the purpose, followers do not orbit around the leader. But if the purpose is not clear and motivating, leaders and followers can only pursue their perceived self-interest, not their common interest.
AuthoritarianManager
ParticipativeManager
Stewardship-Empoweringleader
ServantLeader
Stewardship
Relationship between leaders and followers in which leaders lead without dominating or controlling followers. Stewardship is an employee-focused form of leadership that enables followers to make decisions and have control over their jobs. (Lussier & Achua, 2002)
InternalServiceQuality
EmployeeSatisfaction And Commitment
EmployeeRetention
Employee Productivity
External ServiceValue
CustomerSatisfaction
CustomerLoyalty
RevenueGrowth(effectiveness)
Profitability(efficiency)
RetentionRepeat businessReferral
Service designed and deliveredto meet targeted customers’ needs
Results for customers
Workplace designJob designEmployee selection and developmentRewards and recognitionEnablement: Tools for serving customers
Operating Strategy and Service Delivery System
Source: James L. Heskett et al. “Putting the Service Profit Chain to Work”, Harvard Business Review, March-April 1994, p. 166
Service-Profit Chain
“The skillful leader, then, does not rely on personal force; he controls his group not by dominating but by expressing it. He stimulates what is best in us; he unifies and concentrates what we feel only gropingly and scatteringly, but he never gets away from the current of which we and he are both an integral part. He is a leader who gives form to the inchoate energy in every man. The person who influences me most is not he who does great deeds but he who makes me feel I can do great deeds.” (Mary Parker Follett, 1918)
Servant leadership
Transcends self-interest to serve the needs of others, by helping them grow professionally and emotionally.
Encourages others in their personal development and helps them understand the larger purpose in their work.
“Whenever we have the opportunity or responsibility to influence the thinking and the behavior of others, the first choice we are called to make is whether to see the moment through the eyes of self-interest or for the benefit of those we are leading” (Blanchard & Hodges, 2003)
One of the quickest ways you can tell the difference between a servant leader and a self-serving leader is how they handle feedback, because one of the biggest fears that self-serving leaders have is to lose their position.
Self-serving leaders spend most of their time protecting their status. They usually respond negatively to feedback, because they think your feedback means that you don’t want their leadership anymore.
Servant leaders embrace and welcome feedback as a source of useful information on how they can provide better service.
Basic precepts of Servant Leadership
Put service before self-interest. Be resourceful. Listen first to affirm confidence in others. Listen
to figure out the will of the group and then further it however she can.
Inspire trust by being trustworthy. Be willing to give everything away – power, control, rewards, information, and recognition.
Help others find the power of the human spirit and accept their responsibilities. Work exists for the person as much as the person exists for work.
Examples
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-63
Time for a flick!
Acceptance and Empathy
Acceptance is receiving what is offered, without approbation, satisfaction, or acquiescence, and empathy is the imaginative projection of one’s own consciousness into another being. The opposite of both, the word reject, is to refuse to hear or receive – to throw out.
Acceptance and Empathy
“The servant always accepts and empathizes, never rejects. The servant as leader always empathizes, always accepts the person but sometimes refuses to accept some of the person’s effort or performance as good enough.” (Greenleaf, 1977)
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-66
Foresight
This is the central ethic of leadership. The failure (or refusal) to foresee may be viewed as an ethical failure, because a serious ethical compromise today (when the usual judgment on ethical inadequacy is made) is sometimes the result of a failure to make the effort at an earlier date to foresee today’s events and take the right actions when there was freedom for initiative to act. The action we label unacceptable in the present moment is often really one of no choice. (Greenleaf, 1977)
Servant leadership
“The measure of leadership is not in the quality of the head, but in the tone of the body. The signs of outstanding leadership appear primarily among the followers. Are followers reaching their full potential? Are they learning? Serving? Do they achieve the required results? Do they change with grace? Manage conflict?” (De Pree, 1989)
Servant Leadership
Justice Climate
Positive Service Climate
Self-Efficacy
CommitmentTo the Supervisor
OCB
Group Level
Individual Level
Walumba, et al. 2010, Journal of Applied Psychology
New Studies on Servant Leadership Cognition-based and affect-based trust as
mediators of leader behavior influences on team performance. By Schaubroeck, John; Lam, Simon S. K.; Peng, Ann Chunyan, Journal of Applied Psychology, Feb 7, 2011
Antecedents of team potency and team effectiveness: An examination of goal and process clarity and servant leadership. By Hu, Jia; Liden, Robert C. Journal of Applied Psychology, Feb 14, 2011,
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-69
Credibility
• Leadership is a reciprocal relationship between those who choose to lead and those who decide to follow
• Source: Kouzes, J.M. & Posner, B.Z. (1993) Credibility: how leaders gain and lose it, and why people demand it
Strong relationships are built on mutual understanding. Leadership is a dialogue, not a monologue. Dialogue requires both listening to others and
sharing of yourself Personal credibility: DWYSYWD – do what you
say you will do. Necessary but not sufficient: even a despot can
have personal credibility Leadership credibility: DWWSWWD – do what
we say we will do. Only arises from relationship. Leaders speak and
act consistent with the values of constituents.
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-72
Credibility (cont.)
Forgetting the we has derailed many managers. Their actions may have been consistent only with their own wishes, not with those of the people they wanted to lead. When managers resort to the use of power and position, to compliance and command to get things done, they are not leading, they are dictating.
Credibility (cont.)
“The true test of moral legitimacy is grounded in conscious choice among real alternatives. One way to recognize moral leaders and to guard against immoral ones is to observe if they engage in learning the true needs and values of their constituents. If they are more intent on telling than on listening, it is likely that they are up to no good.” (James MacGregor Burns, 1978)
• Leadership is a service. Leaders serve a purpose for the people who made it possible for them to lead – their constituents. They are servant leaders – not self-serving, but other serving.
• Leadership is a privilege. You can’t be motivated by self-interest and expect to be a leader. The instant you feel exempt from the standards of the organization, you cease to be a leader. The leader galvanizes people by living their shared vision.
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-75
Attitude check. As a leader…
Is your purpose to serve those you have been given the privilege to lead, or to be served by your subordinates?
Are you more concerned about maintaining and overseeing your fiefdom, or are you more concerned about partnering with others to build a healthy, purposeful work environment for everyone?
Team leadership Effective team leaders understand 1) they do not
have all the answers, 2) they do not need to make all key decisions, and 3) they cannot succeed without the other team members
The essence of the team leader’s job – striking the right balance between providing guidance and giving up control, between making tough decisions and letting others make them, and between doing difficult things alone and letting others learn how to do them Effective team leaders allow their people to grow
The key to the leader’s role is understanding what the team needs and does not need from the leader to help it perform
Extra: Six things necessary for good team leadership
Maintain perspective. Keep the purpose (why we are doing what we are doing), goals, and approach relevant and meaningful The team leader must do this for him/herself as well as
for the team. If the leader looses perspective, the team members have a responsibility to keep the team on course and to reestablish leadership perspective
Build commitment and confidence with positive and constructive reinforcement
Strengthen the mix and level of skills of team members
Manage relationships with outsiders, including removing obstacles
Create opportunities for others Do real work.
Demonstrates credibility and provides a role model
Transformational Team Leadership
Individuals Communicate high
expectations Coach to help
achieve expectations Encourage creativity
and critical thinking Recognize
achievement
Groups Emphasize group
identity Communicate a
shared vision Promote cooperation
and trust
© 2008 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning 11-78
Wang & Howell, 2010, JAP