Leadership Sources of Power
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Transcript of Leadership Sources of Power
Leadership Sources of Power
An explanation of the theory by John French and Bertram H. Raven
Holly Justice
Sources of Power
Power refers to the capacity to influence others. So where does it come from? Have you ever wondered why some managers seem like natural leaders? Or perhaps you are interested in what power you hold over others?
Legitimate
Legitimate
Legitimate power is the formal authority granted through the organization and job description. A project manager is placed in charge of a project team so they may delegate tasks. A supervisor is given legitimate power over their subordinates so they can ask for a range of behaviors from the new employee. One will find this power source useful as you begin leading any team, however it cannot be relied upon alone to make you an effective leader.
Reward
Reward
As leaders we may be granted both control over what others value and the ability to change negative aspects of the job giving us reward power.We see reward power used when a manager gives salary increases based on performance or when a supervisor replaces faulty equipment.
Reward
Rewards can be as simple as allowing a person to work on a special project or attend training, granting favorable shifts or bringing in pizza. If employees are given feedback systems to evaluate their managers or co-workers, they also hold reward power. The risk in using only reward power is that you may have a limited supply or the rewards may become too commonplace, losing their power.
Coercive
Coercive
Both team leaders and members may apply coercive power, the ability to punish with the goal of compliance. Punishment is an old fashioned “carry a big stick” management style. Managers who use this power threaten to fire or layoff employees who fail to meet their standards.
Coercive
Team members apply coercive power through gossip or open demands of co-workers when they break the team norms. Coercive power often results in negative relationships since adults naturally resent being punished.With today’s intelligent workforce, using coercive power alone will result in a team who comply with orders only when the manager is watching.
Legitimate
Coe
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Organizational Sources of Power
Reward
Organizational Sources of Power
Legitimate, reward and coercive power are all associated with the organization. The company, your team and where your job sits in the corporate ladder will influence how these sources of power may be available to you.
Reward
Legitimate C
oerc
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Expert
Many leaders become successful due to their own personal power sources. Have you ever noticed the respect we give to experts who help us solve problems? Expert power comes from specialized knowledge.A software engineer who arrives with a specialized skill set may have considerable influence on the team’s decisions and direction even if that person lacks any organizational power.
Expert
Referent
Referent
The charismatic individual has referent power. We follow them because we admire their personality and wish to be like them. Who is your office celebrity, the person everyone wants to follow?
Personal Sources of PowerThose who hold expert and referent power may move their power from one group to another because they hold it personally. A charismatic politician may be elected to several different positions. An expert computer security guru may job hop from organization to organization.
ReferentExpert
Legitimate
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Expert Referent
Organizational & Personal Sources of Power
Reward
Power Combinations
When we look at all five sources of power it is the combinations that are most interesting.
Reward
Legitimate C
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Expert Referent
New Supervisor Example
A new supervisor may rely heavily on the use of legitimate and coercive power. Without reward, referent or expert power, the team will often comply outwardly with the supervisor, but will secretly work against the supervisor’s formal and oppressive style.
Legitimate Coercive
Abandoned Team Example
A manager who abandons their team, giving neither feedback or rewards for good performance is withholding their legitimate or reward power. Within abandoned teams employees may take on a leadership role by exercising their expert or referent power.Some employees may use a form of punishment, such as leaving others undesirable tasks, in order to force their co-workers to comply to their own standards.
Expert Referent Coercive
Project Manager Example
A charming project manager may use legitimate and referent power to influence their team. Project managers often have a limited ability to reward or punish team members for failing to perform. The charismatic manager may recruit a technical person to co-lead the team, adding an expert power source.
LegitimateExpert Referent
John French and Bertram H. Raven
In 1959, John French and Bertram H. Raven examined the five different sources that come from the organization and the individual.
Reward
Legitimate C
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Expert Referent
Discussion
Based on the five source model, what power combinations do you use to influence others in your daily activities?
Reward
Legitimate C
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Expert Referent
Discussion
What combinations do you see others in your organization use?
Reward
Legitimate C
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Expert Referent
What’s your vote?
http://hjustice.wordpress.com/leadership-sources-of-power-poll
Which power sources do you see your boss use to influence others?
Which power sources do you use in your daily activities to influence others?
More Information Online
http://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newLDR_56.htmhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_(social_and_political)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_and_Raven's_five_bases_of_powerhttp://changingminds.org/explanations/power/french_and_raven.htm
Leadership Sources of Power
An explanation of the theory by John French and Bertram H. Raven
Holly Justice