Leadership theory

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Leadership Theory BMG 302 Organizational Leadership

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Transcript of Leadership theory

Page 1: Leadership theory

Leadership Theory

BMG 302 Organizational Leadership

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Tom Peters Video

• Http://vimeo.com/1056137

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Schools of Leadership Theory• Trait Theory

– Stodgill• Behavioural/Competence Theory

– Mc Gregor Theory X/Y– Blake and Mouton - Managerial Grid

• Contingency/Situational Theory– Tannenbaum and Schmidt– Hersey and Blanchard

• Transformational– Burns– Bass• Emotional Intelligence• Distributed/Relational Leadership (Dispersed,

shared, connective and brokered)

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Trait (‘Great Man’) TheoryLeaders are born with certain characteristics

• Leaders are born with specific characteristics

• Stodgill’s classic review of 120 surveys revealed 23 different traits identified many inconsistencies

• Contemporary theories e.g transformational, emotional intelligence conform to the trait approach

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Big Five TraitsSource: Based on Hogan, R, Curphy, G and Hogan, J. (1994) ‘What we Know About Personality:Leadership and Effectiveness’, American Psychologist, 49, pp493-504

Big Five Personality Traits Specific Traits

Surgency Extroversion (Outgoing)Energy/Activity LevelNeed for Power (Assertive)

Conscientiousness DependabilityPersonal IntegrityNeed for Achievement

Agreeableness Cheerful and optimisticNurturance (sympathetic,helpful)Need for affiliation

Adjustment Emotional stabilitySelf-esteemSelf-Control

Intellectance Curious and inquisitiveOpen-mindedLearning oriented

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Kets De Vries - 1994• Identified a number of commonalities in trait leadership

research:– Conscientiousness– Extroversion– Dominance– Self-confidence– Energy– Agreeableness– Intelligence– Openness to experience– Emotional stability

• Suggested meaning is open-ended and traits would need to be tested using clinical methodologies

Kets De Vries, M.R.F. (1994) ‘The Leadership Mystique’, Academy of Management Executive, 8(3):73-92

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Implications of Trait Theory • Creates a hegemonic or powerful elite with particular traits• This elite then creates entry barriers based on assessment of

these traits – ie homogenizing• Net effect inequality – race, gender, religion (See Reward

Data)• Privileges the role of the leader and emphasises

individualism/heroism• May prevent a questioning culture within the organization

which may be damaging/corrupting (E.g. Enron Case) • Ignores other aspects of the leadership dynamic ie context –

creates ‘one-size fits all’ model• Under-resourced management development• Resistance to change• Imbalanced leadership profiles

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Top earning CEOs

No. NAME COMPANYTOTAL SALARY

PACKAGE, £m1 Bart Becht Reckitt Benckiser 36.76 2 Aidan Heavey Tullow Oil 28.84 3 Chip Goodyear BHP Billiton 23.82 4 Sir Martin Sorrell WPP 19.71 5 Arun Sarin Vodafone 13.75 6 John Pluthero Cable & Wireless 10.63 7 Jean-Pierre Garnier GSK 10.33 8 Frank Chapman BG Group 10.10 9 Paul Pindar Capita 9.86 10 Sir Terry Leahy Tesco 9.11

Top earning women

Rank Name Company Job titleTotal salary package, £m

1 Cynthia Carroll Anglo American CEO 3.98 2 Linda Cook Royal Dutch Shell Executive 3.88 3 Marjorie Scardino Pearson CEO 3.79 4 Bridget McIntyre RSA Executive 2.55 5 Lucy Neville-Rolfe Tesco Executive 2.41 6 Rona Fairhead Pearson Executive 2.04

7 Clara Furse London Stock Exchange

CEO 1.98

8 Alison Cooper Imperial Tobacco Executive 1.35 9 Kate Bostock Marks & Spencer Executive 1.2 10 Dorothy Thompson Drax CEO 0.89

Inequality of Leadership Reward – 2009 Guardian Executive Reward Survey

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Rank Name Company Average wage

CEO total pay compared to average wage in company

1 Bart Becht Reckitt Benckiser

26749 1374.2

2 Sir Terry Leahy

Tesco 10047 907.0

3 Johannes Sittard

Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation

4311 643.7

4 Sir Martin Sorrell

WPP 31247 630.7

5 Paul Adams British American Tobacco

16362 391.2

6 Nick Buckles G4S 6295 328.4

7 Aidan Heavey Tullow Oil 88125 327.2

8 Graham Mackay

SABMiller 18358 214.7

9 Vladimir Kim Kazakhmys 7773 183.1

10 Micky Arison Carnival 11907 152.6

The biggest pay gaps – Guardian Executive Pay Survey 2009

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Behavioural Thoery

• 1950’s research at Ohio State University explored the relevance of leader behaviour in the workplace

• Primarily researched by questionnaire data

• Generated lists of behaviours and reduced this to 150 items of good examples or important leadership functions

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McGregor’s Theory X and Y (1960:33-4)

• Theory X– people dislike work– people lack ambition

or goals– people must be

coerced, controlled, directed

– punishments/threats must be used to control behaviour

• Theory Y– work is natural people

enjoy it– people can self-direct

and self-control– under the right

conditions people accept responsibility

– people are creative

McGregor,D. (1960) The Human Side of Enterprise. New York:McGraw-Hill

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Implications

• Theory X managers supervise directly, control all aspects of work and really on coercive power and threats of punishment to direct behaviour and use one way communication (autocratic)

• Theory Y managers give staff freedom and scope, encourage people to use initiative and rely on two way communication (democratic)

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Blake and Mouton Managerial Grid

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Blake and Mouton• Leader’s behaviour is influenced by two

variables

1 Concern for Production– Degree of emphasis placed on achieving

tasks and getting results

2 Concern for People– Degree of emphasis a manager gives to

the needs and expectations of staff

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Implications of Behavioural Theory

• Investment in leadership development• Focus on performance management• Development of ‘fast-track’ or accelerated career programmes• But• Creates a homogenized model of leadership behaviour• Potential for inequality• Questionnaire technique open to bias ie ambiguous items –

Yukl (2006:55)• Causality of behaviour and effect difficult to prove i.e

– Considerate behaviour results in increased subordinate behaviour

– Or – Leaders are more supportive of high performing subordinates

Yukl, G. (2006) ‘Leadership in Organizations’, Sixth Edition, Pearson Education:New Jersey

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Contingency/Situational Theory• Tannenbaum and Schmidt Leadership

Continuum (1958)• Appropriate behaviour influenced by three forces:

– Forces in the manager ( personality, values, preferences, beliefs, confidence in subordinates)

– Forces in the subordinates (need for independence, tolerance of ambiguity, knowledge of the problem, involvement)

– Forces in the situation (organisational norms, size and location of work groups, effectiveness of team working, nature of the problem)

Tannenbaum, R., and Scmidt, W.H. (1958) ‘How to choose a leadership pattern’, Harvard Business Review, 36 (March-April), 95-101

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Tannenbaum and Schmidt Leadership Continuum

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Hersey and Blanchard 1977• Situational Leadership model

• Four basic leadership styles:– S1 Telling - high amounts of task behaviour,

telling subordinates what, when and how to do it, little relationship behaviour

– S2 Selling - high amounts of task and relationship behaviour

– S3 Participating - lots of relationship and support, but little direction or task behaviour

– S4 Delegating - not much task or relationship behaviour

Hersey, P., and Blanchard, K.H. (1977) The management of organizational behavior, 3rd Edition, Englewood Cliffs, NJ:Prentice HAll

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Implications of Contingency/Situational Theory

• Attempts to address other variables but often oversimplifies complex frameworks

• Variables of the leadership dynamic are infinite (?) organization size,competitive position, customer base, employee groups, market complexity etc etc

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Charismatic Leadership

• Some theorists distinguish charismatic leadership and transformational others do not

• Charisma originates in Greek ‘divinely inspired gift’ used by Weber (1947) to ‘describe a form of influence based not on formal authority but on follower perceptions that the leader is endowed with exceptional qualities’ (Yukl,2006:249)

• Charisma linked to leaders that: create an appealing vision; are uncoventional; take risks and make sacrifices; are confident; inspire through emotional appeals.

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Negative Consequences of Charismatic Leaders

• May reduce good suggestions by followers

• Desire for leader acceptance inhibits criticisms

• Adoration by followers create sense of infallibility in leader

• Over-confidence may mask risks

• Denial of problems diminishes organisationl learning

• Taking complete credit for success may alienate some followers

• Impulsive , unconventional behaviour creates opponents

• Dependence on leader inhibits development of successors

• Lack of succession present leadership crisis

• Source : Yukl, 2006:260

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Conclusions

• Leadership is a broad-based discipline• There are many conventional frameworks for

analysing leadership in organisations• There are strengths and limitations present in each

model both at empirical and theoretical levels• A unitarist perspective is one which is leader-

centred and derived from a perception that the leader’s behaviour, traits or abilities direct the leadership process

• What other dimensions of the leadership process or relationship exist and how do these impact on its delivery?