Title: The Leader as an Individual
1Chapter 4
- The Leader as an Individual
2Definition of Personality
- A set of relatively stable characteristics that
lead to consistent patterns of behavior - As a manager, how can you know or assess an
individuals personality? Why would you want to
do this?
3Ex. 4.1 The Big Five Personality Dimensions
Outgoing, energetic, gregarious
Quiet, withdrawn, unassertive
Extroversion
Low
High
Warm, considerate, good-natured
Aloof, easily irritated
Agreeableness
Low
High
Impulsive, carefree
Responsible, dependable , goal-oriented
Conscientiousness
Low
High
Moody, tense, lower self-confidence
Stable, confident
Emotional Stability
Low
High
Imaginative, curious, open to new ideas
Narrow field of interests, likes the
tried-and-true
Openness to Experience
Low
High
4- Some evidence that people who are high on
extroversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness,
and emotional stability are more successful
leaders. - Value of understanding personality is primarily
to help leaders understand their own basic
personality dimensions, and then to learn to
emphasize the positive and mitigate the negative
aspects of their own style. - Also helps you understand others to know
something about their personality knowledge
that you can use to guide YOUR behavior.
5Personality Traits
- Locus of Control
- Defines whether a person places the primary
responsibility for what happens to him or her
within himself/herself or on outside forces - Authoritarianism
- The belief that power and status differences
should exist in an organization - Dogmatism receptiveness to others ideas and
opinions. Highly dogmatic people are close
minded and not receptive to others ideas.
6Locus of control
- Generalized belief about self control vs. control
by the situation or others - Internals have higher job satisfaction, are more
likely to assume managerial positions, prefer
participative management, have higher work
motivation, hold stronger belief that efforts
lead to performance, receive higher salaries, and
display less anxiety than externals. Will not
react well to being closely supervised. - Externals prefer more structured work setting and
may be more reluctant to participate in decision
making.
7Self-monitoring
- The extent to which people base their behavior on
cues from other people and situations - High SM pay attention to what is appropriate in
particular situations and to the behavior of
other people, and they behave accordingly - Low SM are not as vigilant to situational cues
and act from internal states rather than paying
attention to the situation
8Self - Monitoring
- High self monitors
- flexible adjust behavior according to the
situation and the behavior of others - can appear unpredictable inconsistent
- Good in teams
- Accept feedback well
- Low self monitors
- act from internal states rather than from
situational cues - Consistent, but may also be resistant to change
- less likely to respond to work group norms or
supervisory feedback
9Machiavellianism
Machiavellianism - A personality characteristic
indicating ones willingness to do whatever it
takes to get ones own way. Strong influence on
perception of ethical behavior.
10Machiavellianism
- A personality trait involving willingness to
manipulate others for ones own (selfish)
purposes. - Machiavellian tactics
- Neglecting to share important information (e.g.,
claiming to forget to tell you about key
meetings and assignments). - Finding subtle ways of making you look bad to
management (e.g., damning you with faint praise). - Failing to meet obligations (e.g., not holding up
their end on joint projects, thereby causing you
to look bad). - Spreading false rumors about you (e.g., making up
things about you that embarrass you in front of
others).
11Values
- Fundamental beliefs that an individual considers
to be important, that are relatively stable over
time, and that have an impact on attitudes and
behavior. - End Values
- Sometimes called terminal values, these are
beliefs about the kind of goals or outcomes that
are worth trying to pursue (happiness,
prosperity, freedom, equality, salvation). - Instrumental Values
- Beliefs about the types of behavior that are
appropriate for reaching goals (e.g. honesty,
politeness, courage).
12- Values affect your perception of situations.
Perception is the process people use to make
sense of the world by selecting, organizing, and
interpreting information. - Affect how leaders relate to others
- Guide leaders choices and actions.
13Attitude
- An evaluation (either positive or negative) about
people, events, or things. - Self-Concept
- The collection of attitudes we have about
ourselves includes self-esteem and whether a
person generally has a positive or negative
feeling about him/herself.
Should poor performance be blamed on a bad
attitude?
14ABC Model of an Attitude
Component Measured by
Example
A
B
C
ognition Attitude scales
I believe my Verbal
statements boss plays
about beliefs favorites.
15Theory X and Theory Y
Theory X the assumption that people are
basically lazy and not motivated to work and that
they have a natural tendency to avoid
responsibility
Theory Y the assumption that people do not
inherently dislike work and will commit
themselves willingly to work that they care about
16Management Assumptions
- Theory X
- Dislike work
- Must be threatened with punishment
- Avoid responsibilities
- Seek formal direction
- Require security
- Little ambition
- Workers are costs
- Theory Y
- View work as natural
- Self-directed
- Exercise self-control
- Accept responsibility
- Seek responsibility
- Make innovative decisions
- Workers are assets
How do you explain lazy behavior?
17Work Attitudes Job Satisfaction
- Job Satisfaction - a pleasurable or positive
emotional state resulting from the appraisal of
ones job or job experience - Organizational Citizenship Behavior
- Behavior that is above and beyond duty
- Related to job satisfaction
18Task Performance
- The relationship between satisfaction and task
performance is positive, but it is not very
strong. - Job satisfaction and performance may not be
directly linked. Any direct relationship between
them may stem from the fact that both are related
to other factors receipt of various rewards and
organizational commitment.
19Organizational Citizenship Behavior
- Behavior that is above and beyond the call of
duty. Things that affect OCB may be - Job Satisfaction
- Procedural justice
- Helps explain why individual level job
satisfaction is related to organizational
performance.
20Work Attitudes Organizational Commitment
21Commitment
- Conditions that enhance
- Job satisfaction (strong, positive relationship)
- Participation
- Job security
- Job characteristics (autonomy, responsibility,
interesting work) - Advantages
- Lower absenteeism, lower turnover, higher
quality, higher productivity, higher performance
22Organizational Justice
Distributive Justice- fairness of the outcomes
that individuals receive in an organization
Procedural Justice- fairness by which the
outcomes are allocated in an organization
23- Procedural Justice perceived fairness of
process (rules and procedures) used to make a
decision - Perceived fairness of procedures used to allocate
pay raises is a better predictor of satisfaction
than the absolute amount of the pay raise
received. - Affects trust in management, intention to leave,
evaluation of supervisor, job satisfaction, and
employee theft, layoff survivors.
24Cognitive Style
How a person perceives, processes, interprets,
and uses information
25Ex. 4.4 Hermanns Whole Brain Model
D Upper right
A Upper left
Logical Analytical Fact-based Quantitative
Holistic Intuitive Integrating Synthesizing
Organized Sequential Planned Detailed
Interpersonal Feeling-based Kinesthetic Emotional
C Lower right
B Lower left
There is a reason why people think (and act)
differently than you
26Action memo
- Strive for whole-brain thinking to deal
effectively with a wide variety of people and
complex issues. - Be aware of your natural thinking patterns and
engage in activities that help develop a wider
range of styles. - When possible, tailor your communications and
leadership approach to the thinking styles of
followers.
27Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)
Personality test that measures how individuals
differ in gathering and evaluating information
for solving problems and making decisions
28MBTI Preferences
(see page 146 for more)
E/I S/N T/F J/P
29MBTI
- All individuals have some development of both
sides of each pair of functions/attitudes. - Each type has advantages and pitfalls. No type
is better than another. - Accepting and understanding type helps
individuals be more effective. - Understanding the full range of types helps an
individual to communicate and work effectively
with others. - Pitfalls labeling or excuse for behavior
30WSJ Article on Kerrys decision making style
- What MBTI type do you think both Kerry and Bush
are?
31Ex. 4.5 Distinguishing Characteristics of
Charismatic and Noncharismatic Leaders
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33Dark side of charisma
- Personalized
- self-aggrandizing, nonegalitarian, exploitative.
- Based on caring about self.
- Detrimental impact on long-term organizational
purpose - Socialized
- empowering, egalitarian, supportive.
- Based on valuing others.
- Related to successful organizational purpose
34Transactional versus Transformational Leadership
Transactional leadership a transaction or
exchange process between leaders and followers
Transformational Leadership leadership
characterized by the ability to bring about
significant change in followers and the
organization
See page 154 for differences
35Variables Influencing Individual Behavior
36Total Process
materials
methods
supervision
measurement
equipment
15
Individual effort
training
staffing
37WSJ Article on Bowling
- Why did we read this article? What principle
does it illustrate?
38Attribution in Organizations
Attribution Theory Explanations of behavior in
others Consensus - the extent to which peers in
the same situation behave the same
way Distinctiveness - degree to which the person
behaves the same way in other situations Consisten
cy - the frequency of a particular behavior over
time
39The Attribution Process
Antecedents-- factors internal to the perceiver
- Information
- Beliefs
- Motivation
- Perceived external
- or internal causes
- of behavior
Attributions made by the perceiver
- Behavior
- Feelings
- Expectations
Consequences for the perceiver
40Attributions of Internal and External Causes of
Behavior (in others)
Consistency is low Distinctiveness is
high Consensus is high
Attribution of external causes
Consistency is high Distinctiveness is
low Consensus is low
Attribution of internal causes
Consistency is low
Attribution of either external or internal
causes
41Information Cues Attributions
42Information Cues Attributions
43- Attributions (explanations) of the causes of
behavior in yourself. - Internal
- Ability and effort
- External
- Task difficulty and luck
- Change potential
- Stable or unstable
-
44Causal Attributions Of Your Behavior (Success and
Failure)
Stable Unstable
S esteem, efficacy F depression
Internal External
S luck F hope/optimism
F frustration
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46Attributional biases
- Two types of attribution errors
- Fundamental attribution error tendency to make
attributions to internal causes when focusing on
someone elses behavior - Self-serving bias
- Prevents individuals from accurately assessing
their own performance and abilities and makes
more difficult determining real cause of failure - Tendency to blame others for a persons own
failures associated with poor performance and an
inability to establish satisfying interpersonal
relationships at work and other social settings - When problems occur at work, managers and
employees often make different attributions about
the causes.
47Advice for managers when problems occur at work
- Avoid the fundamental attribution error (stop
blaming) - Anticipate the employees self-serving bias and
be proactive. Know that the employee will
attribute causes of failure to (blame) the
environment, including management. Account for
the impact of the environment, including your own
behavior, on the employees behavior. Look
inside first. Eliminate all other causes as much
as possible before you blame employees.
Employees that see you doing this will credit you
with procedural justice. - If the environment is a major cause, it will be
affecting others as well. Fix the system and
stop blaming.