Title: Leadership
1Leadership
- Chapter Four
- Leadership Behaviors, Attitudes, and Styles
2An Effective Leader
is one who helps group members attain
productivity, including high quality and customer
satisfaction.
3Research on Leadership Styles
- Many research studies could be categorized under
the heading of style approach, only a few
strongly represent the idea - Ohio state
- University of Michigan
- Studies by Blake and Mouton
4Behavioral Approaches
In the late 1940s, researchers began to explore
the notion that how a person acts determines that
persons leadership effectiveness. Instead of
searching for traits, these researchers examined
leader behaviors and their impact on the
performance and satisfaction of followers.
5The Michigan Studies
- The Michigan Studies were conducted to determine
the pattern of leadership behavior that result in
effective group performance.
6University of Michigan Studies
- Studied leaders behaviors performance on small
group performance - Two behaviors identified
- Employee orientation
- Leaders approach with strong human relations
emphasis - Production orientation
- Leadership behaviors that stress technological
advancement and production aspects of the job
7The Michigan Studies
Job-Centered Leader Behavior
Employee-Centered Leader Behavior
Attempts to build work group performance by
paying attention to the efficient completion of
the task. Primary emphasis is on the task.
Attempts to build work group performance by
paying attention to the human aspects of the
group. Primary emphasis is on the person.
The studies suggested that a leader could exhibit
either behavior, but not both at the same time.
8The Ohio State Studies
- The Ohio State Studies were conducted at about
the same time as the Michigan Studies. - The Ohio State Studies found that leaders engaged
in two separate sets of leadership behaviors,
referred to as consideration and initiating
structure.
9Ohio State Studies
- Leader Behavior Description Questionnaire (LDBQ)
- Administered to hundreds of individuals in
various fields - Two general types of leader behaviors
- Initiating structure (Task)
- Consideration (Relational)
10The Ohio State Studies
Consideration
Initiating Structure
Involves being concerned with subordinates
feelings and respecting subordinates ideas.
Involves clearly defining the leader-subordinate
roles so that subordinates know what is expected
of them.
Unlike the Michigan Studies variables,
consideration and initiating structure were not
thought to be on the same continuum. Instead,
they were seen as independent dimensions of
leadership behavior.
11Initiating Structure
- Organizing and defining relationships in the
group by engaging in such activities as assigning
specific tasks, specifying procedures to be
followed, scheduling work, and clarifying
expectations for team members - Also referred to as production emphasis, task
orientation, and task motivation
12Consideration
- The degree to which the leader creates an
environment of emotional support, warmth,
friendliness, and trust - Involves being friendly and approachable, looking
out for the personal welfare of the group,
keeping the group abreast of new developments,
and doing small favors for the group
13Four Combinations of Initiating Structure and
Consideration
14Results
- Behaviors viewed as distinct and independent (two
different continua) - The degree to which a leader exhibited one
behavior was not related to the degree to which
he or she exhibited the other behavior - When two behaviors were treated as independent
orientations, leaders were seen as being able to
be oriented to both - Determining how a leader optimally mixed task
and relationship behaviors has been the central
task for research in style approach
15Why Trait and Behavior Approaches Fall Short
Trait approaches consider personal
characteristics of the leader that may be
important in achieving success in a leadership
role.
A shortcoming of both of these approaches is that
they fail to take into account the interaction
between people, tasks, and environment.
Behavioral approaches attempt to specify which
kinds of leader behaviors are necessary for
effective leadership.
16Style Approach
- Emphasizes the behavior of the leader
- Focuses exclusively on what leaders do and how
they act - Explains how leaders combine two kinds of
behaviors to influence subordinates in efforts to
reach a goal
17Task-Related LeadershipAttitudes and Behaviors
- Adaptability to the situation
- Direction setting
- High performance standards
- Risk taking and a bias for action
- Hands-on guidance and feedback
- Stability of performance
- Ability to ask tough questions
18Task Behaviors vs. Relational Behaviors
- Task Behaviors
- Facilitates goal accomplishment
- Relationship Behaviors
- Help subordinates feel comfortable with
themselves, with each other, and with the groups
situation
19Relationship-OrientedAttitudes and Behaviors
- Aligning and mobilizing people
- Concert building
- Creating inspiration and visibility
- Satisfying higher-level needs
- Giving emotional support and encouragement
- Promoting principles and values
- Being a servant leader
20Servant Leadership
- Place service before self-interest
- Listen first to express confidence in others
- Inspire trust by being trustworthy
- Focus on what is feasible to accomplish
- Lend a hand
- Provide tools
21360-Degree Feedback
- A formal evaluation of superiors based on input
from people who work for and with them - Often referred to as multisource feedback or
multirater feedback - Most often used for leadership and management
development
22A 360-Degree Feedback Chart
23Leadership Style
- The relatively consistent pattern of behavior
that characterizes a leader - Often based on the dimensions of initiating
structure and consideration - Examples Hes a real command-and-control type,
shes a consensus leader.
24Participative Leadership
- Participative leaders share decision making with
group members - Three subtypes
- Consultative leaders confer with group members
- Consensus leaders strive for consensus among
group members - Democratic leaders confer final authority to the
group
25Autocratic Leadership
- Autocratic leaders retain most of the authority
for themselves - Autocratic leaders make decisions confidently,
assume that group members will comply, and are
not overly concerned with group members
attitudes toward a decision
26Leadership Grid Styles
- The Leadership Grid simultaneously specifies
concern for production and concern for people - Leadership Grid styles include
- Authority-Compliance
- Country Club Management
- Impoverished Management
- Middle-of-the-Road Management
- Team Management
27Blake and Moutons Leadership Grid of Style
Approach
- Most well-known model of leader behavior
- Explains how leaders help organizations to reach
their purposes through two factors - Concern for production
- How a leader is concerned with achieving
organizational tasks - Concern for people
- How a leader attends to the people with the
organization who are trying to achieve its goals.
28Blake and Moutons Leadership Grid of Style
Approach
- Joins concern for production and concern for
people on two intersecting axes - X axis concern for results
- Y axis concern for people
- Portrays five major leadership styles
- Authority-Compliance (9,1)
- Country Club management (1,9)
- Impoverished management (1,1)
- Middle-of-the-Road management (5,5)
- Team management (9,9)
29Authority-Compliance Management
- Places heavy emphasis on task and job
requirements - Less emphasis on people
- Communication under-emphasized
- Leadership is controlling, demanding, and
overpowering
30Country Club Management
- Low concern for task accomplishment
- High concern for interpersonal relationships
- De-emphasis on production
- Leadership characterized as agreeable, eager to
help, comforting, and uncontroversial
31Impoverished Management
- No concern for task, as well as interpersonal
relationships - Going through the motions with lack of
involvement - Leaderships described as indifferent,
noncommittal, resigned, and apathetic
32Middle-of-the-Road Management
- Leaders are compromisers
- Immediate concern for task and interpersonal
relationship - Leader avoids conflict and emphasizes moderate
levels of production and relations with others to
establish equilibrium - Leaders are described as one who is expedient,
soft-pedals disagreement, and is interested in
group progress over their own convictions
33Team Management
- Places strong emphasis on both tasks and
interpersonal relationships - Promotes high degree of participation and
teamwork - Satisfies a basic need in employees to be
involved and committed to their work - Leaders characterized as clear, open-minded,
determined, and one who stimulates participation
34Combined Styles
- Blake and his colleagues have identified two
styles that incorporate multiple aspects of the
grid - Paternalism/Maternalism
- Leaders uses both (1,9) and (9,1) styles but does
not integrate the two - Opportunistic
- Leader uses any combination of the basic five
styles for purpose of personal advancement
35How does the Style Approach work?
- Provides framework for assessing leadership
behaviors in a broad way and general way - Gives leaders a way to look at their behavior by
sub-dividing it into the two dimensions - Reminds leaders that their impact occurs through
both the task they perform and the relationship
they create.
36Strengths and Weaknesses of the Style Approach
- Strengths
- Easily applied
- Studies on leadership style validates and gives
credibility to the approach - Provides core of the leadership process
- Can be used as a heuristic (cognitive map)
- Approach applies to everything a leader does
- Weaknesses
- Hasnt adequately shown how leaders styles are
associated with performance outcomes - There is no universal leadership style
- Implies that the most effective leadership style
is the Team Management style (9,9)
37Entrepreneurial Leadership
- Strong achievement drive and sensible
risk-taking - High degrees of enthusiasm and creativity
- Tendency to act quickly when opportunity arises
- Constant hurry combined with impatience
- Visionary perspective
38Entrepreneurial Leadership
- Dislike of hierarchy and bureaucracy
- Preference for dealing with external customers
- Eye on the future
39Gender Differences in Leadership Style
- One researcher concluded that men tended toward a
command-and-control style. In contrast, women
tended toward a transformational style, relying
heavily on interpersonal skills. - While researchers found leadership style
differences between men and women, on the
dimension of overall effectiveness, the sexes
were perceived the same.