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Leading and Leadership Development

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Title: Leading and Leadership Development


1
Chapter 13
  • Leading and Leadership Development

2
Planning Ahead Chapter 13
  • What is the nature of leadership?
  • What are the important leadership traits and
    behaviors?
  • What are the contingency theories of leadership?
  • What are current issues in leadership development?

3
Figure 13.1 Leading viewed in relationship to the
other management functions.
4
What is the Nature of Leadership?
  • Leadership.
  • The process of inspiring others to work hard to
    accomplish important tasks.
  • Contemporary leadership challenges
  • Shorter time frames for accomplishing things.
  • Expectations for success on the first attempt.
  • Complex, ambiguous, and multidimensional
    problems.
  • Taking a long-term view while meeting short-term
    demands.

5
vs.
Managers
Leaders
Intuitive
Rational
  • Complexity
  • Planning Budgeting Targets/Goals
  • Organizing Staffing
  • Controlling Problem Solving
  • Change
  • Setting Direction --
  • Visions
  • Aligning People
  • Motivating Inspiring/Moving

Kotter
6
What is the Nature of Leadership?
  • Power.
  • Ability to get someone else to do something you
    want done or make things happen the way you want.
  • Power should be used to influence and control
    others for the common good rather seeking to
    exercise control for personal satisfaction.
  • Two sources of managerial power
  • Position power.
  • Personal power.

7
What is the Nature of Leadership?
  • Position power.
  • Based on a managers official status in the
    organizations hierarchy of authority.
  • Sources of position power
  • Reward power.
  • Capability to offer something of value.
  • Coercive power.
  • Capability to punish or withhold positive
    outcomes.
  • Legitimate power.
  • Organizational position or status confers the
    right to control those in subordinate positions.

8
What is the Nature of Leadership?
  • Personal power.
  • Based on the unique personal qualities that a
    person brings to the leadership situation.
  • Sources of personal power
  • Expert power.
  • Capacity to influence others because of ones
    knowledge and skills.
  • Referent power.
  • Capacity to influence others because they admire
    you and want to identify positively with you.

9
Figure 13.2 Sources of position power and
personal power used by managers.
10
What is the Nature of Leadership?
  • Visionary leadership.
  • Vision
  • A future that one hopes to create or achieve in
    order to improve upon the present state of
    affairs.
  • Visionary leadership
  • A leader who brings to the situation a clear and
    compelling sense of the future as well as an
    understanding of the actions needed to get there
    successfully.

11
What is the Nature of Leadership?
  • Meeting the challenges of visionary leadership
  • Challenge the process.
  • Show enthusiasm.
  • Help others to act.
  • Set the example.
  • Celebrate achievements.

12
What is the Nature of Leadership?
  • Acceptance theory of authority.
  • For a leader to achieve true influence, the other
    person must
  • Truly understand the directive.
  • Feel capable of carrying out the directive.
  • Believe the directive is in the organizations
    best interests.
  • Believe the directive is consistent with personal
    values.

13
What is the Nature of Leadership?
  • Servant leadership
  • Commitment to serving others.
  • Followers more important than leader.
  • Other centered not self-centered.
  • Power not a zero-sum quantity.
  • Focuses on empowerment, not power.

14
What is the Nature of Leadership?
  • Servant Leadership and empowerment.
  • Empowerment.
  • The process through which managers enable and
    help others to gain power and achieve influence.
  • Effective leaders empower others by providing
    them with
  • Information.
  • Responsibility.
  • Authority.
  • Trust.

15
What are the Important Leadership Traits and
Behaviors?
  • Traits that are important for leadership success
  • Drive
  • Self-confidence
  • Creativity
  • Cognitive ability
  • Business knowledge
  • Motivation
  • Flexibility
  • Honesty and integrity

16
What are the Important Leadership Traits and
Behaviors?
  • Leadership behavior
  • Leadership behavior theories focus on how leaders
    behave when working with followers.
  • Leadership styles are recurring patterns of
    behaviors exhibited by leaders.
  • Basic dimensions of leadership behaviors
  • Concern for the task to be accomplished.
  • Concern for the people doing the work.

17
What are the Important Leadership Traits and
Behaviors?
  • Task concerns
  • Plans and defines work to be done.
  • Assigns task responsibilities.
  • Sets clear work standards.
  • Urges task completion.
  • Monitors performance results.
  • People concerns
  • Acts warm and supportive toward followers.
  • Develops social rapport with followers.
  • Respects the feelings of followers.
  • Is sensitive to followers needs.
  • Shows trust in followers.

18
What are the important leadership traits and
behaviors?
  • Blake and Mouton Leadership Grid?
  • Team management.
  • High task concern high people concern.
  • Authority-obedience management.
  • High task concern low people concern.
  • Country club management.
  • High people concern low task concern.
  • Impoverished management.
  • Low task concern low people concern.
  • Middle of the road management.
  • Non-committal for both task concern and people
    concern.

19
Figure 13.3 Managerial styles in Blake and
Moutons Leadership Grid.
20
What are the Important Leadership Traits and
Behaviors?
  • Classic leadership styles
  • Autocratic style.
  • Emphasizes task over people, keeps authority and
    information within the leaders tight control,
    and acts in a unilateral command-and-control
    fashion.
  • Laissez-faire style.
  • Shows little concern for task, lets the group
    make decisions, and acts with a do the best you
    can and dont bother me attitude.
  • Democratic style.
  • Committed to task and people, getting things done
    while sharing information, encouraging
    participation in decision making, and helping
    people develop skills and competencies.

21
WHAT LEADERS DO...
  • Recruits, doesnt just hire
  • Breathes vision into people
  • Models positive behavior
  • Challenges, provokes
  • Is intellectually stimulating
  • Doesnt interfere, has courage to let it happen
  • Discovers talents
  • Builds the habitat for creativity
  • Instills ownership

22
Contingency Approaches to Leadership
  • Fielders Contingency Model
  • Hersey-Blanchard Situational Leadership Model
  • Houses Path-Goal Leadership Theory
  • Vroom-Jago Leadership-Participation Model

23
Contingency Theories of Leadership
  • Fielder Model
  • Leadership style must be fit to the situation
  • Leadership style is part of ones personality and
    is difficult to change
  • Key to success is to put existing style to work
    in situations with best fit
  • Hersey-Blanchard Model
  • Adjust styles depending on the maturity of the
    followers
  • Depends on followers readiness to perform in a
    given situation
  • Believes that the leader's style can and should
    be adjusted as
  • followers mature over time

24
Contingency Theories of Leadership
  • Houses Path-Goal Leadership Theory
  • Effective leader clarifies paths through which
    followers
  • can achieve both task-related and personal
    goals
  • Leaders should be flexible move back forth
    among 4
  • leadership styles to create positive path
    goal linkages
  • Vroom-Jago Leader-Participation Model
  • Helps a leader choose the decision-making method
    that best
  • fits the problem being faced
  • Key is on the amount of decision-making
    participation allowed
  • followers

25
Figure 13.4 Matching leadership style and
situation summary predictions from Fiedlers
contingency theory.
26
Figure 13.5 Leadership implications of the
Hersey-Blanchard situational leadership model.
27
Figure 13.6 Contingency relationships in the
path-goal leadership theory.
28
Figure 13.7 Leadership implications of Vroom-Jago
leader-participation model.
29
What are current issues in leadership development?
  • Superleaders.
  • Persons whose vision and strength of personality
    have an extraordinary impact on others.
  • Charismatic leaders.
  • Develop special leader-follower relationships and
    inspire others in extraordinary ways.

30
What are current issues in leadership development?
  • Transactional leadership
  • Someone who directs the efforts of others through
    tasks, rewards, and structures
  • Transformational leadership
  • Someone who is truly inspirational as a leader
    and who arouses others to seek extraordinary
    performance accomplishments.

31
What are current issues in leadership development?
  • Characteristics of transformational leaders
  • Vision.
  • Charisma.
  • Symbolism.
  • Empowerment.
  • Intellectual stimulation.
  • Integrity.

32
What are current issues in leadership development?
  • Emotional intelligence.
  • The ability of people to manage themselves and
    their relationships effectively.
  • Components of emotional intelligence
  • Self-awareness.
  • Self-regulation.
  • Motivation.
  • Empathy.
  • Social skill.

33
What are current issues in leadership development?
  • Gender and leadership.
  • Both women and men can be effective leaders.
  • Women tend to use interactive leadership.
  • A style that shares qualities with
    transformational leadership.
  • Men tend to use transactional leadership.
  • Interactive leadership provides a good fit with
    the demands of a diverse workforce and the new
    workplace.

34
What are current issues in leadership development?
  • Gender and leadership
  • Future leadership success will depend on a
    persons capacity to lead through
  • Openness.
  • Positive relationships.
  • Support.
  • Empowerment.

35
Druckers Old Fashioned Leadership
  • Define Establish a Sense of Mission
  • Accept Leadership as a Responsibility rather than
    a Rank
  • Earn Keep the Trust of Others

36
What are current issues in leadership development?
  • Moral leadership.
  • Ethical leadership adheres to moral standards
    meeting the test of good rather than bad and
    right rather than wrong.
  • All leaders are expected to maintain high ethical
    standards.
  • Long-term, sustainable success requires ethical
    behavior.
  • Integrity involves the leaders honesty,
    credibility, and consistency in putting values
    into action.

37
What are current issues in leadership development?
  • Moral leadership
  • Leaders with integrity earn the trust of their
    followers.
  • Leaders have a moral obligation to build
    performance capacities by awakening peoples
    potential.
  • Authentic leadership activates performance
    through the positive psychological states of
    confidence, hope, optimism, and resilience.
  • Authentic leadership helps in clearly framing and
    responding to moral dilemmas, and serving as
    ethical role models.

38
Chapter 13 Review
  • What is the nature of leadership?
  • What are the important leadership traits and
    behaviors?
  • What are the contingency theories of leadership?
  • What are current issues in leadership development?
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