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PPA 577 - Leadership

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... separately, seeking information and advice, but reserving decision authority. ... to make the decision, although their advice should be sought and considered. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PPA 577 - Leadership


1
PPA 577 - Leadership
  • Lecture 2 Contingency Theory

2
The Contingency Model of Leadership Effectiveness
3
The Contingency Model of Leadership Effectiveness
  • Fred Fiedler (1967) Leadership is primarily the
    exercise of social influence, therefore, the ease
    with which a leader influences his or her
    followers should make a big difference in how
    favorable the leadership situation is for the
    leader.

4
The Contingency Model of Leadership Effectiveness
  • Situational favorableness.
  • Quality of interpersonal relations (good or poor)
    primary consideration.
  • The clarity and structure of the task (high or
    low) secondary consideration.
  • Authority available from the formal position of
    the leader (strong or weak) tertiary
    consideration.
  • Fiedler developed eight-fold scale from the
    combinations of these variables ranging from I
    (favorable situation) to VIII (unfavorable
    situation).

5
The Contingency Model of Leadership Effectiveness
  • Situational favorableness measured against group
    performance controlling for LPC (least preferred
    coworker scale).
  • In very favorable or unfavorable situations, low
    LPC leaders were more effective in achieving high
    group productivity.
  • In moderate situations, high LPC leaders were
    more effective.

6
The Contingency Model of Leadership Effectiveness
  • Validity of model.
  • Criticism on complexity of model.
  • Criticism of post-hoc nature of model
    accommodates limited data and make capitalize on
    chance.
  • Meta-analysis of many studies confirms model.
  • Subsequent studies confirm analysis.

7
The Contingency Model of Leadership Effectiveness
  • Validity of model.
  • Meaning of LPC.
  • Psychological distance unclear.
  • Value-attitude interpretation.
  • Low LPC Value task accomplishment. Make more
    complex, accurate, favorable, and optimistic
    evaluations of people and activities that
    accomplish the task.
  • High LPC Value interpersonal accomplishment.
    Make more complex, accurate, favorable, and
    optimistic evaluations of people and activities
    that maximize interpersonal relations.

8
The Contingency Model of Leadership Effectiveness
  • Causal explanations of contingency effects.
  • High control situations.
  • High performance expectations gives great rein to
    task-oriented leader.
  • Relationship-oriented leader may be bored and
    distracted and engage in irrelevant activity.

9
The Contingency Model of Leadership Effectiveness
  • Causal explanations of contingency effects.
  • Moderate control situations.
  • Clear task with uncooperative group may benefit
    from morale building activities of
    relationship-oriented leader.
  • Task-oriented leader may rush judgment.
  • Low control situations.
  • Chaotic situations can be marginally improved by
    strong structures of task-oriented leaders.

10
Cognitive Resource Theory
  • What are the roles of intelligence and experience
    in predicting successful performance?
  • No clear results in straightforward experiments.
  • Fiedler (1970) concluded that the major
    moderating influence was the level of stress.

11
Cognitive Resource Theory
  • Intelligence
  • If leaders are under a high level of stress,
    leader intelligence bears no relationship to unit
    success.
  • Under low levels of stress, leader intelligence
    is positively related to unit success.
  • Experience
  • If leaders are under a high level of stress,
    experience is positively related to unit success.
  • If leaders are under a low level of stress,
    experience has no relationship to unit success.

12
Cognitive Resource Theory
  • Stress and anxiety interfere with careful and
    thoughtful analysis and creativity.
  • Prior training provides a fallback point for the
    experienced.

13
Path-Goal Theory of Leadership
  • The contingency theory fails describe the
    processes by which the leaders motivational
    orientation affects group processes and outcomes.
  • One obvious path for leadership effects is
    through the psychological states of the followers.

14
Path-Goal Theory of Leadership
  • Path-goal instrumentality.
  • The motivation to engage in a behavior was a
    function of the product of the persons
    perception of the probability that the behavior
    would lead to goal and the perceived importance
    of the goal.

15
Path-Goal Theory of Leadership
  • Evans (1970) - Considerate and participative
    supervision enhanced the subordinates
    perceptions of the availability of goals
    associate with higher order needs (self-esteem,
    feelings of accomplishment), but did nothing to
    make the subordinate feel more certain about how
    to go about attaining those goals.

16
Path-Goal Theory of Leadership
  • House (1971) integrated situational variables as
    moderators of the model followers ability and
    personality (locus of control and
    authoritarianism) and environmental factors (the
    task, the formal authority system, and the nature
    of the primary work group).
  • When task structure is low, subordinates will
    respond to a leaders structuring behavior, which
    clarifies the goal and identifies the path.

17
Path-goal Theory of Leadership
  • When task structure is high, structuring behavior
    by the leader is redundant and the behavior would
    be perceived as interfering.

18
Path-goal Theory of Leadership
  • Consideration behavior would have the most effect
    when the task is boring or repetitive (when
    structure is high). Consideration will have no
    effect if the task is complex and interesting.
  • Overall, tests of the model have been
    inconsistent.
  • The model relies too heavily on perceived
    behavior.
  • Characteristics of the subordinate tend to be
    ignored.

19
Contingency Approach to Decision Making
  • Two principles of normative decision-making
    model.
  • High levels of subordinate participation in
    decision making increase commitment, but are
    costly in time and effort.
  • The quality of the information that contributes
    to the decision.

20
Contingency Approach to Decision Making
  • Decision strategies.
  • Autocratic.
  • Consultative.
  • Democratic.

21
Contingency Approach to Decision Making
  • Decision models (groups).
  • Autocratic I leader makes decision alone using
    available information.
  • Autocratic II leader obtains information from
    subordinates but makes decision alone.
  • Consultative I leader shares the problem with
    each subordinate separately, seeking information
    and advice, but reserving decision authority.
  • Consultative II same pattern, but subordinates
    are consulted as a group.
  • Group II leader shares the problem with
    subordinates in a group and invites them to
    participate fully in decision making.

22
Contingency Approach to Decision Making
  • Decision models (individuals).
  • Autocratic I leader makes decision alone using
    available information.
  • Autocratic II leader obtains information from
    subordinates but makes decision alone.
  • Consultative I leader shares the problem with
    each subordinate separately, seeking information
    and advice, but reserving decision authority.
  • Group I participative decision making with a
    single subordinate.

23
Contingency Approach to Decision Making
  • Situational questions.
  • Whether the leader or subordinates have the
    necessary information to make a high quality
    decision.
  • Whether the subordinates are likely to be
    supportive of the decision and committed to its
    successful execution.
  • Whether there is conflict among the subordinates
    about the most desirable solution.

24
Contingency Approach to Decision Making
  • Six base principles of decision making.
  • If you do not have enough information to make a
    good decision, you must get the information from
    somewhere.
  • If the information that you have is not
    sufficiently structured to facilitate a clear
    decision, you need to seek to help and advice to
    clarify and structure the problem.
  • If you need the acceptance and commitment of
    followers to implement the decision and youre
    not sure that you have that acceptance, you must
    involve the followers in participative decision
    making to enlist acceptance.

25
Contingency Approach to Decision Making
  • Six base principles of decision making.
  • If followers are not committed to the
    organizational goals embedded in the problem,
    they cannot be allowed to make the decision,
    although their advice should be sought and
    considered.
  • If followers are in conflict over the most
    desirable solution, they must be brought together
    to allow them to air their opinions before a
    decision is made.
  • Followers should be represented, that is,
    solicited and heard, about decisions that affect
    them.

26
The Multiple Influence Model of Leadership
  • Contingency model with discretionary leadership
    behavior added as a modifying factor.
  • Recognition that hierarchical-level,
    environmental complexity, technological
    complexity, organizational structure constrain
    leadership behavior.
  • Leaders job is to bridge the gap between
    expectations and reality. Greater complexity
    increases the gap and reduces flexibility.

27
Multiple Linkage Model
  • Develops intervening variables linking
    behavioral, situational, and outcome variables.
  • Subordinate effort.
  • Role clarity and task skills.
  • Work organization.
  • Cohesiveness and cooperation.
  • Resources and support services.
  • External coordination.

28
Situational Leadership Theory
  • Most contingency theories do not take time into
    account.
  • Dimensions.
  • Psychological maturity.
  • Commitment.
  • Motivation.
  • Willingness to accept responsibility.
  • Job maturity.
  • Experience.
  • Knowledge.
  • Understanding of task requirements.

29
Situational Leadership Theory
  • Scale of overall maturity.
  • Unwilling and unable.
  • Willing but unable.
  • Able but unwilling.
  • Willing and able.

30
Situational Leadership Theory
  • Leader responses to each category.
  • High directive low participative (telling).
  • High directive high participative (selling).
  • High participative low directive
    (participative).
  • Low participative low task (delegative).
  • As the follower matures, leader moves from
    telling to selling to participative to delegative.

31
Summary Contingency Theory
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