Title: Leadership and Management Behavior in Multinational Companies
114
- Leadership and Management Behavior in
Multinational Companies
2Learning Objectives
- Know the characteristics of global business
leadership - Understand traditional North American models of
leadership - Understand the Japanese performance-maintenance
model of leadership - Be able to apply the cultural-contingency model
of leadership - Develop sensitivity to national cultural
differences - Understand how national culture affects the
choice of leader influence tactics - Understand how national culture influences
subordinates expectations - Understand the role of transformational
leadership in multinational settings - Understand how the national culture affects a
leaders attributions - Understand the role of women global leaders for
multinationals - Develop the ability to diagnose cultural
situations and suggest appropriate leadership
style to fit the situation
3Leadership
- Leadership process of influencing group members
to achieve organizational goals - Excellent leaders motivate their employees to
achieve more than minimal requirements
4Global Leadership The New Breed
- Global Leader One who has the skills and
abilities to interact with and manage people from
diverse cultural backgrounds - Characteristics of a global leader Cosmopolitan,
skilled at intercultural communication,
culturally sensitive, and capable of rapid
acculturation - Global Leader Characteristics
- Knowledgeable about cultural and institutional
influences on management - Facilitator of subordinates intercultural
performance - A user of cultural synergy
- A promoter and user of the growing world culture
- A commitment to continuous improvement in
self-awareness and renewal
5Three Classic Models of Leadership
- Three basic models of leadership
- Leadership traits
- Leadership behavior
- Contingency leadership
6Leadership Traits
- Are leaders born or made?
- Great-person theory idea that leaders are born
with unique characteristics that make them quite
different from ordinary people - Contemporary views of leadership traits do not
assume that leaders are born
7Traits of Successful U.S. Leaders
- Higher intelligence and self-confidence
- More initiative
- More assertiveness and persistence
- Greater desire for responsibility and the
opportunity to influence others - A greater awareness of the needs of others
8Leadership Behaviors
- U.S. perspectives on leadership behaviors
- Two major types of leadership behaviors
- Task-centered leader focus on completing tasks
by initiating structure - Gives subordinates specific standards, schedules,
and tasks - Person-centered leader focus on meeting the
social and emotional needs of employees
9Leader Decision Making Styles
- Autocratic leadership leaders make all major
decisions themselves - Democratic leadership leader includes
subordinates in decision making - Consultative or participative leadership
leaders style falls midway between autocratic
and democratic styles
10Japanese Perspectives on Leader Behaviors
- Performance-maintenance (PM) theory balancing
task- and person-centered leader behaviors - Two dimensions of PM theory
- Performance function (P) similar to
task-centered leadership - Two components of performance function
- Planning component the leader works for or with
subordinates to develop work procedures - Pressure component the leader then pressures
employees to put forth more effort and to do good
work - Maintenance function (M) similar to
person-centered. Presents behaviors that promote
group stability and social interaction - Difference between the Japanese PM approach and
the U.S. perspective - Japanese PM leader focuses on influencing groups
- U.S. approach focuses on influencing individuals
11Contingency Theory
- Assumption that different styles and different
leaders are more appropriate for different
situations - Two North American contingency theories of
leadership - Fiedlers theory of leadership
- Path-goal theory
12Fiedlers Theory of Leadership
- Proposed that managers tend to be either task- or
person-centered leaders - Three successful contingencies of the work
situation - Leader and subordinates relationships
- Clearly defined subordinates tasks
- Power of the leader
- Effective leadership occurs when the leadership
styles match the situation - Theory suggests that task-centered leadership
works best when situation is favorable or not
favorable for leader - If favorable, subordinates are positive about
their workneed to be told what to do - In unfavorable situations, job requirements are
unclear, leader need to focus on getting things
done
13Path-Goal Theory
- Four leadership styles that a manager might
choose depending on the situation - Directive
- Supportive
- Participative
- Achievement-oriented
- When subordinates have high achievement needs
adopt the achievement-oriented style - Subordinates with high social needsadopt the
supportive leadership style - When job is unstructuredadopt a directive style
or an achievement-oriented style
14Exhibit 14.3 A Simplified Model of Path-Goal
Theory
15Traits, Behaviors, and Contingencies
- No consistent leadership trait or behavior that
works best - A successful leader must diagnose the situation
and pick the behaviors and/or develop the
leadership traits that fits best.
16National Context as a Contingency for Leadership
Behaviors
- Successful leadership in multinational companies
requires that managers adjust their leadership
styles to fit different situations. - Two steps to adjust a leadership to a multination
- Step 1 understanding what local managers do to
lead successfully in their own country - Step 2 using this knowledge to modify ones
leadership style - National-context contingency model of leadership
shows how culture and related social institutions
affect leadership practices
17Exhibit 14.5 National-Context Contingency Model
of Leadership
18The National-Context Contingency Model of
Leadership
- Outlines of how leadership behaviors, traits, and
contingencies are affected by the national
context - Leader behaviors and traits
- Subordinates characteristics
- Work setting
19Leadership Traits and behaviors in the National
Context
- GLOBE (Global Leadership and Organizational
Behavior Effectiveness) - The very latest research on cross-national
differences in leadership - Study contains insights regarding crucial
leadership styles to navigate successfully
through a maze of cultural settings
20GLOBE findings
- Leadership styles vary by countries.
- Team-oriented leaders are preferred in Latin
European and Southern Asian countries. - Anglo and Germanic cultures prefer participative
leaders. - South Asian cultures prefer humane leader.
- All countries agree that autonomous leaders and
self-protective leaders universally impeded
leadership.
21National Context and Preferred Leader-Influence
Tactics
- Influence tactics tactical behaviors leaders use
to influence subordinates (Exhibit 14.9) - U.S managers favor seven influence tactics
- Assertiveness
- Friendliness
- Reasoning
- Bargaining
- Sanctioning
- Appeals to a higher authority
- Coalitions
22National Context and Subordinates Expectations
- National context affects subordinates
expectations regarding what leaders should do
and what they may or may not do - High power-distance autocratic leadership
- E.g., many of the Latin and Asian countries
- Low power-distance leader be more like them
- E.g., Sweden and Norway
- Strong masculinity norms
- Lead to the acceptance of more authoritarian
leadership - Strong uncertainty-avoidance norms
- Subordinates to expect the leader to provide more
detail in directions
23Contemporary Leadership Perspectives
Multinational Implications
- Two basic forms of leadership
- Transactional leadership managers use rewards or
punishments to influence their subordinates - Most ordinary leaders use transactional
leadership - Transformational Leaders (Charismatic) succeed
because subordinates respond to them with high
levels of performance, devotion and willingness
to sacrifice - Same leadership traits may not lead to
transformational leadership in all countries
24Transformational Leadership
- Managers go beyond transactional leadership by
- Articulating a vision
- Breaking from the status quo
- Providing goals and a plan
- Giving meaning or a purpose to goals
- Taking risks
- Being motivated to lead
- Building a power base
- Demonstrating high ethical and moral standards
25Attributions and Leadership
- Emphasis on what leaders believe causes
subordinates behaviors - Two key distinctions in attributions
- External attribution factors outside the person
and beyond the persons control (e.g., natural
disasters, illness, faulty equipment, etc.) - Internal attribution characteristics of the
person (e.g., personality, motivation, low
ability, etc.) - Once leader makes attribution, leader responds to
subordinate based on that assumption - Fundamental attribution error assumption by
managers that people behave in certain ways
because of internal motivations, rather than
outside factors - Successful leaders make the correct attributions.
26Global Women Leaders The Future?
- Women global leadership spread of traits or
qualities that are associated with women to the
process of leading organizations worldwide - orientation toward more participative,
interactional, and relational styles of leading - Women leaders have skills to develop deep
relationship to understand markets - More likely to provide unity to accommodate needs
of various stakeholders - Better ability to understand diversity at global
levels
27Getting the Results Should You Do What Works at
Home?
- Cannot assume that successful home leadership
styles or traits will result in equally
successful leadership in a foreign country - It is nevertheless difficult to adapt.
28The Cultural Context and Suggested Leadership
Styles
- High power distance behave more autocratically
- High uncertainty cultures remove ambiguity from
work setting
29Exhibit 14.13 National Culture and Recommended
Leadership Styles