Responsibilities of Leaders
French & Raven - Leadership and power
Personal power: emotional power
1. referent power -> follower’s identification
2. expert power -> competence: knowing details and not only the overview
Position power: derives from a particular office or rank in formal organizational system
3. Reward power -> position power - capacity to reward
4. coercive power -> opposite: capacity to penalize
5. Legitimate power -> status of formal job authority
6. Information power -> possessing knowledge that others want
Different between Leadership and Management
Leader: producing change and movement
Manager: order and consistency
-Allocating resources
-Organizing and staffing - providing working structures
(working placement, work enlargements, enrichments, established rules and procedures)
-Controlling and solving - creative solutions, escalating if necessary
-Taking corrective actions
Great Person/Man Theory
5 trait approach
Costa & Mccrae
Trait approach
5 factors
and how it works
Focuses exclusively on leader
Leader with certain traits is crucial to having effective leadership
Consequence for organization: use personality assessments to find people with designated leadership profiles (trait assessment can help)
- Provides direction: which traits are good to have if one aspires a leadership position
- Individuals can determine whether they have the selected traits
- Used by managers to assess where they stand
Skill approach (Katz) 3 skills
Top: director tasks (CEO), clarifying the big picture
Middle: sandwich position, receives info and gets questions from both sides, acts as intermediary
Supervisory: smaller leadership tasks and teams, more tech knowledge required
Mumford, Zacaro & Harding
Capability model 5 components
Blake & Mouton
Behavior Approach leadership grid
2 orientation for the leader:
a) concern for production -> task oriented leadership
b) concern for people -> human side, how leader attends to feelings motivation
Middle of the road management (5,5)
Team management (9,9)
Country club management (1,9)
Impoverished management (1,1)
Authority compliance (9,1)
Hersey & Blanchard
Situational leadership
2 forms of behavior
1) Directive behavior
- helps followers to achieve goals with one direction
- needs to communicate the goal, define timelines and methods on how to reach them
2) Supportive behavior
- 2-way communication between leader and followers
- seeking for input, moderating, problem solving, praises people and listens
SL2 MODEL
S1 : Directing - high directive and low supportive behavior
S2: Coaching - high directive and high supportive behavior
S3: Supporting - low directive and high supportive behavior
S4: Delegating - low directive and low supportive behavior
5 multi-components of group cohesion
4 Stages of team development
Goal Setting
Levels of goals
Individual goals - member of team
Unit goals - operating unit levels (e.g. departments)
Strategy goals - enterprise level
Real power of these 3 cascading goals lies in their alignment with objectives of the company.
- meaning of alignments: everybody is involved in goals and understands benefits of it. Can only be realized by sharing information
Goal setting
5 principles of goal setting
Lock
4 ways how goals can affect performance
SMART
Achieve model
The traditional interpretation of SMART stands for: specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, timely
Adaptive leadership
how leaders encourage people to adopt challenges and change. It focuses on people to respond changing environment and how leader can support them during these changes
Technical challenges : problem solved by experts, who have repair to solve them.
Locus of work: Authority
Adaptive challenges: allow problems to identify accurately and involve entire organization in the search for possible solutions, which are challenging require learnings finding hidden patterns. Leader performs different behaviors
Solution: empathy, autonomy, independence, win-win solution for all stakeholders
4 dimensions adaptive leadership
6 Adaptive Leadership behavior
Get on the balcony: observe for better problem solving
Identify the adaptive challenge: problems with no clear cut, changes involved
Regulate distress: maintain productive levels of stress by creating a holding environment
Main disciplined attention: leader helps followers to address change and not avoiding conflicts, helps followers to stay focused on the changes
Give the work back to the people: empower the people to decide what to do when feeling uncertain, encourage them to think from themselves, help them grow and thrive
Protect leadership voices from below: seek for consultancy, protect the voices that are more silent, give everybody a chance to participate in decision making process
Adaptive approach: leader is looking for collaboration of leader and follower (not only himself) encouraging followers.
4 lessons in adaptive leadership
Follett 1949/1987
Invisible Leadership
Invisible leadership embodies situations in which dedication to a compelling and deeply held common purpose is the motivating force for leadership. The common purpose provides inspiration for participants using their strengths willingly in leader or follower roles and cultivates a strong shared bond that connects participants to each other in pursuit of the purpose.
Invisible leadership builds on several shared leadership concepts: leader-follower relations, teams&team and democratic leadership
possibilities for further research on invisible leadership
- The power of compelling common purpose can generate leadership in various contexts - companies, non profit organizations, communities etc.
Interrelated factors in invisible leadership are for example: bond among participants, commitment and ownership of the purpose, influence/inspiration to contribute
Convergence theory and collective process
Tools of leading : conflict management skills, empathy, planning, listening, sharing leadership skills etc.
House & Mitchell
Path Goal theory
Leaders should use specific leadership styles for given task situations and subordinates characteristics to satisfy unmet needs -> motivate followers to accomplish goals
House & Mitchell
Path goal theory
3 follower characteristics
3 task characteristics
3 Task characteristics
How leadership and management differ
Management
Leadership
Behavioral Approach
Douglas Mcgregor
Theory X and Theory Y
Focuses exclusively on what leaders do and how they act composed of two general types of behaviors
Theory X and Y
explained how managers beliefs about what motivates their people can affect their leadership
- How leaders combine the two kinds of behaviors
- to influence followers in their efforts
- to reach a given goal
Situational leadership approach
Features of the situational leadership approach
Features - followers
Focuses on followers, rather than wider workplace circumstances
Leaders should change their behavior according to type of followers and situation
Proposes leadership adaption in response to the development of followers-> flexibility
Followers
what is group cohesion?
managing team expectations
Integrity, Solidarity, Unity
Members of a cohesive group “stick together”
Ideas: strong feelings of attraction, morale and trust, combination to a highly productive unit