Chapter 12
Chapter 12
Chapter 12
The Situational Leadership Theory (SLT) is a contingency theory that focuses on followers’ readiness. It was developed by Paul Hersey and
Ken Blanchard and enjoys a strong following among management development specialists.
Let’s stop here to clarify two points: (1) why a leadership theory focuses on the followers, and (2) what is meant by the term readiness. The
emphasis on the followers reflects the reality that it is the followers who accept or reject the leader, regardless of what the leader does, so
the group’s effectiveness depends on the actions of the followers. Readiness, as defined by Hersey and Blanchard, refers to the extent to
which people have the ability and willingness to accomplish a specific task.
SLT uses the same two leadership dimensions that Fiedler identified task and relationship behaviors but takes it a step further by
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considering each as either high or low and then combining them into four specific leadership styles
1. Telling (high task–low relationship), in which the leader defines roles and tells people what, how, when, and where to do various
tasks.
2. Selling (high task–high relationship), in which the leader provides both directive and supportive behavior.
3. Participating (low task–high relationship), in which the leader and followers share in decision making and the main role of the
leader is facilitating and communicating.
4. Delegating (low task–low relationship), in which the leader provides little direction or support.
The final component in the model is the four stages of follower readiness:
• R1: People are both unable and unwilling to take responsibility for doing something.
Followers aren’t competent or confident.
• R2: People are unable but willing to do the necessary job tasks. Followers are
motivated but lack the appropriate skills.
• R3: People are able but unwilling to do what the leader wants. Followers are
competent but don’t want to do something.
• R4: People are both able and willing to do what is asked of them.
SLT essentially views the leader-follower relationship like that of a parent and a child, in which a parent needs to
relinquish control when a child becomes more mature and responsible. As followers reach higher levels of
readiness, the leader responds not only by decreasing control over their activities but also by decreasing
relationship behaviors.
than at the person that is, it should talk about autocratic and participative situations rather than autocratic and participative leaders.
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Research findings on the path-goal model have been mixed due to the number of variables to examine.
However, evidence does show that an employee’s performance and satisfaction are likely to be positively
influenced when the leader chooses a leadership style that compensates for shortcomings in either the
employee or the work setting.
In today’s uncertain environment, leaders need to build, or even rebuild, trust and credibility.
Before we can discuss ways leaders can do that, we have to know what trust and credibility
are and why they’re so important.
The main component of credibility is honesty. Surveys show that honesty is consistently singled out as the
number one characteristic of admired leaders. In addition, credible leaders are competent and inspiring. They
are personally able to effectively communicate their confidence and enthusiasm.
Trust is closely entwined with the concept of credibility, and is defined as the belief in the integrity, character,
and ability of a leader. Research has identified five dimensions that make up the concept of trust:
1. Integrity
2. Competence
3. Consistency
4. Loyalty
5. Openness
Of these five dimensions, integrity seems to be the most critical when someone assesses another’s
trustworthiness. Workplace changes have reinforced the importance of these leadership qualities because
employee empowerment and self-managed work teams have reduced many traditional control mechanisms
used to monitor employees. Employees have to trust managers to treat them fairly, and managers have to trust
employees to conscientiously fulfill their responsibilities—whether they are onsite, members of cross-functional
or virtual teams, or a strategic alliance.
Research has shown that trust in leadership is significantly related to positive job outcomes, including job
performance, organizational citizenship behavior, job satisfaction, and organizational commitment. Leaders
need to build trust with their followers. Some suggestions for how to build trust are shown here in Exhibit 12-7.