Module 10 Leading
Module 10 Leading
Module 10 Leading
1. Meaning of leadership
Leadership is influence to achieve objectives
-process that cause people to strive willingly and enthusiastically toward the achievement of
group goals
-the process of guiding the activities of organization members in appropriate directions
-any behavior that cause a change in attitude or behavior of another person or group
-the relationship in which one person cause others to work together willingly on related
tasks to attain goals desired by the leader and/or the group
-the process that causes others to behave in preferred ways or to follow a particular course
to accomplish organizational objectives
-the activity that maximizes productivity, stimulates creative problem solving, and promotes
morale and satisfaction
-the ability to direct people toward the attainment of organizational goals
-the process of directing the behavior of others toward the accomplishment of some
objective.
-it is getting things accomplished through people
-the ability to consistently deliver extraordinary results by making decisions about values
and resources
-the capacity to for setting strategy, allocating resources, and executing the strategy
-the ability, art, and process of getting people do or not do certain activities directed towards
the achievement of organizational goals
2. Nature and meaning of power and authority
Power
-the ability or capacity to influence others to do something they would not otherwise do
-the ability to influence the behavior of others
-the ability to command or apply force and it need not be accompanied by authority
-the extent to which an individual is able to influence others so that they respond to orders
Authority
-the right to perform or command or issue directive and expend resources
-it stems from the position created by the organization
-the amount of authority that a manager can exercise depends on the amount of coercive,
reward, and legitimate power that the manager can exert in a certain position.
3. French and Raven’s Five Sources of power
EXTERNAL SOURCES (instruments of a manager)
a. Legitimate power
-based on an individual’s position in the organization and the authority granted to it
-generate compliance from followers
b. Reward power
-comes from the ability and authority of one individual to provide rewards, either intrinsic or
extrinsic or extrinsic, for compliance with this individual’s wishes
-generate compliance from followers
c. Coercive power
-comes from the authority to punish or recommend punishment
-based on fear, the subordinate does what is required to avoid punishment
-the disciplinary policies of organizations generally are based on this type of power
-creates resistance or an attempt to disobey orders
PERSONAL POWER ( tools of a leader)
d. Expert power
-based in the special skill, expertise, or knowledge that a particular individual possesses
-generates commitment
-it is particularly important when change is the desired outcome of a leader’s instructions
because change carries risk and uncertainty
e. Referent power
-results from characteristics that command subordinates’ identification with, respect and
admiration for, and desire to emulate the leader
-it is exemplified by the charismatic individual who has unusual traits that allow that person
to control situations
-generates commitment
-commitment assists the follower in overcoming fear of change
4. Two classes of leaders
Formal leader
-holds a position in an organization either by election or by appointment
-power comes from the organization
Informal leader
-emerges in an informal group and the one seen by the group as most capable of satisfying
its needs.
-power comes from the group
5. Leadership versus Management
Leadership Management
Warren Bennis -One who do the right things -One who do things right
-Innovates -Administers
-An original -A copy
-Develops -Maintains
-Focuses on people -Focuses on systems and structures
-Inspires trust -Relies on control
-Long-range perspective -Short range view
-Asks what and why -Asks how and when
-Eyes on the horizon -Eyes always on the bottom line
-Originates -Intimates
-Challenges the status quo -Accepts the status quo
-His own person -The classic good soldier
Genevieve -Embodies the soul characterized as -Embodies the mind, characterized as
Capowski visionary, passionate, creative, rational, consulting, persistent,
flexible, inspiring, innovative, problem-solving, tough-minded,
courageous, imaginative, analytical, structured, deliberate,
experimental, change initiator, with authoritative, stabilizing, with power
power based on personal trait based on position
John P. Kotter Establishing direction Planning and budgeting
-Developing a vision for the future, -Establishing detailed steps and
often the distant future and timetables for achieving needed
strategies for producing the changes results, and then allocating the
needed to achieve that vision resources necessary to make that
happen
Aligning people Organizing and staffing
-Communicating the direction by -Establishing some structure for
words and deeds to all those whose accomplishing plan requirements,
cooperation may be needed so as to staffing that structure with individuals,
influence the creation of terms and delegating responsibility and authority
coalitions that understand the vision for carrying out the plan, providing
and strategies, and accept their policies and procedures to help guide
validity people, and creating methods or
systems to monitor implementation
Motivation and Inspiring Controlling and Problem Solving
-Energizing people to overcome -Monitoring results vs. plan in some
major political, bureaucratic and detail, identifying deviations, and then
resource barriers to change by planning to solve these problems
satisfying very basic, but often
unfulfilled, human needs
6. Leadership
Peter Drucker Basic competence
-willingness, ability, and self discipline to listen; listening is not a skill – it’s a
discipline
-willingness to communicate and demonstrate, to make yourself understood,
again and again – requires patience
-willingness to realize how unimportant you are compared to the task
-No substitute for leadership
-Requires aptitude
-Requires basic attitude
-Thinks “we”
-Thinks “team”
-Leadership skills can be learned by those who want to
Douglas Major variables involved in leadership:
McGregor -Characteristics of the leaders
-The attitudes, needs, and other personal characteristics of the followers
-Characteristics of the organization, such as its purpose, its structure, the
nature of the tasks to be performed
-The social, economic, and political milieu
Leadership
-The personal characteristics required for effective performance as a leader
vary depending on the other factors
-Leadership is not property of the individual, but a complex relationship
among these variables
-A leader makes history and history can also make the leader
-Successful leadership is not dependent on the possession of a single
universal pattern of inborn traits and abilities
-Leadership is a relationship between the leader and the situation rather than
as a universal pattern of characteristics possessed by certain people
-The differences in requirements for successful leadership in different
situations are more striking than the similarities
-Research studies emphasize the importance of leadership skills and attitude
which can be acquired and are, therefore, not inborn characteristics of the
individual
Tom Peters & -Leadership is many things
Robert -It is patient, usually boring coalition building
Waterman -It is the purposeful seeding of cabals that one hope will result in the
appropriate ferment in the bowels of the organization
-It is meticulously shifting the attention of the institution through mundane
language of management systems
-It is altering agendas so that new priorities get enough attention
-It is being visible when things are going awry and invisible when they are
working well
-It is building a loyal team at the top that speaks more or less with one voice
-It is listening carefully much of the time, frequently speaking with
encouragement, and reinforcing words with believable action
-It is being tough when necessary, and it’s the occasional naked use of power
– or the subtle accumulation of nuances, a hundred things done a little better
Tom Peters -The most effective leaders, political or corporate, empower others to act –
and grow – in support of a cause that both leaders and followers find worth
-The leader’s job is at once to articulate the empowering vision, and to stay in
touch with followers to ensure that she or he is in tune with the needs of the
real world where the vision is implemented
-The listening organization is in turn the one most likely to pick up quickly on
changes in the environment
Emmanuel T. The seven Cs of Leadership
Santos -Competence: expert power
-Characters: anchored on the values, integrity, honesty, honor, courage
-Commitment: adherence to principles, beliefs, values, vision, mission
-Communication: connecting
-Capacity for listening: learning from others
-Capability for leadership presence: looking, smelling, acting, behaving,
speaking, and listening like a leader
-Charisma and passion: having that attractive, magnetic, and hypnotizing
appeal anchored on the pursuit of a vision, the unreachable star, with all
one’s heart, mind and soul.
John Harvey -The aim of the business leader must be to be the best, for only the best
Jones command their own destiny and achieve the sort of rewards that are sought
for themselves and their people
-In a cycle of reinforcement, the best people wish to join the best companies
-The best companies are able to more readily able to make alliances or
purchase technology or be welcomed into countries other than their own, or
obtain financial considerations from banks or shareholders, or escape some
of the more scathing criticism which can be so damaging to a company
Warren Bennis -Leadership is the capacity to create a compelling vision and to translate it
into action and sustain it
-The key to future competitive advantage will be the organization’s capacity
to create the social architecture capable of generating intellectual capital.
And leadership is the key realizing the full potential of intellectual capital
-It is not enough to intuitively grasps these forces. Many visionary strategists
have rich intuitions that they cannot explain. They end up being
authoritarian leaders, imposing their strategies and policies or continually
intervening in decisions. They fall into this fate even if their values are
contrary to authoritarian leadership – because only they see the decisions
that need to be made
-Leaders in learning organizations have the ability to conceptualize their
strategic insights so that they become public knowledge, open to challenge
and further improvement
-Leader as teacher is not about teaching people how to achieve their vision.
It is about fostering learning for everyone. Such leaders help people
throughout the organization develop systemic inderstandings. Accepting this
responsibility is the antidote t one of the most common downfall of
otherwise gifted leaders – losing their commitment to the truth.
-Leaders who are designers, stewards, and teachers come to see their task
very simply as holding a vision and concurrently telling the truth about
current reality relative to that vision to dramatize the issue so that it can no
longer be ignored.
-A leader’ story, sense of purpose, values and vision establish the direction
and target. His relentless commitment to the truth and to inquiry into the
forces underlying the current reality continually highlights the gaps between
reality and the vision. The gap creates the creative tension in the entire
organization. This is how they energize an organization
Harold Geneen -Leadership is the very heart and soul of business management. What you
manage in business is people
-Make them enjoy the process of tackling a difficult piece of business, solving
it, and going on a bigger, better, and tougher challenges
7. Theories of Leadership
a. Trait Theory
b. Behavioral Theories
c. Situational/Contingency Theories
d. Integrated Model of Leadership
8. Trait Theories
-Traits are distinguishing personal characteristics such as intelligence, values, and appearance
-Trait theory holds that certain distinguishing physical, psychological, and intellectual
characteristics or traits differentiate leaders from their groups
-Prior to 1949, studies of leadership were based largely on an attempt to identify the traits that
leaders possess
-Starting with the great men theory that leaders are born not made, a belief dating back to the
ancient Greeks and Romans and popularized by Thomas Carlyle in modern times, researchers
have tried to indentify the physical, mental, and personality traits of leaders and attempted to
identify a set of individual characteristics or traits that distinguished leaders from followers and
successful leaders from unsuccessful leaders
a. Stogdill’s Trait Factors
-Intelligence and scholarship
-Leaders are somewhat more intelligent, perform better academic tasks, and
possess superior judgment than followers
-If there is too much of an intellectual gap, there can be problems in cooperation
and coordination of performance
-A leader who is much smarter than group members may have difficulty
empathizing and communicating with followers, which results in impatience and
potential conflict from both parties
-Physical traits
-May have some relations to leadership presence
-Personality
-Leaders appear to have self confidence, honesty, integrity, creativity, and
initiative
-Social status and experience
-Leaders are more educated
-Higher socioeconomic status can be an advantage to leadership status
-Task orientation
-Leaders are characterized as having a high need for assuming responsibility and
achieving specific tasks
-They are highly motivated to set goals and reach them consistently
b. Ghiselli’s Personality Traits
-Very important
-Decisiveness
-Intellectual capacity
-Job achievement orientation
-Self-actualization feelings
-Self confidence
-Management ability – team builder
-Moderately important
-Affinity for working class
-Drive and initiative
-Need for a lot of money
-Need for job security
-Personal maturity
-Almost no importance
-Masculinity versus femininity
c. John C. Maxwell
-Character: be a piece of rock
-Charisma: first impression counts
-Commitment: doers
-Communication:
-Competence: ability
-Courage:
-Discernment: solve mysteries
-Focus: sharp
-Generosity: light another
-Initiative: take responsibility for results
-Listening: use your ears
-Passion: love life
-Positive attitude: believe you can
-Problem-solving: look for causes
-Relationships: get along
-Responsibility: carry the ball to carry the team
-Security:
-Self-discipline: follow the rules
-Servanthood: put others first
-Teachability: keep learning
-Vision: visualize the future
d. Steven Covey
-Principle-centered leadership
-Principles are like compasses
-Principles operate in obedience to natural laws
-Principles apply at all times in all places
-Service-oriented
-Radiate positive energy
-Believe in other people
-Lead balanced lives
-See life as an adventure
-Synergistic
-Exercise for self-renewal
9. Behavioral Theories
a. Kurt Lewin study on Autocratic vs. Democratic Leaders
Autocratic Democratic
The group with autocratic leader The performance of groups was
performed highly so long as the almost as good
leader was present to supervise Group members felt positive
them feelings rather than hostility
However, group members were Group members performed well
displeased with the close, even when the leader was
autocratic style of leadership absent and left the group on its
Feelings of hostility frequently own
arose The participative techniques and
majority rule in decision-making
made group members perform
well with or without the
presence of the leader
This explains why empowerment
of lower employees is a popular
trend in organizations today
A democratic leader delegates
authority to others, encourages
participation, and relies on
expert and referent power to
manage subordinates
b. Lewin, Lippit, and White’s Continuum Theory
-Identified three basic styles of leadership
-The autocrat
Tends to centralize authority and relies on legitimate, rewards, and coercive
power to manage subordinates
Has little trust in group members
Believes that money is the only rewards that will motivate workers
Issue orders to be fulfilled with no questions asked
-The laissez-faire
Has little or no self-confidence in his or her leadership ability
Sets no goals for the group
Minimizes communication and group interaction
Characterized by low concern for people and low concern for task or production
-The democrat
Delegates authority to others, encourages participation, and relies on expert and
referent power to manage subordinates
Shares decision-making with the group members
Explains to the group reasons for personal decisions when necessary
Objectively communicates criticism and praise to subordinates
c. Robert McMurry
-The benevolent autocrat
Leader who listens carefully to followers, gives the impression of being democratic
but always makes his or her own personal decision
Democratic leadership style is too slow and unworkable in our fast-moving business
world
A benevolent autocrat is powerful, prestigious, and respected and therefore able to
move faster and more effectively in a firm manner
d. Ohio University, University of Michigan, and Blake and Mouton from Texas University
-a leader’s style is oriented towards either an employee/people-centered or
job/production/performance-centered emphasis
-In the employee/people-centered orientation, the leader emphasizes developing friendly,
open relationships with employees and is very sensitive to their personal and social needs
-A job-centered orientation is one in which the leader emphasizes getting the job done by
planning, organizing, delegating, making decisions, evaluating performance, and exercising
close managerial control (technocrat)
Michigan Studies
-Compared the behavior of effective and ineffective supervisors
Effective Supervisors Less Effective Supervisors
Those who focused on the The focus is on meeting schedules,
subordinates’ human needs in order to keeping cost low, and achieving
build effective work groups with high production efficiency
performance goals The job centered leaders tended to be
Employee centered leaders established less concerned with goal achievement
high performance goals and displayed and human needs
supportive behavior toward the
subordinates
Blake and Mouton Texas University Study:
-Managerial/Leadership Grid
High 9 1.9 9.9
concern 8
for 7
people 6
5 5.5
4
3
2
Low 1 1.1 9.1
concern 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
for Low concern for production High concern for production
people
-Deals with trying to make sense out of cause-effect relationship. When an event happens,
people want to attribute it a certain cause
-Leadership is merely an attribution that people make about other individuals
-People tend to characterize leaders as having traits such as intelligence, outgoing
personality, strong verbal skills, aggressiveness, understanding, and industriousness
-Similarly, the high-high leader (high in initiating structure/high in consideration) has been
found to be consistent with people’s attribution of what makes a good leader
-At the organizational level, the attribution framework explains why people are prone to
attribute either the extremely negative or extremely positive performance of an organization
to its leadership
-It also explains the vulnerability of CEO when their organization suffers major financial
setbacks, regardless of whether they had much to do with it. It also clarifies why these CEOs
tend to be given credit for extremely positive financial results, again regardless of how much
or how little they contributed
-Effective leaders are generally considered to be consistent or unwavering in their decisions
-A heroic leader is perceived as being someone who takes up a difficult or unpopular cause
but through determination and persistence, ultimately succeeds.
c. Team Leadership
-The challenge
Having the patience to share information
Being able to trust others and give up authority
Understanding when to intervene
-Need to master the difficult balancing act of knowing when to leave their teams alone and
when to get involved.
-Common responsibilities
Coaching
Facilitating
Handling disciplinary problems
Reviewing team and individual performance
Training
Communication
-Priorities
Managing the team’s external boundary
Facilitating the team process
-Roles
Liaisons with external constituencies
-Representing the team to upper management, other internal teams, customers,
suppliers, etc.
-Securing needed resources, clarifying others’ expectations of the team, gathering
information from the outside, and sharing that information with team members
Trouble shooters
-Resolves team’s problems
-Problems are rarely technical and therefore the right questions must be asked to
help the team talk through the problems or to gather needed resources from
external constituencies
Conflict managers
-Process conflicts
-Help identify issues, such as the source of the conflict, who is involved, the issues,
the resolution options available, and the advantages and disadvantages of each
Coaching
-Clarify expectations and roles
-Teach, offer support, cheerlead
-Do whatever is necessary to help team members keep their work performance at
high levels
Transactional -One person takes the initiative in making contact with others for the
Leaderships purpose of an exchange of valued things.
-The exchange could be economic, financial, political, or psychological in
nature: a swap of goods or of money for one good; a trading of votes
between candidate and voter.
-The bargainers have no enduring purpose that holds them together.
-Leaders motivate by making subordinates understand how their needs and
the rewards they desire are linked by goal achievement
Enlightened -Those who guide or motivate their followers in the direction of established
Transactional goals by clarifying role and task requirements
Leadership
Transformational -Leaders with a vision, translate it into action and outcomes, and sustain it.
Leadership -Leaders who motivate individuals to perform beyond normal expectations
by inspiring subordinates to focus on broader missions that transcends their
own immediate self-interest, to concentrate on intrinsic higher level goals
and to have confidence in their abilities to achieve the extraordinary
missions articulated by the leader
-Transformational leadership occurs when one or more persons engage with
others in such a way that leaders and followers raise one another to higher
levels of motivation and morality
Transcending -A dynamic leadership that throw themselves into a relationship with
Leadership followers who will feel elevated by it and often become more active
themselves, thereby creating new cadres of leaders
Reform -One that seeks change through gradual means
Leadership
Revolutionary -One who seeks complete, pervasive, profound, and radical transformation
Leadership of the entire social, economic or political system