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What is Leadership?. Approaches to Leadership. Fairhurst (2007) . Competency (Trait) Perspective of Leadership. Skills, knowledge, aptitudes and other personal characteristics that lead to superior performance. Traits and Characteristics eg Stodgill (1974), Handy (1980).
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Approaches to Leadership Fairhurst (2007)
Competency (Trait) Perspective of Leadership • Skills, knowledge,aptitudes • and other • personal characteristics • that lead • to superior performance
Traits and CharacteristicsegStodgill (1974), Handy (1980) Limitations: • Assumes that all effective leaders have the same personal characteristics that are equallyimportant in all situations. • Alternative combinations of competenciesmay be equally successful • Views leadership as something within a person • Indicates leadership potential, not leadership performance
Leadership Styles and Behaviours • McGregor (1960) • Theory X • Theory Y
Types and Roles Lewin, Lippitt and White (1939) • Autocratic • Democratic • Laissez –faire Benne and Sheats(1948) • Task maintenance act • Group maintenance act
Authentic leadership • Emotional intelligence Effective leaders need to act consistently with their values, personality, and self-concept Source: McShane et al 2013: 384-385
Contingency (Situational) Perspective of Leadership • The most appropriate leadership style depends • on the • situation. • Leaders • must be • insightful and flexible, • and adapt behaviours and styles • to the • immediate situation.
Contingent LeadershipFiedler’s (1974) Contingency Model Favourable Unfavourable
Charismatic Leadership Applied to a certain quality of an individual • considered extraordinary • treated as endowed with supernatural, superhuman, specifically exceptional powers or qualities. • qualities are not accessible to the ordinary person • regarded as of divine origin or as exemplary , and the individual concerned is treated as a “leader”’ (Weber,1968: 241)
Transformational Leadership • Visioning the new corporate future • Communicating the vision • Implementing the vision Popular in 1980s and 1990s (Dunphyand Stace, 1990) Source: McShane et al. 2013: 393
Paternal Leadership Style Source: Fulop, L and Linstead, S (2009) : 525
Paternal Leadership Tactics Source: Fulop, L and Linstead, S (2009) : 526
Narcissistic Leader Narcissism • They must be more than they are • Their value as people is dependent upon the image they project • People are objects to be manipulated to get the validation narcissists need Source: Fulop and Linstead, 2009
Post Heroic Leadership • Associated with transformational leadership but with a greater emphasis on developing subordinates (Bradford and Cohen, 1984) • Distributed or collective leadership Heifetz and Laurie (1997)
Followership • Followership is the role of the group member in supporting (or not) the leadership role • Leadership prototypicality (Hogg, 2001) • Social identity and leadership (Haslam , 2001)
Implicit Leadership Perspective • People evaluate a leader’s effectiveness in terms of how well that person fits preconceived beliefs about the features and behaviours of effective leaders (leadership prototypes) • People tend to inflate the influence of leaders on organisational events • Followers perceptions about the characteristics and influence of people they call leaders Source: McShane et al. 2013: 395- 396
The Three Levels of Leadership Source: Scouller, J. (2011)
Leadership is very much a relational product of the societies in which organisations operate. • Cultural variables will affect how leaders from different • cultural backgrounds manage in foreign cultures and with culturally diverse groups. Source: Fulop and Linstead, 2009: 530