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Chapter Seven. Leadership and Leader Behaviors. Reading 15 Predicting Organizational Effectiveness with a Four-Factor Theory of Leadership.
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Chapter Seven Leadership and Leader Behaviors
Reading 15Predicting Organizational Effectiveness with a Four-Factor Theory of Leadership • Research emphasis has shifted from a search for personality traits to a search for behavior that makes a difference in the performance or satisfaction of the followers • In a modern organizational family there is: • Usual task interdependence • Frequent social interdependence
Dimensions of Leadership • The concept of leadership is meaningful only in the context of two or more people • Leadership is the behavior by one member of an organizational family toward another member or members of the group, which advances some joint aim
Ohio State Leadership Studies • The Halpin and Winer analysis is widely used • The following are identified as “the Ohio State” dimensions of leadership: • Consideration • Behavior indicative of friendship, mutual trust, respect, and warmth • Initiating structure • Behavior that organizes and defines relationships or roles • Establishes well-defined patterns of organization channels of communication, and ways of getting jobs done
University of Michigan Survey Research Center Studies • Employee orientation • Behavior of a supervisor, which indicates that he feels that the “human relations” aspect of the job is important • Production orientation • Stresses production and the technical aspects of the job, with employees as means for getting work done
Studies at the Research Center for Group Dynamics • Group maintenance functions • Resolves disputes • Provides encouragement • Stimulates self-direction • Increases interdependence among members • Goal achievement functions • Initiates action • Keeps members’ attention on the goal • Makes expert information available
Mann’s Three Skills • Human relations skill – Ability and judgment in working with and through people • Technical skill – Ability to use knowledge, methods, techniques, and equipment necessary for performing tasks • Administrative skill – Ability to understand and act according to the objectives of the total organization
Comparison and Integration • Support • Behavior that enhances someone else’s feeling of personal worth and importance • Interaction facilitation • Behavior that encourages members of the group to develop close relationships • Goal emphasis • Behavior that stimulates an enthusiasm for meeting the group’s goal • Work facilitation • Behavior that helps achieve goal attainment by activities such as coordinating and planning
Table 1Correspondence of Leadership Concepts of Different Investigators
Independence of Leadership and Position • Leadership maybe either “supervisory” or “mutual” • Formally designated leaders set the pattern of mutual leadership which subordinates supply each other
Discussion and Conclusion • Both managerial and peer leadership characteristics seem important • There are plausible relationships of managerial to peer leadership characteristics. • Leadership is not adequate alone to predict effectiveness • Other constructs required: • Leadership related • Work patterns • Personal and motivational
Reading 16Patterns of Leadership Behavior Related to Employee Grievances and Turnover • The study investigates the relationships between: • Foreman behavior • Grievances and employee turnover • Procedure: • The study was conducted in a motor truck manufacturing plant • It included 57 production foremen and their work groups
Results: Leader Behavior and Grievances • As consideration drops significantly, grievance rates rise sharply • Extremely high structure and extremely low consideration are most related to high grievances • High consideration can compensate for high structure, but low structure will not offset low consideration
Results: Leader Behavior and Grievances • Leader behavior and turnover • It takes higher structure and lower consideration for turnover to occur • Turnover is highest for the work groups whose leaders combine low consideration with high structure • This was true regardless of the amount of emphasis placed on structure
Conclusions • Low consideration and high structure go with high grievances and turnover • Grievances and turnover are shown to increase most markedly at the extreme ends of the consideration (low end) and structure (high end) scales • Consideration is the dominant factor in determining leader effectiveness • Leaders with high consideration can increase the level of structure with very little increase in grievances and no increase in turnover
Reading 17Leader Self-sacrifice and Leadership Effectiveness • Effective leadership plays an important role in influencing employees’ willingness to exert themselves on the job and to cooperate towards collective goals • Effectiveness of leader self-sacrifice has recently attracted increasing attention from leadership researchers
Self-sacrifice and Leadership Effectiveness • Self-sacrifice indicates a person’s willingness “to suffer the loss of types of things to maintain personal beliefs and values” • Van Knippenberg showed that leader’s self-sacrifice (vs. no self-sacrifice) motivated higher task performance • It is suggested that self-sacrificial leadership is positively related to criteria of leadership effectiveness • Collective identification mediated the interactive effect of leader self-sacrifice and procedural fairness on cooperative behavior
Leader Display of Self-Confidence as a Moderator • Effectiveness of specific leadership styles or behavior may be contingent on a host of personal, situational and organizational characteristics • Leader’s display of self-confidence may feed into the leader’s effectiveness in pursuit of collective success
Present Research • Hypothesis 1: Leader self-sacrifice is positively related to leadership effectiveness and perceptions of charisma • Hypothesis 2: Leader self-confidence is positively related to leadership effectiveness and perceptions of charisma • Hypothesis 3: Leader self-sacrifice and self-confidence interact, such that the effects of self-sacrifice on leadership effectiveness and perceptions of charisma are stronger when self-confidence is high rather than low
Present Research • Hypothesis 4: Leader self-sacrifice and self-confidence interact, such that the effects of self-sacrifice on collective identification are stronger when self-confidence is high rather than low • Hypothesis 5: Collective identification mediates the interactive effect of leader self-sacrifice and self-confidence on leadership effectiveness and perceptions of charisma
General Discussion • Self-sacrifice and self-confidence had stronger effects in conjunction than on their own on leadership effectiveness and perceptions of charisma • It is important to identify contingencies of the effectiveness of self-sacrificial behavior • Self-sacrifice is, in principle, under the leader’s volitional control and insights into the working leader self-sacrifice may thus feed relatively easily into organizational practice
Reading 18Influence of Leader Behaviors on the Leader–Member Exchange (LMX) Relationship • High exchange relationships • Characterized by high-level of trust, liking, and respect, and they involve expectations of mutual exchange • Subordinates are expected to be committed to the work and be loyal to the leader • Low-quality exchange relationships • Subordinates are only expected to perform the formal requirements of their jobs, and extra benefits are not provided by the leader
Research on Leader Behaviorand LMX • Hypothesis 1: Supporting is related positively to the quality of LMX • Hypothesis 2 : Developing is related positively to the quality of LMX • Hypothesis 3 : Recognizing is related positively to the quality of LMX • Hypothesis 4: Consulting is related positively to the quality of LMX • Hypothesis 5: Delegating behavior is related positively to the quality of LMX
Discussion • Supporting and leading by example were the only transformational behaviors independently related to LMX • Exchange relationship between a leader and subordinate is influenced primarily by relations-oriented behaviors • Recognizing • Consulting • Delegating