the leadership experience

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©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part. Learning Objectives CHAP 1 • Understand the full meaning of leadership and see the leadership potential in yourself and others • Recognize and facilitate the six fundamental transformations in today’s organizations and leaders • Identify the primary reasons for leadership derailment and the new paradigm skills that can help avoid it

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Page 1: The Leadership Experience

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

Learning Objectives CHAP 1• Understand the full meaning of leadership

and see the leadership potential in yourself and others

• Recognize and facilitate the six fundamental transformations in today’s organizations and leaders

• Identify the primary reasons for leadership derailment and the new paradigm skills that can help avoid it

Page 2: The Leadership Experience

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

Learning Objectives• Recognize the traditional functions of

management and the fundamental differences between leadership and management

• Appreciate the crucial importance of providing direction, alignment, relationships, personal qualities, and outcomes

Page 3: The Leadership Experience

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

Learning Objectives• Explain how leadership has evolved and

how historical approaches apply to the practice of leadership today

Page 4: The Leadership Experience

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

Exhibit 1.1 - What Leadership Involves

Page 5: The Leadership Experience

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Leadership• Influencing others to come together

around a common vision–Multidirectional– Noncoercive

• Reciprocal in nature• Involves creating change• Qualities required for effective leadership

are also needed to be an effective follower

Page 6: The Leadership Experience

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

Leadership• Effective followers are:– Self thinkers who do assignments with

energy and enthusiasm• Leaders are:• Committed to the common good rather

than self-interest• Firm in their beliefs

Page 7: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 1.2 - The New Reality for Leaders

Page 8: The Leadership Experience

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Management and Vision

• Attainment of organizational goals in an effective and efficient manner through:• Planning and organizing• Staffing and directing• Controlling organizational resources

Management

• Picture of an ambitious, desirable future for the organization or team

Vision

Page 9: The Leadership Experience

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

Exhibit 1.3 - Comparing Management and Leadership

Source: Based on John P. Kotter, A Force for Change: How Leadership Differs from Management (New York: The Free Press, 1990) and ideas in Kevin Cashman, Lead with Energy, Leadership Excellence, (December 2010) :7; Henry Mintzberg

Page 10: The Leadership Experience

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

Theories of Leadership

• Leadership was conceptualized as a single Great Man who put everything together and influenced others to follow along based on the strength of inherited traits, qualities, and abilities

Great man theories

• Leaders had particular traits or characteristics that distinguished them from non-leaders and contributed to success

Trait theories

Page 11: The Leadership Experience

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

Theories of Leadership

• Leaders’ behavior correlated with leadership effectiveness or ineffectiveness

Behavior theories

• Leaders can analyze their situation and tailor their behavior to improve leadership effectiveness• Known as situational theories• Emphasized that leadership cannot be understood in a

vacuum separate from various elements of the group or organizational situation

Contingency theories

Page 12: The Leadership Experience

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

Theories of Leadership

• Examined the influence processes between leaders and followers• Charismatic leadership - Influence based on the

qualities and personality of the leader

Influence theories

• Focused on how leaders and followers interact and influence one another• Transformational leadership and servant leadership

are two important relational theories

Relational theories

Page 13: The Leadership Experience

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

Exhibit 1.4 - Leadership Evolution

Page 14: The Leadership Experience

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

Fatal Flaws That Cause Derailment

• Failing to meet business objectives because of too much time promoting themselves and playing politics, a failure to fulfill promises, or a lack of hard work

Performance problems

• Being insensitive, manipulative, critical, and not trustworthy in relationships with peers, direct reports, customers, and others

Problems with relationships

• Not learning from feedback and mistakes to change old behaviors• Defensive, unable to handle pressure, and unable to change

management style to meet new demands

Difficulty changing

Page 15: The Leadership Experience

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

Fatal Flaws That Cause Derailment

• Poor management of direct reports• Inability to get work done through others• Not identifying and hiring the right people

Difficulty building and leading a team

• Inability to work effectively or collaborate outside their current function

• Failing to see big picture when moved into general management position over several functions

Too narrow management experience

Page 16: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 1.6 - Learning to Be a Leader

Source: Based on “Guidelines for the Apprentice Leader,” in Robert J. Allio, “Masterclass: Leaders and Leadership—Many Theories, But What Advice Is Reliable?” Strategy & Leadership 41, no. 1 (2013): 4–14.

Page 17: The Leadership Experience

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Learning Objectives CHAP 2• Outline some personal traits and

characteristics that are associated with effective leaders

• Identify your own traits that you can transform into strengths and bring to a leadership role

• Distinguish among various roles leaders play in organizations, including operations, collaborative, and advisory roles, and where your strengths might best fit

Page 18: The Leadership Experience

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Learning Objectives• Recognize autocratic versus democratic

leadership behavior and the impact of each

• Know the distinction between people-oriented and task-oriented leadership behavior and when each should be used

Page 19: The Leadership Experience

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Learning Objectives• Understand how the theory of

individualized leadership has broadened the understanding of relationships between leaders and followers

• Describe some key characteristics of entrepreneurial leaders

Page 20: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 2.1 - Personal Characteristics of Leaders

Sources: Bass and Stogdill’s Handbook of Leadership: Theory, Research, and Management Applications, 3rd ed. (New York: The Free Press, 1990), pp. 80–81; S. A. Kirkpatrick and E. A. Locke, “Leadership: Do Traits Matter?” Academy of Management Executive 5, no. 2 (1991), pp. 48–60; and James M. Kouzes and Barry Z. Posner, The Leadership Challenge: How to Get Extraordinary Things Done in Organizations (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1990)

Page 21: The Leadership Experience

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Characteristics of Leaders• Tendency to see the positive side of things and expect that things will

turn out well

Optimism

• Assurance in one’s own judgments, decision making, ideas, and capabilities

Self-confidence

• Refers to truthfulness and nondeceptionHonesty

• Quality of being whole, integrated, and acting in accordance with solid ethical principles

Integrity

• High motivation that creates a high effort level by a leaderDrive

Page 22: The Leadership Experience

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What are Strengths?• Natural talent or ability that has been

supported and reinforced with learned knowledge and skills

• Acts as the central point of focus in life– Enables leadership to be based on:• Energy • Enthusiasm • Effectiveness

Page 23: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 2.2 - Three Types of Leadership Roles

Page 24: The Leadership Experience

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Behavior Approaches

• Centralizes authority and derives power from position, control of rewards, and coercion

Autocratic

• Delegates authority, encourages participation, relies on subordinates’ for completion of tasks, and depends on subordinate respect for influence• Effective if subordinates possess decision-making skills• Effective when the skill difference between the leader

and subordinates is high

Democratic

Page 25: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 2.3 - Leadership Continuum

Source: Harvard Business Review. An exhibit from Robert Tannenbaum and Warren Schmidt, “How to Choose a Leadership Pattern” (May–June 1973). Copyright 1973 by the president and Fellows of Harvard College

Page 26: The Leadership Experience

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

Exhibit 2.4 - Leadership Grid®

Source: The Leadership Grid figure from Leadership Dilemma—Grid Solutions by Robert R. Blake and Anne Adams McCanse (formerly the Managerial Grid by Robert R. Blake and Jane S. Mouton). Houston: Gulf Publishing Company, p. 29. Copyright 1991 by Scientific Methods, Inc. Reproduced by permission of the owners

Page 27: The Leadership Experience

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

Exhibit 2.5 - Themes of Leader Behavior Research

Sources: Based on Marilyn R. Zuckerman and Lewis J. Hatala, Incredibly American: Releasing the Heart of Quality (Milwaukee, WI: American Society for Quality, 1992), pp. 141–142; and Mark O’Connell, Gary Yukl, and Thomas Taber, “Leader Behavior and LMX: A Constructive Replication,” Journal of Managerial Psychology 27, no. 2 (2012), pp. 143–154

Page 28: The Leadership Experience

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Individualized Leadership• Notion that a leader develops a unique

relationship with each group member, determining:– Leader's behavior toward the member–Member's response to the leader

Page 29: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 2.6 - Stages of Development of Individualized Leadership

Sources: Based on Fred Danereau, “A Dyadic Approach to Leadership: Creating and Nurturing This Approach Under Fire,” Leadership Quarterly 6, no. 4 (1995), pp. 479–490, and George B. Graen and Mary Uhl-Bien, “Relationship-Based Approach to Leadership: Development of Leader–Member Exchange (LMX) Theory of Leadership over 25 Years: Applying a Multi-Level, Multi-Domain Approach,” Leadership Quarterly 6, no. 2 (1995), pp. 219–247

Page 30: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 2.7 - Leader Behavior Toward In-Group versus Out-Group Members

Sources: Based on Jean François Manzoni and Jean-Louis Barsoux, “The Set-Up-to-Fail Syndrome,” Harvard Business Review (March–April 1988), pp. 110–113; and Mark O’Donnell, Gary Yukl, and Thomas Taber, “Leader Behavior and LMX: A Constructive Replication,” Journal of Management Psychology 27, no. 2 (2012), pp. 143–154.

Page 31: The Leadership Experience

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Entrepreneurial Traits and Behaviors

• Entrepreneurship– Initiating a business venture, organizing

the necessary resources, and assuming the associated risks and rewards

• Need to be:– Strongly driven– Enthusiastic– Driven by a vision

Page 32: The Leadership Experience

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Entrepreneurial Traits and Behaviors

• Leaders are:– Persistent– Independent– Action oriented– Drawn to new opportunities – Innovative– Creative– Highly self-motivated

Page 33: The Leadership Experience

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Learning Objectives CHAP 3• Understand how leadership is often

contingent on people and situations• Apply Hersey and Blanchard’s situational

theory of leader style to the level of follower readiness

• Apply Fiedler’s contingency model to key relationships among leader style, situational favorability, and group task performance

Page 34: The Leadership Experience

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Learning Objectives• Explain the path-goal theory of leadership• Use the Vroom-Jago model to identify the

correct amount of follower participation in specific decision situations

• Know how to use the power of situational variables to substitute for or neutralize the need for leadership

Page 35: The Leadership Experience

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Contingency and Contingency Approaches

• Theory meaning one thing depends on other things

Contingency

• Seek to delineate the characteristics of situations and followers and examine the leadership styles that can be used effectively

Contingency approaches

Page 36: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 3.1 - Comparing the Universalistic and Contingency Approaches to Leadership

Page 37: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 3.2 - Meta-Categories of Leader Behavior and Four Leader

Styles

Source: Based on Gary Yukl, Angela Gordon, and Tom Taber, “A Hierarchical Taxonomy of Leadership Behavior: Integrating a HalfCentury of Behavior Research,” Journal of Leadership and Organizational Studies 9, no. 1 (2002), pp. 15–32.

Page 38: The Leadership Experience

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Hersey and Blanchard’s Situational Theory - Leadership Style

• Reflects a high concern for tasks and a low concern for people and relationships

Directing style

• Based on a high concern for both relationships and tasks

Coaching style

• Characterized by high relationship and low task behavior

Supporting style

• Reflects a low concern for both tasks and relationships

Entrusting style

Page 39: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 3.3 - The Situational Model of Leadership

Source: Based on Gary Yukl, Angela Gordon and Tom Taber, “A Hierarchial Taxonomy of Leadership Behavior: Integrating a Half Century of Behavior Research“, Journal of leadership and Organizational Studies 9, no 1 (2002), pp. 15–32; and Paul Hersey, Kenneth Blanchard and Dewey Johnson, Management of Organizational Behavior: Utilizing Human Resources, 7th Ed (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1996).

Page 40: The Leadership Experience

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Situation

• Group atmosphere and members’ attitudes toward and acceptance of the leader

Leader-member relations

• Extent to which tasks performed by the group are defined, involve specific procedures, and have clear, explicit goals

Task structure

• Extent to which the leader has formal authority over subordinates

Position power

Page 41: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 3.4 - Fiedler’s Classification: How Leader Style Fits the Situation

Source: Based on Fred E. Fiedler, “The Effects of Leadership Training and Experience: A Contingency Model Interpretation,” Administrative Science Quarterly 17 (1972), p. 455

Page 42: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 3.5 - Leader Roles in the Path-Goal Model

Reprinted from Organizational Dynamics, 13 (Winter 1985), Bernard M. Bass, “Leadership: Good, Better, Best”, pp. 26–40, Copyright 1985, with permission from Elsevier.

Page 43: The Leadership Experience

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Leader Behavior

• Shows concern for subordinates’ well-being and personal needs• Leadership behavior is open, friendly, and

approachable, and the leader creates a team climate and treats subordinates as equals

Supportive leadership

• Tells subordinates exactly what they are supposed to do• Leader behavior includes planning, making schedules,

setting performance goals and behavior standards, and stressing adherence to rules and regulations

Directive leadership

Page 44: The Leadership Experience

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Leader Behavior

• Consults with subordinates about decisions• Leader behavior includes asking for opinions and

suggestions, encouraging participation in decision making, and meeting with subordinates in their workplaces

Participative leadership

• Sets clear and challenging goals for subordinates• Leader behavior stresses high-quality performance and

improvement over current performance

Achievement-oriented leadership

Page 45: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 3.6 - Path-Goal Situations and Preferred Leader Behaviors

Page 46: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 3.7 - Five Leader Decision Styles

Page 47: The Leadership Experience

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Diagnostic Questions

• How significant is this decision for the project or organization?

Decision significance

• How important is subordinate commitment to carrying out the decision?

Importance of commitment

• What is the level of the leader’s expertise in relation to the problem?

Leader expertise

• If the leader were to make the decision alone, would subordinates have high or low commitment to the decision?

Likelihood of commitment

Page 48: The Leadership Experience

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Diagnostic Questions

• What is the degree of subordinate support for the team’s or organization’s objectives at stake in this decision?

Group support for goals

• What is the level of group members’ knowledge and expertise in relation to the problem?

Goal expertise

• How skilled and committed are group members to working together as a team to solve problems?

Team competence

Page 49: The Leadership Experience

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Substitutes for Leadership

• Situational variable that makes leadership unnecessary or redundant

Substitute

• Situational characteristic that counteracts the leadership style and prevents the leader from displaying certain behaviors

Neutralizer

Page 50: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 3.10 - Substitutes and Neutralizers for Leadership

Page 51: The Leadership Experience

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Learning Objectives CHAP 4• Understand the importance of self-

awareness and recognize one’s blind spots

• Identify major personality dimensions and understand how personality influences leadership and relationships within organizations

Page 52: The Leadership Experience

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Learning Objectives• Clarify instrumental and end values, and

recognize how values guide thoughts and behavior

• Define attitudes and explain their relationship to leader’s behavior

• Explain attributions and recognize how perception affects the leader-follower relationship

Page 53: The Leadership Experience

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Learning Objectives• Recognize individual differences in

cognitive style and broaden one’s own thinking style to expand leadership potential

• Understand how to lead and work with people with varied personality traits

Page 54: The Leadership Experience

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Self-Awareness• Being conscious of the internal aspects of

one’s nature– Personality traits– Emotions – Values– Attitudes and perceptions – Appreciating how your patterns affect

other people 

Page 55: The Leadership Experience

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Big Five Personality Dimensions

• Extroversion: Degree to which a person is outgoing, sociable, talkative, and comfortable meeting and talking to new people– Characteristic of dominance• High degree of dominance could even be

detrimental to effective leadership

Page 56: The Leadership Experience

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Big Five Personality Dimensions

• Agreeableness: Degree to which a person is able to get along with others– Being good-natured, cooperative,

forgiving, compassionate, understanding, and trusting

• Conscientiousness: Degree to which a person is responsible, dependable, persistent, and achievement-oriented– Focus on a few goals

Page 57: The Leadership Experience

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Big Five Personality Dimensions

• Emotional stability: Degree to which a person is well-adjusted, calm, and secure– Emotionally stable leader can: • Handle stress and criticism well, and does not

take mistakes or failures personally• Develop positive relationships• Improve relationships

– Leaders with a low degree of emotional stability can become tense, anxious, or depressed

Page 58: The Leadership Experience

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Big Five Personality Dimensions

• Openness to experience: Degree to which a person has a broad range of interests and is imaginative, creative, and willing to consider new ideas– Important as leadership is about change

Page 59: The Leadership Experience

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Differences in Behavior Between Internals and

Externals Internals

• More self-motivated• Better in control of their

own behavior• Participate more in social

and political activities• Actively seek information• Better able to handle

complex information and problem solving

Externals• Have structured, directed

work situations• Better able to handle work

that requires compliance and conformity

Page 60: The Leadership Experience

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Theory X and Theory Y

• Assumption that people are basically lazy and not motivated to work and that they have a natural tendency to avoid responsibility

Theory X

• Assumption that people do not inherently dislike work and will commit themselves willingly to work that they care about

Theory Y

Page 61: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 4.3 - Attitudes and Assumptions of Theory X and Theory Y

Source: J. Hall and S. M. Donnell, “Managerial Achievement: The Personal Side of Behavioral Theory,” Human Relations 32 (1979), pp. 77–101

Page 62: The Leadership Experience

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Social Perception• Making sense out of the environment by

selecting, organizing, and interpreting information– Values and attitudes affect perceptions,

and vice versa

Page 63: The Leadership Experience

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Perpetual Distortions• Errors in judgment that arise from

inaccuracies in the perceptual process– Stereotyping: Assigning an individual to

a group and attributing generalizations about the group to the individual • Hinders from knowing people who are

stereotyped–Halo effect: Overall impression of a

person or situation based on one characteristic• Blinds the perceiver to other characteristics

Page 64: The Leadership Experience

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Perpetual Distortions– Projection: Tendency to see one’s own

personal traits in others– Perceptual defense: Protecting oneself

by disregarding ideas, situations, or people that are unpleasant

Page 65: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 4.4 - Hermann’s Whole Brain Model

Source: Ned Herrmann, The Whole Brain Business Book (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1996) p. 15

Page 66: The Leadership Experience

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Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)™

• Measures how individuals differ in gathering and evaluating information for solving problems and making decisions

• Uses different pairs of attributes to classify people in 1 of 16 different personality types– Introversion versus extroversion– Sensing versus intuition– Thinking versus feeling– Judging versus perceiving

Page 67: The Leadership Experience

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Working with Different Personality Types

• Leaders can work effectively by:– Understanding one’s own personality and

how they react to others– Treating everyone with respect– Acknowledging each person’s strengths– Striving for understanding– Remembering that everyone wants to fit in

Page 68: The Leadership Experience

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Learning Objectives CHAP 5• Recognize how mental models guide

behavior and relationships• Engage in independent thinking by

staying mentally alert, thinking critically, and being mindful rather than mindless

• Break out of categorized thinking patterns and opening your mind to new ideas and multiple perspectives

Page 69: The Leadership Experience

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Learning Objectives• Beginning to apply systems thinking and

personal mastery to your activities at school or work

• Exercising emotional intelligence, including being self-aware, managing emotions, motivating oneself, displaying empathy, and managing relationships

• Applying the difference between motivating others based on fear and motivating others based on love

Page 70: The Leadership Experience

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Developing a Leader’s Mind

Independent Thinking

Open-Mindedness

Systems Thinking

Personal Mastery

Page 71: The Leadership Experience

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Independent Thinking• Questioning assumptions and interpreting

data and events• Mindfulness: State of paying attention

to new information – Readiness to create new mental

categories during evolving circumstances• Intellectual stimulation - Stimulating the

ability of followers to identify and solve problems creatively

Page 72: The Leadership Experience

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Open-Mindedness• Putting aside preconceptions and

suspending beliefs and opinions– Reflected well by beginner’s mind than by

expert’s mind• Pike Syndrome - Illustrates the power of

the conditioning that limits thinking and behavior

Page 73: The Leadership Experience

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Systems Thinking• Seeing the synergy of the whole and

learning to reinforce or change whole system patterns

• Enables leaders to:– Look for patterns of movement over time – Focus on the factors that accomplish the

performance of the whole

Page 74: The Leadership Experience

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Exhibit 5.3 - Systems Thinking and Circles of Causality

Page 75: The Leadership Experience

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Personal Mastery• Discipline of mastering oneself • Qualities– Clarity of mind - Committing to the truth of

the current reality– Clarity of objectives - Focusing on the end

result– Organizing to achieve objectives - Bridging

the disparity between current reality and the vision of a better future

Page 76: The Leadership Experience

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Emotional Intelligence• Abilities to perceive, identify, understand,

and successfully manage emotions in oneself and others

• Leaders should understand:– Range of emotions people have – How emotions manifest themselves

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Exhibit 5.4 - Positive and Negative Emotions

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Importance of Emotions

• Leader’s emotional state influences the team, department, or organization

• Leaders should:• Tune in to the emotional state of others• Bring negative emotions to the surface• Encourage people to explore and use positive emotion in

work

Contagious

• Leaders need a high degree of emotional intelligence to:• Regulate their emotions• Motivate others

Influence performance

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Exhibit 5.7 - Components of Emotional Intelligence

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LeadershipLeading with love Leading with fear

• Contemporary approach • Traditional approach

• More effective • Powerful motivator

• Used when the organizational success depends on people’s:• Knowledge• Mind power• Commitment• Creativity• Enthusiasm

• Used when the organizational success depends on people following orders

• Drives people to other organizations

• People do not perform to their real capabilities

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Fear in Organizations

Fear of failure

Fear of change

Fear of personal loss

Fear of being judged

Fear of the boss

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Drawbacks of Fear• Creates avoidance behavior• Weakens trust and communication• Employees feel threatened by

repercussions of speaking about work-related concerns

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Exhibit 5.8 - Indicators of Love versus Fear in Organizations

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Motivational Potential of Love versus Fear

• Fear of losing a job

Fear-based motivation

• Feeling of being valued in the job

Love-based motivation

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Learning Objectives CHAP 6• Combine a rational approach to

leadership with a concern for people and ethics

• Understand how leaders set the ethical tone in organizations and recognize the distinction between ethical and unethical leadership

• Recognize your own stage of moral development and ways to accelerate your moral maturation

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Learning Objectives• Know and use mechanisms that enhance

an ethical organizational culture• Apply the principles of stewardship and

servant leadership• Recognize courage in others and unlock

your own potential to live and act courageously

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Exhibit 6.2 - How to Act Like a Moral Leader

Sources: Based on Linda Klebe Treviño, Laura Pincus Hartman, and Michael Brown, “Moral Person and Moral Manager: How Executives Develop a Reputation for Ethical Leadership,” California Management Review 42, no. 4 (Summer 2000), pp. 128–142; Christopher Hoenig, “Brave Hearts,” CIO (November 1, 2000), pp. 72–74; and Patricia Wallington, “Honestly?!” CIO (March 15, 2003), pp. 41–42

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Becoming a Moral Leader• Moral leadership: Distinguishing right

from wrong and doing right– Seeking the just, honest, and good in the

practice of leadership• Internal characteristic that influences a

leader’s capacity to make moral choices is the individual’s level of moral development

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Exhibit 6.4 - Three Levels of Personal Moral Development

Sources: Based on Lawrence Kohlberg, “Moral Stages and Moralization: The Cognitive-Developmental Approach,” in Moral Development and Behavior Theory, Research, and Social Issues, ed. Thomas Likona (Austin, TX: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1976), 31–53; and Jill W. Graham, “Leadership, Moral Development, and Citizenship Behavior,” Business Ethics Quarterly 5, no. 1 (January 1995), 43–54

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Servant Leadership• Leader transcends self-interest to: – Serve the needs of others– Help others grow– Provide opportunities for others to gain

materially and emotionally• Types– Authoritarian management– Participative management– Stewardship

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Exhibit 6.5 - Changing Leader Focus from Self to Others

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Principles for Stewardship

Adopt a partnership mindset

Give decision-making power and the authority to act to those closest to the work and the customer

Tie rewards to contributions rather than formal positions

Expect core work teams to build the organization

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Courage• Mental and moral strength to engage in,

persevere through, and withstand danger, difficulty, or fear

• Accepting responsibility• Nonconformity• Pushing beyond the comfort zone

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Courage• Asking for what you want and saying

what you think– Abilene paradox: Tendency to resist

voicing their true thoughts or feelings in order to please others and avoid conflict

• Fighting for what you believe

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How Does Courage Apply to Moral Leadership

• Applying courage to:– Be unconventional and do what is right– Step up and take responsibility– Balance:• Profit with people and self-interest with service• Control with stewardship

– Act like a moral leader–Whistleblowing: Employee disclosure of

illegal, immoral, or unethical practices in the organization

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Finding Personal Courage

Believe in a higher purpose

Draw strength from others

Harness frustration and anger

Take small steps

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Learning Objectives CHAP 7• Effectively manage both up and down the

hierarchy• Recognize your followership style and

take steps to become a more effective follower

• Understand the leader’s role in developing effective followers

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Learning Objectives• Apply the values of effective followership,

including responsibility, service, challenging authority, participating in change, and knowing when to leave

• Implement the strategies for effective followership at school or work

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Learning Objectives• Know what followers want from leaders

and what leaders expect from followers• Use feedback and leadership coaching to

help followers grow and achieve their potential

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What Leaders Want

Make-it-happen attitude

Willingness to collaborate

Motivation to stay up-to-date

Passion to drive your own growth

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Critical and Uncritical Thinking

• Thinking independently and being mindful of the effects of one’s own and other people’s behavior on achieving the organization’s vision

Critical thinking

• Failing to consider possibilities beyond what one is told• Accepting the leader’s ideas without thinking

Uncritical thinking

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Exhibit 7.2 - Followership Styles

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Exhibit 7.3 - Ways to Influence Your Leader

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Exhibit 7.4 - Sources of Power for Managing Up

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Necessary Courage to Manage Up

Courage to assume responsibility

Courage to challenge

Courage to participate in transformation

Courage to serve

Courage to leave

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Exhibit 7.5 - Rank Order of Desirable Characteristics

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Exhibit 7.6 - Follower Benefits from Coaching

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Feedback• Using evaluation and communication to

help individuals and the organization learn and improve

• Effective tips–Make it timely– Focus on the performance, not the person–Make it specific– Focus on the desired future, not the past

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Learning Objectives CHAP 8• Recognize and apply the difference

between intrinsic and extrinsic rewards• Tap into the motives that induce people to

take action to accomplish important goals• Motivate others by meeting their higher-

level needs• Apply needs-based theories of motivation

and understand how the concept of equity applies to motivation

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Learning Objectives• Describe the psychological and structural

elements of empowerment and how empowerment contributes to motivation

• Apply the job characteristics model to enrich jobs

• Identify factors that play a role in employee engagement and use engagement to meet higher level needs

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Learning Objectives• Build a thriving workforce by giving

people a sense of making progress toward meaningful goals

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Exhibit 8.1 - A Simple Model of Motivation

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Types of Rewards

• Internal satisfactions a person receives in the process of performing a particular action• Appeal to the higher needs of individuals

Intrinsic rewards

• Given by another person, typically a supervisor• Pay raise and promotions• Appeal to the lower needs of individuals

Extrinsic rewards

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Exhibit 8.2 - Needs of People and Motivation Methods

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Exhibit 8.3 - Four Categories of Motives

Source: Based on Bruce H. Jackson, “Influence Behavior: Become a Master Motivator,” Leadership Excellence (April 2010), p. 14

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Needs-Based Theory of Motivation

• Maslow’s theory proposes that humans are motivated by multiple needs and those needs exist in a hierarchical order

Hierarchy of needs theory

• Hygiene factors: Involves the presence or absence of job dissatisfiers, such as working conditions, pay, company policies, and interpersonal relationships

• Motivators: Involves job satisfaction and meeting higher-level needs such as achievement, recognition, and opportunity for growth

Two-factor theory

• McClelland’s theory proposes that certain types of needs are acquired during an individual’s lifetime• Need for achievement, affiliation, and power

Acquired needs theory

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Exhibit 8.4 - Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs

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Exhibit 8.5 - Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory

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Other Motivation Theories

• Looks at the relationship between behavior and its consequences • Behavior modification: Set of techniques by which reinforcement theory is used to

modify behavior

Reinforcement theory

• Motivation depends on individuals’ mental expectations about their ability to perform tasks and receive desired rewards

Expectancy theory

• People are motivated to seek social equity in the rewards they receive for performance• State of equity - Ratio of one person’s outcomes to inputs equals the ratio of others’

in the work group• Inequity - Input/outcome ratios are out of balance

Equity theory

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Exhibit 8.6 - Shaping Behavior with Reinforcement

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Exhibit 8.7 - Key Elements of Expectancy Theory

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Exhibit 8.8 - The Job Characteristics Model

Source: Adapted from J. Richard hackman and G.R. Oldham, “Motivation through the design of Work: Test of a Theory,” Organizational Behavior Human Performance 16 (1976): 256

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Exhibit 8.9 - The Empowerment Continuum