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Title: Leadership and Power in Organizations


1
Chapter 13
  • Leadership and Power in Organizations

2
Objectives
  • Define leadership
  • Explain the five sources of power and the three
    sources of political power
  • Summarize the major approaches and theories of
    leadership
  • Compare and contrast the major approaches and
    theories of leadership
  • Discuss the barriers to womens advancement in
    the workplace

3
What is Leadership?
  • Leader
  • The person in charge or the boss of other people
  • Does not mean that others will listen to him or
    her or do what he or she says
  • Leadership involves influencing the attitudes,
    beliefs, behaviors and feelings of other people
  • Within an organization, leaders are associated
    with supervisory positions
  • Being a supervisor does not guarantee that a
    person will be able to influence others
  • Informal leaders arise in work groups and may
    have more influence on the behavior of group
    members than do the actual supervisors
  • Individual develops the informal leader role
    through interaction with colleagues

4
Sources of Influence and Power (I)
  • French and Ravens Bases of Power
  • Power is the extent to which one person can
    influence another to do something
  • Power bases involve individual and follower, or
    between supervisor and subordinate
  • Power arise from the interaction between
    subordinate and supervisor
  • Expert power
  • Based on the knowledge and expertise that the
    supervisor has
  • Subordinate is likely to follow the directives of
    person whom he or she believes has special
    knowledge or expertise about the issue at hand
  • Enhance the perceived expert power of an
    individual
  • Titles, College degrees, Certifications and
    Distinctions

5
Sources of Influence and Power (II)
  • Referent power
  • The extent to which the subordinate likes and
    identifies with the supervisor
  • Influenced by another whom he or she admires or
    likes
  • Power can be developed through personal
    relationships with other people
  • Legitimate power
  • The power inherent in a supervisor's job title
  • The legitimate right or authority to be in charge
  • This power derives from the subordinates values
    about the rights of supervisors
  • Reward power
  • The ability of the supervisor to reward
    subordinates with bonus, desirable job
    assignments, promotions or raises

6
Sources of Influence and Power (III)
  • Coercive power
  • The ability of the supervisors to punish
    subordinates with disciplinary actions, fines,
    firing or salary reductions
  • Supervisors can give out punishments and rewards
  • Coercive power was associated with poor relations
  • The major limitation of rewards power
  • Subordinates might become accustomed to it
  • Comply only when the reward is available
  • Reward power were associated with good relations
    between college professors and their students
  • Yukls Sources of Political Power

Co-opt the opposition
Gain control of decision processes
Political power
Form coalitions
7
Sources of Influence and Power (IV)
  • Political action
  • The process by which people gain and protect
    their power within the organization
  • Control over decision processes
  • Involves controlling and influencing important
    decisions in the organization
  • The power can be achieved by serving on
    appropriate committees or taking on the right
    tasks
  • Forming coalitions
  • Person enters into agreement with others to
    support his or her position in return for his or
    her support of the others position
  • Legislative bodies when different factions agree
    to support each other in favored positions
  • Co-optation
  • Involves trying to diffuse another factions
    opposition by allowing its members to participate
    in the decision

8
Abuse of Supervisory Power (I)
  • Power can provide tools to enhance the
    functioning of organizations
  • Used to help individuals have positive feelings
    about work and perform their jobs well
  • Ethnic harassment
  • The mistreatment of employees based on their
    ethnic or racial background
  • More abusive behavior from supervisors
  • Others at work report lower job satisfaction
  • Greater burnout, psychological strain and
    intention of quitting the job

9
Abuse of Supervisory Power (II)
  • Sexual harassment
  • Is unwanted
  • Can adversely affect a persons employment
  • Interferes with a persons job performance
  • Creates a hostile and intimidating work
    environment
  • Constitute sexual harassment
  • Unwelcome sexual advances and requests
  • Unwanted physical contact or touching
  • Use of offensive language
  • Repeated requests for a data
  • Threats of punishment for noncompliance with
    requests

10
Abuse of Supervisory Power (III)
  • These behavior only become harassment
  • When they are unwanted
  • Are reported often enough to create a hostile or
    intimidating work environment
  • Classified as the less serious behaviors of data
    requests
  • Unwanted advances
  • Unwanted physical contact (touching)
  • Offensive language

11
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership (I)
  • The trait approach
  • The behavior approach
  • The contingency approach
  • The leader-member exchange theory and the
    Charismatic/transformational approaches
  • Who will make a good leader?
  • What do good leaders do?
  • Under a given condition, who will be a good
    leader and what behavior is likely to be
    effective?
  • How does the interaction between subordinate and
    supervisor affect the subordinates behavior?

12
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership (II)
  • The Trait Approach
  • The oldest approach to the study of leadership is
    the trait approach
  • Good leadership is a function of the person
  • A person who is a good leader in one situation
    will be a good leader in any situation
  • These might include measures of various
    abilities, job experience, motivation and
    personality
  • Relationships between the personal
    characteristics and performance are interpreted
    as the effects of traits on leader performance
  • The intelligence, aggressiveness, decisiveness
    and dominance were associated with leader
    emergence
  • Being intelligent and trustworthy were
    universally seen as positive characteristics

13
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership
(III)
  • The Leader Behavior Approach
  • Concerned with what leaders do rather than what
    their personal chrematistics are
  • The leadership style is a cluster of related
    behaviors that represent an approach to dealing
    with subordinates
  • The style of asking advice and having discussions
    about issues is called Participative
  • Making the decision and announce it to the group
  • The subordinates are given little input that
    called Autocratic
  • The Ohio State Leadership Studies (1945) designed
    to uncover the effects of specific supervisory
    behaviors on subordinates
  • Developed a 150-item questionnaire on leader
    behavior
  • The employees answered each item about their
    supervisors

14
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership (IV)
  • Consideration
  • The amount of concern that supervisors show for
    the happiness and welfare of their subordinates
  • Friendly and supportive behavior that makes the
    workplace pleasant for subordinates
  • Initiating structure
  • The extent to which the supervisor defines his or
    her own role
  • Makes clear what is expected of subordinates
  • Assigning tasks to subordinates and scheduling
    the work
  • Leader behavior Description Questionnaire (LBDQ)
  • Completed by subordinates about their supervisor
  • The grievance and turnover rates were also
    collected for each supervisors work group
  • Grievances can be considered behavioral measures
    of dissatisfaction with conditions of work
  • Destroy the efficiency of a work group because
    people are spending time in unproductive ways

15
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership (V)
  • The two major difficulties
  • LBDQ might not be a good indicator of supervisory
    behavior
  • May be telling us as much about subordinates as
    about their supervisors
  • Drawing causal conclusions from data collected at
    one time in a cross-sectional research design
  • The supervisor behavior can be affected by
    subordinate behavior, particularly job
    performance
  • The subordinates are filing many grievances might
    become angry and reduce consideration behavior
  • More angry and lead them to file more grievances
  • Fiedlers Contingency Theory
  • States that leadership is a function of both the
    person and the situation
  • Fiedler (1978) refers to as the motivational
    structure of the leader
  • Assessed with a self-report instrument
  • Called the Least Preferred Coworker (LPC) scale

16
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership (VI)
  • The scale actually measures a characteristics of
    the leader
  • The LPC asks the leader to think about the person
    with whom he or she has had the most trouble
    working
  • The co-worker with whom he or she would least
    like to work
  • Consists of 18 bipolar adjective items
  • The scales in which a person indicates which of
    two words with opposite meanings best describes
    someone
  • Situational control
  • Concerns the amount of power
  • Influence the leader has over subordinates
  • The supervisors actions will predictably lead to
    subordinate behavior
  • Leader-member relations
  • Extent to which subordinates get along with and
    support their supervisors
  • Task structure
  • The extent to which subordinate job tasks are
    clearly and specifically defined

17
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership
(VII)
  • Position power
  • Refers to the amount of power and influence the
    supervisors has
  • Including the ability to give out rewards and
    punishments
  • Good leader-member relations, highly structured
    tasks for subordinates
  • High position power will be in a situation of
    high control
  • The situation is moderately favorable, relations
    are poor
  • Task structure is high and the leader has
    moderate power
  • The high LPC person should be more effective than
    the low LPC person
  • Low LPC leaders are more concerned with getting
    tasks done than with having good relationships
    with subordinates
  • High LPC leaders have the opposite motivations
  • More concerned with having good relationships
    with subordinates than with getting the job done

18
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership
(VIII)
  • Leader Match
  • Developed the training program
  • Better group performance for the trained
    supervisors
  • Leaders changing the situation
  • Leadership involves the complex interaction of
    leader characteristics with the leadership
    situation
  • Path-Goal Theory
  • Subordinate job performance and job satisfaction
    result from the interplay of situational
    characteristics, subordinate characteristics and
    supervisors style
  • Based on the expectancy theory
  • Supervisors can enhance the motivation and job
    satisfaction of subordinates by providing rewards
    for good job performance

19
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership (IX)
  • The 4 supervisory styles are
  • Supportive Style
  • consideration
  • Involves showing concern for the needs and
    welfare of subordinates
  • Directive Style
  • Initiating structure
  • Involves structuring job tasks for subordinates
    and letting them know what is expected
  • Participative Style
  • Involves seeking input from subordinates and
    allowing them to participant in decision making
  • Achievement Style
  • Emphasizing achievement and good performance
  • Setting challenging task goals
  • Emphasizing high performance standarrds

20
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership (X)
  • Locus of control
  • Extend to which subordinates believes that they
    can control rewards in their lives
  • Internal locus of control believes that he or she
    is able to control rewards
  • External locus of control believes that rewards
    are controlled by others or by outside forces
  • Self-perceived ability
  • Extent to which the subordinate believes he or
    she is capable of doing the task well
  • Different styles within different situations
  • Tasks are boring, dangerous, stressful or tedious
  • Supportive style will be the most appropriate
  • Anxiety lowered and their self-esteem raised by a
    supportive supervisor
  • Tasks are unstructured and subordinates are
    inexperienced
  • Directive style will increase subordinates
    effort and job satisfaction

21
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership (XI)
  • Leader-Member Exchange (LMX) Theory
  • Focuses on the subordinate-supervisor dyad rather
    than on the supervisor and work group
  • Supervisor treat individuals subordinates
    differently and over time the relationships
    between supervisors and subordinates will evolve
  • The cadre or in-group
  • Consists of subordinates who are trusted and
    influential members of the work group
  • Members cadre were more satisfied with their
    jobs, better relations with supervisors, were
    less likely to quit than were hired hands
  • The hired hands, or out-group
  • Subordinates who are supervised with a directive
    style and are given little input into decisions

22
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership
(XII)
  • Training was intended to help supervisors improve
    their relationships with subordinates
  • Good relationships with supervisors were less
    likely to intend to quit
  • More likely to be good performance
  • Engage in organizational citizenship behavior
  • High organizational commitment
  • Limitations
  • Differential treatment of subordinates within a
    work group can be destructive
  • Equity theory describes how employees can react
    negatively to unequal treatment
  • Make it clear, LMX theory helped to focus
    attention on the relationship between subordinate
    and supervisor
  • Understanding that supervisors do not act the
    same way with all subordinates

23
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership
(XIII)
  • Transformational Leadership Theory
  • Deal with leaders who have considerable and
    unusual influence over their followers, or in
    other words are charismatic leaders
  • Link traits to performance and attempts to
    determine how leaders affect their followers
  • Specifically on charismatic or transformational
    leaders who are unusual in how their followers
    become devoted to them
  • Followers become motivated to make personal
    sacrifices to reach the goals set forth by the
    leader
  • They engage in behaviors that make them appear to
    be creative, innovative, powerful and trustworthy
  • Transformational leaders can convince followers
  • Make extraordinary efforts to achieve worthwhile
    objectives

24
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership
(XIV)
  • Producing a superior product
  • Providing an important service
  • Solving a social problem
  • Finding a cure for a disease
  • Help provide direction for an organization
    through their version
  • Help motivate employees to pursue that version
  • Tend to be high on job performance
  • Organizational citizenship behavior
  • Organizational commitment
  • Satisfaction with supervision
  • Vroom-Yetton Model
  • Prescriptive model that indicates the supervisory
    approach that is expected to be most effective in
    a particular situation when making decisions

25
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership (XV)
  • The psychological principles that help inform the
    best decision making practices based on
    characteristics of a particular situation
  • The following 5 approaches to making a decision
    that range from the autocratic to democratic
  • Independently-Supervisor makes the decision alone
  • Sharing the decision from merely soliciting
    information-Supervisor gets information for
    subordinates and makes the decision alone
  • Discussing the problem-Supervisor discuss the
    problem with some subordinates and then make the
    decision
  • Considering others viewpoints-Supervisors
    discuss the problem with all subordinates in a
    meeting and makes the decision
  • Turn over the problem to the group-Supervisors
    presents the problem to all subordinates in a
    meeting and lets them decide

26
Approaches to the Understanding of Leadership
(XVI)
  • The decision-making situation is defined by 7
    characteristics
  • Quality requirement for the result
  • Sufficiency of information the supervisor has
  • Problem structure
  • Necessity for subordinate acceptance of the
    decision
  • Subordinate acceptance of the decision if made by
    the supervisor alone
  • Subordinates commitment to solving the problem
  • Subordinates conflict over solutions
  • Provided decision tools based on their model
  • Help choose a decision-making approach
  • Minimize the time necessary for a decision
  • Maximize the likelihood of group acceptance the
    decision
  • With a paper-and-pencil materials that can use to
    follow the answers to all 7 questions to the
    recommended decision-making approaches

27
The role of expectations The Pygmalion effect (I)
  • Leaders expectations about their employees job
    performance can influence that performance
  • Pygmalion effect
  • A self-fulfilling prophecy in which managers
    expectations about the level of their employees
    job performance can influence that performance
  • It was more prevalent among men than women
  • The low-scoring trainees in the experimental
    groups improved significantly more than did
    low-scoring trainees in the control group
  • The squad leaders higher expectations led them
    to except more and demand more from the trainees

28
Problems of leadership (I)
  • First-line supervisors
  • Supervisors may receive no training at all, and
    they are not selected as carefully as people who
    began their careers at high-level management
    positions
  • Supervisors promoted from the ranks face
    conflicting demands and loyalties
  • Socialized with co-workers off the job
  • Their work group gave them a sense of identity
    and belonging that provided a measure of
    emotional security
  • Supervisors are the point of contact between
    management and workers, trying to weigh the
    conflicting needs of both sides
  • Self-managing work groups are another threat to
    supervisory power and autonomy

29
Problems of leadership (II)
  • Managers and executives
  • Middle-level managers, despite comfortable
    salaries and fringe benefits, typically express
    considerable discontent
  • Middle managers also complain about having
    insufficient authority and resources to carry out
    company policy
  • Middle managers often experience considerable
    frustration as they vie for the few top
    management slots in the hierarchy
  • Middle-level managers reached a plateau and will
    receive no additional promotions
  • Employee participation in decision making is
    another source of stress for middle managers

30
Problems of leadership (III)
  • Massive layoffs create a motivational crisis
    among middle-level managers
  • Mergers and layoffs also mean fewer opportunities
    for promotion and more competition for the
    available positions
  • A source of stress more common among high-level
    managers is the intense commitment of time and
    energy to he organization
  • Executives can work at home and while traveling,
    rarely escaping the demands of the office
  • Positive aspects to life at the top of
    organizational hierarchy
  • Top executives report high job satisfaction
  • The most upper-level executives would remain on
    the job even if they were financially independent

31
Women in Leadership Positions (I)
  • Glass ceiling phenomenon
  • Symbolizes womens difficulty in getting beyond
    the lower levels of management
  • Focused on differences between men and women in
    their career preparation and their attitudes
  • Found on gender differences on organizational
    commitment or self-ratings of perceived work
    competence
  • The attitudes and stereotypes of those at the top
    levels of organizations who make decisions about
    hiring
  • The women executives identified several major
    obstacles to successful management careers for
    women

32
Women in Leadership Positions (II)
  • The persistence of male stereotypes and
    preconceptions about women
  • The exclusion of women from informal networks
    such as after-hours socializing
  • The lack of general management or line experience
  • An inhospitable corporate culture
  • Women were more likely than men to report feeling
    they didnt fit with colleagues
  • Harder time adapting to management ranks
  • Finding colleagues and supervisors less accepting
    of them
  • Merely perceive poorer fit is unclear

33
Gender and Leadership Style
  • Do men and women in leadership positions differ
    in their supervisory styles?
  • Women would be more concerned with the feelings
    and emotional well-being of subordinates
    (consideration)
  • Men would be more concerned with getting the job
    done (initiating structure)
  • The stereotypes of men being high in structure
    and women being high in consideration
  • In an organizational setting, environmental
    constraints and requirements may force male and
    female supervisors to adopt similar styles
  • Organizations may select women who have
    leadership styles similar to mens

34
Future Issues and Challenges
  • Future of leadership in organizations concerns
  • The increasing diversity of the workplace
  • Becoming increasingly female and multicultural
  • Hiring of increasing numbers of minority members
  • The globalization of the world economy
  • Effective leadership is partially determined by
    culture
  • Developed for supervisors to deal with a more
    varied group of subordinates
  • Cultures and increased sensitivity to issues that
    might not exist in more homogeneous groups
  • The problem of the glass ceiling which exists for
    minorities as well as for women
  • Achievement-oriented style that holds employees
    accountable for results

35
Chapter 13
  • -THE END-
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