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Title: Organizational Behavior


1
PowerPoint Presentation
to accompany
Organizational Behavior 11th Edition
Don Hellriegel and John W. Slocum, Jr.
Chapter 9Leading Effectively Contemporary
Developments
Prepared by Argie Butler Texas AM University
2
Learning Objectives for Leading Effectively
Contemporary Developments
  • State the characteristics of transactionalleader
    ship.
  • Describe the features of charismaticleadership.
  • Discuss the attributes of authenticleadership.
  • Explain the nature of transformationalleadership.

3
Transactional Leadership Interrelated Components
Providescontingentrewards
Emphasizes passive management by exception
Transactional Leadership
Exhibitsactive managementby exception
4
Practices of Effective Transactional Leaders
  • They ask What needs to be done?
  • They ask What is right for the organization?
  • They develop action plans.
  • They take responsibility for decisions.
  • They take responsibility for communicating.

5
Model of Charismatic Leadership (Figure 9.1)
6
Implications for Leaders
  • Gains power because their followers identify with
    them
  • Rare in business
  • Communication competency is critical

7
Model of Authentic Leadership (Figure 9.2)
Source Based on Avolio, B.J., Gardner, W.L.,
Walumbwa, F.O., Luthans, F., and May, D.R.
Unlocking the mask A look at the process by
which authentic leaders impact follower attitudes
and behaviors. Leadership Quarterly, 2004, 15,
801-823.
8
Implications for Leaders
  • Influence followers attitudes and behaviors
    through identification, hope, trust, positive
    emotions, and optimism.
  • Knows oneselfstrengths and limitations
  • Ethics and open communication are central
  • Focus on being a servant to followers and other
    stakeholders

9
Model of Transformational Leadership (Figure 9.3)
10
Inspirational Motivation
  • Displays great enthusiasm and optimism
  • Gets followers involved in and committed to a
    vision
  • Inspires others by what they say and do

11
Intellectual Stimulation
  • Urges followers to question assumptions,explore
    new methods and ideas, and takenew approaches to
    old situations
  • Actively seeks out new ideas and
    creativesolutions from followers
  • Doesnt criticize followers ideas just
    becausethey differ from those of the leader

12
Intellectual Stimulation (Continued)
  • Relatively high tolerance for mistakes madeby
    conscientious followers
  • Focuses on the what in problems ratherthan the
    who to blame
  • Willing to abandon systems and practicesthat are
    no longer useful
  • Views risk taking as necessary and desirablefor
    long-term development and success

13
Idealized Influence
  • Often considers the needs and interests of their
    followers before their own
  • May willingly sacrifice personal gain
  • Can be trusted
  • Demonstrate high ethical and moral standards

14
Idealized Influence (Continued)
  • Can be very direct and challenging to some
    followers and empathetic and supportive of others
  • Minimizes the use of power for personal gain
  • Uses all power sources to move individuals and
    teams toward a vision and its goals

15
Individualized Consideration
  • May act as coach, mentor, teacher, facilitator,
    confidant,and counselor
  • Embraces and rewards individual differences to
    enhancecreativity and innovation
  • Encourages open dialogue with followers
  • Empowers followers to make decisions
  • Monitors followers to determine if they need
    additionalsupport or direction

16
Implications for Leaders
  • Needed more than ever at all levels
  • Encourages reasonable risk taking
  • Knows when to reject traditional ways of doing
    things
  • Vital to handling difficult and complex
    organizational threats, opportunities, and
    weaknesses

17
PowerPoint Presentation to accompany
Organizational Behavior 11th Edition
Don Hellriegel and John W. Slocum, Jr.
Chapter 10Developing and Leading Teams
Prepared by Argie Butler Texas AM University
18
Learning Objectives for Leading and Developing
Teams
  • State the basic characteristics of groups,
    including informal groups.
  • Describe the attributes of six types of
    work-related teams.
  • Explain the five-stage model of team development.
  • Describe seven key factors that influence team
    effectiveness.
  • Explain how team creativity can be stimulated
    through the nominal group technique, traditional
    brainstorming, and electronic brainstorming.

19
Features of Informal Groups
  • Informal group goals and formal organizational
    goals are not necessarily related
  • Often meet their members social and security
    needs
  • May exercise undesirable power over individual
    members from the perspective of higher management
  • May exhibit both positive and negative
    characteristics

20
Characteristics of Effective Groups
  • Members of effective groups
  • Know why the group exists and have shared goals
  • Support agreed upon decision-making guidelines or
    procedures for making decisions
  • Communicate freely among themselves
  • Help each other
  • Deal with conflict within the group
  • Diagnose and improve individual and group
    processes and functioning

21
Common Types of Work-Related Teams (Figure 10.1)
Functional
Virtual
Problem-Solving
GlobalTeams
Self-Managed
Cross-Functional
22
Brief Definitions of Types of Work-Related Teams
  • Functional team
  • Members work together daily on similar tasks and
    must coordinate their efforts
  • Problem-solving team
  • Members focus on a specific issue, develop
    potential solution, and often are empowered to
    take action
  • Cross-functional team
  • Members from various work areas who identify and
    solve mutual problems

23
Brief Definitions of Types of Work-Related Teams
(continued)
  • Self-managed team
  • Highly interdependent and empowered members who
    must work together effectively daily to
    manufacture an entire product (or major
    identifiable component) or provide an entire
    service to a set of customers.
  • Virtual team
  • Members who collaborate through various
    information technologies on one or more tasks
    while located at two or more locations.
  • Global team
  • Members from a variety of countries who are,
    therefore, often separated significantly by time,
    distance, culture, and native language.

24
When Is Team Problem Solving Likely to be
Superior to Individual Problem Solving?
  • Greater diversity of information, experience,
    andapproaches is important to the task
  • Acceptance of decisions is crucial for
    effectiveimplementation
  • Participation is important for reinforcing the
    valuesof representation and demonstrating respect
  • Team members rely on each other in
    performingtheir jobs

25
Characteristics of Team Empowerment
Potency
Impact
Meaningfulness
Empowerment
Autonomy
26
Examples of Managerial Tasks That May be
Performed by Self-Managed Teams
  • Work and vacation scheduling
  • Ordering materials
  • Deciding on team leadership
  • Setting key team goals
  • Hiring replacements for departing team members
  • Sometimes evaluating each others performance

27
Conditions for Use of Empowered Self-Managed Teams
  • Is the organization fully committed to aligning
    all management systems with the teams?
  • Are organizational goals and the expected team
    results clearly specified?
  • Will the teams have access to the resources they
    need for high performance?

28
Conditions for Use of Empowered Self-Managed
Teams (continued)
  • Will team members carry out interdependent tasks?
  • Do employees have the necessary maturity levels?
  • Are employee competency levels sufficient for
    handling increased responsibility and, if not,
    will training lead to the needed competencies?

29
Core Features of Virtual Teams
  • Goals
  • Clear, precise, and mutually agreed upon goals
    are the glue that holds a virtual team together
  • People
  • Everyone needs to be autonomous and self-reliant
    while simultaneously working collaboratively with
    others
  • Technological links
  • Virtual teams can function with simple or more
    complex information technologies

30
Stages of Team Development
Mature (efficient, effective)
Group Maturity
Failure
Immature (inefficient, ineffective)
Failure
Failure
Forming
Storming
Norming
Performing
Adjourning
Stage
Source Adapted from Tuckman, B.W., and Jensen,
M.A.C. Stages of small-group development
revisited. Group and Organization Studies, 1977,
2, 419-442 Komanski, C. Team interventions
Moving the team forward. In J. Pfeiffer
(ed.), The 1996 Annual Volume 2 Consulting. San
Diego Pfeiffer and Company, 1996, 19-26.
31
Potential Team Dysfunctions in Performing Stage
  • Groupthink
  • Illusion of invulnerability
  • Direct pressure to suppress dissent
  • Self-censorship
  • Shared illusion of unanimity
  • Free Riding
  • Absence of Trust

32
Team Context
Type of Technology
OrganizationalRewardsandPunishments
PhysicalWorkingConditions
ExternalConditions
ManagementPractices
33
Goals
  • Team Goals

Outcomes desired by the team as a whole, not
just goals of the individual members
  • Compatible and conflicting goals often exist
    within a team
  • Use of superordinate goals

34
Team Member Roles and Diversity
  • Task-oriented role
  • Initiating new ideas, seeking information, giving
    information, coordinating, and evaluating
  • Relations-oriented role
  • Encouraging members, harmonizing and mediating,
    encouraging participation, expressing standards,
    and following
  • Self-oriented role
  • Blocking progress, seeking recognition,
    dominating, and avoiding involvement

35
Team Diversity
Attitudes involving stereotypical false
assumptions about team diversity
  • Diversity poses a threat to the organizations
    effective functioning.
  • Expressed discomfort with the dominant groups
    values is perceived as oversensitivity by
    minority groups.
  • Members of all groups want to become and should
    be more like the dominant group.
  • Equal treatment means the same treatment.

36
Norms
Rules and patterns of behaviors that are accepted
and expected by members of a team
  • Conforming to norms
  • Compliance conformity
  • Personal acceptance conformity

37
Cohesiveness
Strength of the members desire to remain in a
team and their commitment to it
  • Low cohesiveness is usually associated with low
    conformity
  • High cohesiveness may be associated with either
    high or low conformity

38
Leadership in Teams
  • Informal leaders are important in determining
    whether a team accomplishes its goals
  • Multiple leaders may exist in a team because it
    has both relations-oriented and task-oriented
    goals
  • Effective team leaders influence virtually all
    the other factors that affect team behaviors

39
Stimulating Team Creativity
  • Nominal group technique
  • A structured process used where there is
    disagreement or incomplete knowledge
  • Traditional brainstorming
  • Individuals state as many ideas as possible
    during a short time period
  • Electronic brainstorming
  • Uses collaborative software technology to
    facilitate involvement of all team members in
    idea generation

40
Stages of the Nominal Group Technique (NGT)
OutcomeofSession
VotingonIdeas
ClarifyingIdeas
RecordingIdeas
Generating Ideas
41
Guidelines for Traditional Brainstorming
Wilder the Ideas the better
Quantityis Wanted
No CriticismAllowed
Brainstorming
Hitchhike on or Combine previously stated ideas
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