2. Objectives
Examine leadership with managerial
function
– Planning, organizing, leading, & controlling
Examine theoretical foundation
– Motivation & Leadership theories
Practical application
3. Q&A
Write in your notes 5 attributes of a good
leader.
– We’ll compare to later answers
4. Leadership Matters, Character Matters
Influence others toward goal and
achievement of those goals
Process where an individual influences
others to do what s/he wants them to
“A leader is a person who has the ability
to get other people to do what they
don’t want to do and like it” - Harry Truman
5. A leader is best
when people barely know he exists
Not so good
when people obey and acclaim him
Worse when they despise him
But of a good leader
who talks little
when this work is done
his aim fulfilled
they will say:
“WE DID IT OURSELVES”
- Lao-tse (c. 565 B.C.)
6. Why do people follow?
Why do people lead?
Why are some people successful and
why are some unsuccessful?
– Psychological contract (Schein, 1970) and
have expectations of things in return
– Influenced by how view authority and past
experiences
7. What does it take to be a leader?
Trust your subordinates – you can’t expect them to go all out for
you if they think you don’t believe in them
Develop a vision – people want to follow someone who knows
where he or she is going
Keep your cool – the best leaders show their mettle under fire
Encourage risk – nothing demoralizes the troops like knowing the
slightest failure could jeopardize their entire career
Be an expert – from boardroom to mailroom, everyone had better
understand that you know what you’re talking about
Invite dissent – your people aren’t giving you their best … if they
are afraid to speak up
Simplify – you need to see the big picture in order to set a course,
communicate it, and maintain it
Kenneth Labich – article in Fortune
8. What does it take to be a leader?
Learn from others
Expertise
Create trust
Patience, Persistence, Focus, and
Passion
Communication
Compassion and respect
9. 10 Commandments of Leadership
1. Treat everyone with respect and dignity
2. Set the example for others to follow
3. Be active
4. Maintain the highest standards of honesty
and dignity
5. Insist on excellence and hold your people
accountable
6. Build group cohesiveness and pride
7. Show confidence in your people
8. Maintain a strong sense of urgency
9. Be available and visible to your staff
10. Develop yourself to your highest potential
10. Leadership is broader than
managerial functions
Managing and leading
Manager and leader
Management and leadership
11. Management
Getting things done with and through
people
Goal attainment, organizing, and
monitoring performance
Management versus Leadership
Are managers leaders?
– Leaders manage
– Managers lead
*Yet not synonymous
12. Management and Leadership
Two distinctive and complementary
systems
Ideal world, they’re balanced,
integrated
– One person is both
*A good leader needs to manage, but not
always the case, sometimes more
necessary than others
13. MANAGERS
Plan, coordinate
Evaluate and supervise
Negotiate, budget
Reality check, sets time
limits, copes with
complexity
Bring order and consistency
Planning complement to
direction
LEADERS
Facilitate interpersonal
interaction
Charisma
Innovate, inspire
Vision, communicate it
Ability to change things,
set direction, look at larger
picture, align people, look
at competition and do
better and different, willing
to listen and learn,
sensitive to concerns
Gains trust, empowers,
enable others to reach
potential
14. LEADERS
Innovates
Is an original
Develops
Investigates it
Focuses on people
Inspires trust
Has a long-range plan
Asks what and why
Has eye on horizon
Originates
Challenges it
Does the right thing
MANAGERS
Administers
Is a copy
Maintains
Accepts reality
Focuses on system &
structure
Relies on control
Has short-range view
Asks how and when
Has eye on bottom
Imitates
Accepts status quo
Does things right
15. Motivation Theories
Part of leadership process by which someone
gets another to do what s/he wants to do
For this it helps to know what motivates
people
– Motivation – understanding the construct is closely
linked to leadership
– Motivation is traced back to the 1930s (Murray)
– Simple terms – has to do with one’s willingness to
do something
– Relates to need satisfaction and behavior is goal
oriented.
16. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
Abraham Maslow
– Brandeis professor in the 50-60s, died in 70s
– Ahead of his time
– Worked with company in DelMar, CA (Non-
Linear Systems) in 1960s and noticed
workers were most productive at end of the
line due to fact produced a sense of
accomplishment
– He coined “Enlightened Management” to
describe work conditions, leading to self
actualization or achievement of one’s
potential (trust, teamwork, recognition)
17. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
Abraham Maslow
– He found teams made better workers and better
workers made better teams
Creativity flowed from ambiguity
Knowledge breads knowledge
– Used term “Synergy” to describe self-reinforcing
process and wrote:
“The more influence and power you give to someone else in
the team situation, the more you have for yourself”
– “Business was not a “chain of links or a chain of
cause and effect, but rather a web in which every
part is related to every other part”
– Urged pursuit of “continued improvement”
18. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
People are motivated on the basis of five
classes of needs ordered in hierarchy of
power or force
Once lower order needs are satisfied
externally, other levels become more
important and then motivate and
dominant behavior
– Higher order are satisfied internally
19. Expectancy Model
The strength of a tendency to act in a certain
way depends of the strength of an expectation
that the act will be followed by a given
outcome and on the attractiveness of that
outcome (Nader & Lawler)
– Attractiveness – importance an individual places on
the potential outcome or reward than can be
achieved on the job
– Performance – reward linkage – degree to which the
individual believes that performance at a particular
level will lead to the attainment of a desired
outcome
– Effort – performance linkage – the perceived
probability by the individual that exerting a given
amount of effort will lead to performance
20. Expectancy Model
The strength of a person’s motivation to
perform (effort) depends on how strongly
s/he believes that s/he can achieve what
is attempted
And if s/he works to achieve the goal
(performance), will s/he be adequately
rewarded and will that reward satisfy the
goals?
21. Expectancy Model
Maximize pleasure and minimize pain
Drives are influenced by outcome of
actions
Based on subjective assessment of
likelihood of certain outcomes –
perceived outcome is the “expectancy”
22. David McClelland
Examined leadership motives and identified three
needs
Need for AFFILIATION
– Desire to be liked and accepted
– Stay in good terms with people
Need for ACHIEVEMENT
– Desire to be challenged, enjoy risk taking
– Competitive, thrive in moderate to difficult goals
– Willing to assume responsibility
– Seeks feedback
Need for POWER
– Self-serving power
– Institutionally minded power
23. Additional Theories
Equity Approach – belief individual has in
equity or fairness of rewards and
punishments in determining performance
and satisfaction
Goal-Setting Theory – cognitive approach
that focuses on process of setting goals
Reinforcement Theory – stimulus, response,
consequences, future response
– Behavior Modification
24. Leadership Theories
Leadership – behavioral process of directing and
influencing someone toward a set of goals
Power – ability to exert influence, that is to
change the attitudes or behavior of individuals or
groups
Nature of Leadership
A person can be an effective manager, good
planner and a fair, organized administrator, but
lack the motivational skills of a leader.
Others can be effective manager, skilled at
inspiring enthusiasm and devotion, but lack the
managerial skills to channel the energy they
arouse in others.
25. Leadership Theories
Trait Approach
Behavioral Approach
– Leadership Functions
– Leadership Styles
Contingency (Situational) Approaches
– Hersey and Blanchard
– Fiedler Model
– Path-Goal
Future of Leadership Theory
– Transformational or Charismatic
26. Trait Theory
Tries to identify what qualities a leader
possesses
Trait – predisposition to act in a certain way
– Over time it is a relatively permanent feature of
behavior, thus behavior is relatively consistent
and predictable
– Underlying assumption – LEADERS ARE BORN
Two approaches
– Compare traits who emerged as leaders with
those who did not emerge
– Compare traits of effective leaders with
ineffective leaders
27. Behavioral Theory
Trait research was unsuccessful, thus tried to
isolate behavior characteristics of effective leaders
What effective leaders WERE and what they DID
Behavior can be learned, thus if supported we
could train people to be leaders and teach
leadership
Several studies were done to examine leader
behavior and focused on two aspects of
Leadership behavior
– Leadership Functions: task-related activities that must
be performed by leader to perform effectively
– Leadership Styles: various patterns of behavior favored
by leaders during process of directing and influencing
28. Leadership Styles
- Ohio State
Low Structure
And
High Consideration
High Structure
And
High Consideration
Democratic
Low Structure
And
Low Consideration
Laissez-Faire
High Structure
And
Low Consideration
Authoritarian
(Low) Initiating Structure (High)
(Low)
Consideration
(High)
29. Situational Leadership Theory
Basically can’t change our style, thus better
to match leader and situation
– Leader-member relations (good-poor)
Degree of confidence, respect, trust workers
have for leader
– Task structure (structured-unstructured)
Degree to which jobs are procedurized
– Position-power (strong-weak)
Degree of influence a leader has over
promoting, hiring, and disciplinary
30. Situational Leadership Theory
Hersey & Blanchard (1980s)
– Move through Four Phases, correlated to life cycle
– Varies depending on “maturity” of followers
Desire for achievement (capacity of setting high,
attainable goals)
Willingness to accept responsibility
Task-related ability and experience
– As maturity levels increase, leader lessens task,
increases relationship
– Then as maturity proceeds, decrease task and
relationship behavior
31. Future of Leadership Theory
Transformational or Charismatic Leadership
– Leaders who, through their personal vision and
energy, inspire followers and have a major impact
on their organizations
Seeks change, proactive
Innovative, creative
– Leaders who determine what followers need to do
to achieve objectives, classify those requirements,
and help followers become confident they can
reach their objectives
Inspire others to do more than expected
Raise level to self-actualization
Empower others