13. LEADERSHIP AND
POWER IN ORGANIZATIONS
WHAT IS LEADERSHIP?
Social influence or power
Ability
to control & influence others
Directed
toward specific goals & objectives
Five types of social power or influence (French &
Raven)
Informational
or expert: Persuasion through expertise
Target
must believe
Information
must have importance for target
Referent: Desire for
identification & interpersonal attraction
Legitimate: Power in formal role
Must
be accepted by target
Reward: Contingent
rewards for compliance
Coercive: Punishment
Causes
poor relationships with subordinates
TRAIT APPROACH TO
LEADERSHIP
Good leaders possess certain traits
Born not made
Good supervision a selection problem
Good leaders good in all situations
General approach much like test validation
Identify sample of good & bad leaders
Measure traits
Analyze relations of traits & effectiveness
Mean r of leader effectiveness with I.Q.= .30,
Personality = .28
Study: Randle (1956)
Appraisal
of 1427 executive from 25 companies
Analysis
of background
Ratings
by 5 peers
Battery
of tests
Interviews
(1.5‑3 hr. each)
30
traits found predictive of good managers
Creativity,
Drive, Initiative, Intelligence, Motivation
Problems and limitations
Some
inconsistency of results
Lack of
insight into process
Ignores
situational specificity
Counter
to zeitgeist, i.e., fell out of favor when I/O abandoned
personality
in favor of situational influences
LEADER BEHAVIOR
(STYLE) APPROACH
Good leaders do certain things
Leaders made not born
Good supervision as training problem
Styles universal
Styles
Autocratic
Democratic
Laissez
Faire
Person
oriented
Task
oriented
Ohio State Leadership Studies (1950's)
1.
Analysis of supervisory behavior (critical incidents)
2. 1800
incidents distilled to 150 items
3.
Administered to employees to rate supervisors
4.
Factor analyzed to two dimensions
Consideration
Initiating
structure
Problems & limitations
Ignores
situational differences
Ignores
individual differences
CONTINGENCY THEORY
APPROACHES
Considers situational and leader variables
Fiedler's Theory
Situational
favorability has three components
Task
structure
Position
power
Leader‑group
relations
Leader
characteristic assessed with a scale
Least
Preferred Coworker (LPC) assesses unknown trait/s
of
the leader
Hypotheses (moderately supported)
High
LPC leaders most effective in middle favorable
Low LPC
leaders best at extremes
Implications
Fiedler
argues that person should be chosen to fit the job or job
can
be changed to fit the person
He does
not recommend trying to change the leader
PATH GOAL THEORY
A more complex contingency theory than Fiedler’s
Basic idea
Supervisors
motivate employees by
Increasing
value of rewards
Clarifying
paths to rewards
Complex theory with many components
Four styles
Achievement
oriented
Directive
Participative
Supportive
Contingency
factors
Subordinate
personality such as locus of control
Perceived
ability
Environment
Nature
of task (aversiveness)
Theory has a series of hypotheses, e.g.
Leader
initiating structure increases instrumentality with
unstructured,
nonroutine tasks.
When
tasks are frustrating, consideration will increase social
support
& reduce negative valence of tasks
Support for the theory
Mixed,
with some hypotheses holding and some not
VROOM – YETTON
MODEL
Prescriptive model of how decisions should be made
Based on established principles
Focus on decision making
Decision aid
Five decision styles, based on problem attributes
Model indicates which approach should be taken,
depending upon the situation
LEADER MEMBER
EXCHANGE (LMX)
Leadership as interaction of supervisor &
subordinate
Should be studied at level of dyad interaction between
both
Supervisors treat different employees differently
In-group
are those in the supervisor’s inner circle
Out-group
are everyone else
In-group
treated better
Competence
of subordinate an important determinant of group
membership
Laboratory study
Lowin
& Craig (1968)
Subjects
asked to act as supervisors for confederates who acted
either
competent or incompetent
Competents
received high consideration and low structure
Incompetents
received low consideration and high structure
Field studies
Danseueau
et al. (1975)
Found
similar results with real supervisors and subordinates
Spector,
Dwyer, Jex (1988) found that job performance related
to
subordinate autonomy.
CHARISMATIC AND
TRANSFORMATIONAL LEADERSHIP
Leaders with considerable and unusual influence
Can convince followers to do things they would never do
alone
Both good and evil
Generally considered a trait theory
Represents a return to focus on personality of leaders
Charisma of supervisor relates to subordinate
Job
performance
Job
satisfaction
OCB
Organizational
commitment
Usually thought of as part of basic personality
Might be trainable
Actors
were trained to be charismatic in a lab study
(Kirkpatrick
& Locke, 1996, Journal of Applied
Psychology)
Bank
managers trained in charisma
(Barling
et al., 1996, Journal of Applied Psychology)
Are men more charismatic than women?
Same as
seen by male and female subordinates or females a
little
higher (Bass et al., 1996, Applied Psychology: An
International
Review)
Copyright
Paul E. Spector, All rights reserved, July 22, 2002.