influencing & leading

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Influencing and Leading Chapter 13 Ready Notes For in-class note taking, choose Handouts or Notes Pages from the print options, with three slides per page.

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A guide for effective leadership.

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Page 1: Influencing & Leading

Influencing and Leading

Chapter 13 Ready Notes

For in-class note taking, choose Handouts or Notes Pages from the print options, with three slides per page.

Page 2: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–2

Chapter Objectives

1. Identify and describe eight generic influence tactics used in modern organizations.

2. Identify the five bases of power and explain what it takes to make empowerment work.

3. Explain the concept of emotional intelligence in terms of Goleman’s four leadership traits.

4. Summarize what the Ohio State model and the Leadership Grid® have taught managers about leadership.

Page 3: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–3

Chapter Objectives (cont’d)

5. Describe the path-goal theory of leadership, and explain how the assumption on which it is based differs from the assumptions on which Fiedler’s contingency theory is based.

6. Identify the two key functions that mentors perform, and explain how a mentor can develop a junior manager’s leadership skills.

Page 4: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–4

Influence Tactics in the Workplace

• Influence– Any attempt by a person to change the behavior of

superiors, peers, or lower-level employees.

– Is not inherently good or bad.

– Can be used for purely selfish reasons.

– Can be used to subvert organizational objectives.

– Can be used to enhance organizational effectiveness.

– Gender appears to play no significant role in the choice of influence tactic.

Page 5: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–5

Influence Tactics in the Workplace (cont’d)

• Eight Generic Influence Tactics– Consultation

– Rational persuasion

– Inspirational appeals

– Ingratiating tactics

– Coalition tactics

– Pressure tactics

– Upward appeals

– Exchange tactics

Page 6: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–6

Power

• What Is Power?– The ability to marshal the human, informational, and

material resources to get something done.

– Power affects

– Decisions

– Behavior

– Situations

Page 7: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–7

Power (cont’d)

• What Is Power?– Types of power

– Power over: the ability to dominate.

– Power to: ability to act freely.

– Power from: ability to resist the demands of others.

Page 8: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–8

Power (cont’d)

• Five Bases of Power– Reward power: having the ability to grant rewards.

– Coercive power: gaining compliance through threats or punishment.

– Legitimate power: gaining compliance based on the power associated with holding a superior position.

– Referent power: gaining compliance based on charisma or personal identification.

– Expert power: gaining compliance based on the ability to dispense valued information.

Page 9: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–9

Power (cont’d)

• Empowerment– Making employees full partners in the decision-

making process and giving them the necessary tools and rewards.

– Power is viewed as an unlimited resource.

– Traditional authoritarian managers feel threatened.

– Threats to empowerment

– Dishonesty

– Untrustworthiness

– Selfishness

– Inadequate skills

Page 10: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–10

Leadership

• Leadership Defined– The process of inspiring, influencing, and guiding

others to participate in a common effort.

• Formal Leadership– The process of influencing relevant others to pursue

official organizational objectives.

• Informal Leadership– The process of influencing other to pursue unofficial

objectives that may or may not serve the organization’s interests.

Page 11: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–11

Figure 13.1The Evolution of Leadership Theory

Page 12: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–12

Leadership (cont’d)

• Trait Theory– The search for universal traits possessed by all

leaders.

– An early review 100 trait studies found moderate agreement on five traits common to leaders

– Intelligence

– Scholarship

– Dependability in exercising responsibilities

– Activity and social participation

– Socioeconomic status

Page 13: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–13

Leadership (cont’d)

• A Modern Trait Profile: Leaders with Emotional Intelligence– Emotional Intelligence (EI): the ability to monitor

and control one’s emotions and behavior in complex social settings.

– Leadership traits associated with EI

– Self-awareness

– Self-management

– Social awareness

– Relationship management

Page 14: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–14

Leadership (cont’d)

• The Controversy Over Male and Female Leadership Traits– Rosener’s research: Female leaders are better at

sharing power and information.

– Later research found no significant differences in the leadership styles of men and women.

– Women did not fit the female stereotype.

– Men did not fit the male stereotype.

Page 15: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–15

Leadership (cont’d)

• Behavioral Styles Theory– WWII studies of the patterns of leader behaviors

(leadership styles) rather than who the leader was (traits).

– Democratic style

– Authoritarian style

– Laissez-faire (hands-off style)

Page 16: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–16

Behavioral Styles Theories of Leadership

• The Ohio State Model– Initiating structure: leader’s efforts to get things

organized and get things done.

– Consideration: the degree of trust, friendship, respect, and warmth that the leader extended to subordinates.

– Identified four leadership styles

– Low structure, high consideration

– High structure, high consideration

– Low structure, low consideration

– High structure, low consideration

Page 17: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–17

Behavioral Styles Theories of Leadership (cont’d)

• The Leadership Grid®– The belief that there is one best style of leadership.

– Concern for production: the desire to achieve greater output, cost-effectiveness, and profits.

– Concern for people: promoting friendships, helping coworkers get the job done, and attending to things that matter to people.

Page 18: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–18

Behavioral Styles Theories of Leadership (cont’d)

• The Leadership Grid® Styles– 9, 1 style: primary concern for production; people

secondary.

– 1, 9 style: primary concern for people; production secondary.

– 1, 1 style: minimal concern for production or people

– 5, 5 style: moderate concern for both production and people to maintain the status quo.

– 9, 9 style: high concern for both production and people (commitment, trust, and teamwork)

Page 19: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–19

Situational Theories of Leadership

• Fiedler’s Contingency Theory– Performance of the leader depends on:

– the degree to which the situation gives the leader control and influence (favorableness of the situation).

– the leader’s basic motivation to either accomplish the task or having supportive relationships with others (task or relationship motivation).

– The challenge is to match the leader with a suitable situation: easier to move the leader than to change the leader’s style.

Page 20: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–20

Situational Theoriesof Leadership (cont’d)

• Path-Goal Theory– Derived from expectancy motivation theory.

– Effective leaders enhance employee motivation by

– clarifying perceptions of work goals.

– linking rewards to goal attainment.

– explaining how goals and rewards can be achieved.

– Leadership styles

– Directive Supportive

– Participative Achievement-oriented

Page 21: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–21

Transformational Leadership Theory

• Transformational leaders– Are capable of charting new courses for their

organization.

– Are visionaries who challenge people to do exceptional things, above and beyond the plan.

• Transactional leaders– Monitor people to see that they do the expected,

according to plan in order to maintain the status quo.

– Get people to do things by offering a reward or threatening them with a punishment.

Page 22: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–22

Servant Leaders: Putting to Work What You’ve Learned

• The Servant Leader (Greenleaf)– An ethical person who put others—not herself or himself—in the

foreground.

– Characteristics

– Are servants first

– Inspire trust

– Are masters of feedback

– Emphasize personal development

– Articulate goals

– Know how to listen

– Rely on foresight

Page 23: Influencing & Leading

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Lecture Outline and Line Art Presentation, 13–23

Mentoring

• Learning from a Mentor– Mentor: someone who develops another person

through tutoring, coaching, and guidance.

• Dynamics of Mentoring– Mentoring’s key functions

– Serving as a career enhancement function.

– Providing psychological support.