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Typology: Schemes and Mind Maps
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LEADERSHIP FOR MANAGERIAL PERFORMANCE
3.1ContingencyTheory–Path-GoalTheory
3.2Leadership Member Exchange Theory
3.3LeadershipStyles
Transactional Leadership Transformational Servant Leadership Authentic Leadership
◻ According to House and Mitchell (1974), leadership generates motivation when it increases the number and kinds of payoffs that followers receive from their work.
◻ Leadership also motivates when it makes the path to the goal clear and easy to travel through coaching and direction, removing obstacles and roadblocks to attaining the goal, and making the work itself more personally satisfying
◻ Follower characteristics determine how a leader’s behavior is interpreted by followers in a given work context.
◻ Researchers have focused on followers’ needs for affiliation, preferences for structure, desires for control, and self perceived level of task ability.
◻ These characteristics and many others determine the degree to which followers find the behavior of a leader an immediate source of satisfaction or instrumental to some future satisfaction.
◻ Task characteristics also have a major impact on the way a leader’s behavior influences followers’ motivation. ◻ Task characteristics include the design of the follower’s task, the formal authority system of the organization, and the primary work group of followers. ◻ Collectively, these characteristics in themselves can provide motivation for followers. ◻ When a situation provides a clearly structured task, strong group norms, and an established authority system, followers will find the paths to desired goals apparent and will not need a leader to clarify goals or coach them in how to reach these goals. ◻ Followers will feel as if they can accomplish their work and that their work is of value. ◻ Leadership in these types of contexts could be seen as unnecessary, unempathic , and excessively controlling.
◻ This theory, also known as LMX or the Vertical Dyad Linkage Theory , explores how leaders and managers develop relationships with team members; and it explains how those relationships can either contribute to growth or hold people back.
Leadership Theory Exchange alters time
Features
The Leader member exchange Theory
Role taking
Role making
Routinizatio n
Little responsibility Simple tasks
Need to earn Trust Members categorized In group have security Out group often side lined
◻ Role-taking occurs when team members first join the group. Managers use this time to assess new members' skills and abilities.
◻ During this last phase, routines between team members and their managers are established.
◻ In-Group team members work hard to maintain the good opinion of their managers, by showing trust, respect, empathy, patience, and persistence.