Difference between revisions of "Leadership Quarter"

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#'''[[Leader credibility]]'''. The degree to which followers perceive someone as honest, competent, and able to inspire.
 
#'''[[Leader credibility]]'''. The degree to which followers perceive someone as honest, competent, and able to inspire.
 
#*[[Credibility]]. The quality of being trusted and believed in.
 
#*[[Credibility]]. The quality of being trusted and believed in.
 +
#'''[[Leadership orientation]]'''.
 +
#*[[Task orientation]].
 +
#*[[Relationship orientation]]]] (also known as [[human relations orientation]] or [[people orientation]]).
 
#'''[[Leader-member relations]]'''. (1) The degree of confidence, trust, and respect subordinates have in their leader; (2) One of initial situational contingencies of the [[Fiedler contingency model]] that describes the degree of confidence, trust, and respect employees have for their leader.
 
#'''[[Leader-member relations]]'''. (1) The degree of confidence, trust, and respect subordinates have in their leader; (2) One of initial situational contingencies of the [[Fiedler contingency model]] that describes the degree of confidence, trust, and respect employees have for their leader.
 
#*[[Consideration]]. The extent to which a leader is likely to have job relationships characterized by mutual trust, respect for subordinates' ideas, and regard for their feelings.
 
#*[[Consideration]]. The extent to which a leader is likely to have job relationships characterized by mutual trust, respect for subordinates' ideas, and regard for their feelings.

Revision as of 18:01, 19 May 2018

Leadership Quarter (hereinafter, the Quarter) is a lecture introducing the learners to team implementations primarily through key topics related to leadership. The Quarter is the last of four lectures of Team Quadrivium, which is the sixth of seven modules of Septem Artes Administrativi (hereinafter, the Course). The Course is designed to introduce the learners to general concepts in business administration, management, and organizational behavior.


Outline

Workgroup Design Quarter is the predecessor lecture. In the enterprise implementation series, the previous lecture is Stakeholder Arrangements Quarter.

Concepts

  1. Leadership. A process of influencing a group to achieve a vision or set of goals, as well as the ability to do so.
    • Authentic leadership. Leadership expressed by those who know who they are, know what they believe in, and act on those values and beliefs openly and candidly.
    • Socialized charismatic leadership. A leadership concept that states that leaders convey values that are other-centered versus self-oriented and who role-model ethical conduct.
    • Strategic leadership. The ability to anticipate, envision, maintain flexibility, think strategically, and work with others in the organization to initiate changes that will create a viable and valuable future for the organization.
    • Visionary leadership. The ability to create and articulate a realistic, credible, and attractive vision of the future that improves upon the present situation.
  2. Leadership role. A specific action or behavior expected of and exhibited by a leader. Besides some or all managerial roles, leaders are often serve as coaches, troubleshooters, and, after changes, are expected to exhibit initiating structure behaviors.
  3. Leader credibility. The degree to which followers perceive someone as honest, competent, and able to inspire.
    • Credibility. The quality of being trusted and believed in.
  4. Leadership orientation.
  5. Leader-member relations. (1) The degree of confidence, trust, and respect subordinates have in their leader; (2) One of initial situational contingencies of the Fiedler contingency model that describes the degree of confidence, trust, and respect employees have for their leader.
    • Consideration. The extent to which a leader is likely to have job relationships characterized by mutual trust, respect for subordinates' ideas, and regard for their feelings.
  6. Trust. A positive expectation that another will not act opportunistically. For a leader, trust is the belief in the integrity, character, and ability to lead.
  7. Trust component. A part or element of trust.
    • Integrity. (1) The quality of being honest and having strong moral principles; moral uprightness; (2) The state of being whole and undivided.
    • Leader competence. The ability to lead successfully.
    • Consistency. Conformity in the application of something, typically that which is necessary for the sake of logic, accuracy, or fairness.
    • Loyalty. The quality of being loyal to someone or something.
    • Openness. (1) Lack of restriction; accessibility; (2) Lack of secrecy or concealment; frankness.
  8. Leadership theory. A supposition or a system of ideas intended to explain leadership.
  9. Power. A capacity that A has to influence the behavior of B so that B acts in accordance with A's wishes.
    • Position power. Influence derived from one's formal structural position in the organization; includes power to hire, fire, discipline, promote, and give salary increases.
    • Reward power. Compliance achieved based on the ability to distribute rewards that others view as valuable.
    • Coercive power. (1) The power a leader has to punish or control; (2) A power base that is dependent on fear of the negative effects from failing to comply.
    • Referent power. Influence based on identification with a person who has desirable resources or personal traits.
    • Legitimate power. The power a person receives as a result of his or her position in the formal hierarchy of an organization.
    • Expert power. Influence based on expertise, special skills, or knowledge.
  10. Power tactic. A way in which individuals translate power bases into specific actions.
  11. Leadership style. A leader's style of providing direction, implementing plans, and motivating people. The full range of leadership model and managerial grid are some of attempts to identify and classify different leadership styles such as as exhibited by leaders in the political, business or other fields.
    • Autocratic style. Leadership style of someone who dictates work methods, makes unilateral decisions, and limits employee participation.
    • Democratic style. Leadership style of someone who involves employees in decision making, delegates authority, and uses feedback as an opportunity for coaching employees.
    • Servant leadership. A leadership style marked by going beyond the leader's own self-interest and instead focusing on opportunities to help followers grow and develop.
  12. Routine leadership irrelevance. The approach that a leader is not needed in routine operations.
    Routine leadership irrelevance
    • Leader neutralizer. An attribute or set of attributes that make it impossible for leader behavior to make any difference to follower outcomes.
    • Leader substitute. An attribute or set of attributes, such as experience and training, that can replace the need for a leader's support or ability to create structure.
  13. Self organization. The principle that those closest to the work best know how to do the work, so set clear goals and boundaries and let them make all tactical and implementation decisions, cf. emergence, empiricism.
    • Emergence. The principle that the best designs, and the best ways of working come about over time through doing the work, rather than being defined in advance, cf. empiricism, self organization.
    • Empiricism. The principle of "inspect and adapt" which allows teams or individuals to try something out and learn from the experience by conscious reflection and change, cf. emergence, self organization.

Roles

  1. Leader. (1) The person who leads or commands a group, organization, or country; (2) Someone who can influence others toward attaining some goal.
  2. Coach.
  3. Troubleshooter.

Methods

  1. Team building. High interaction among team members to increase trust and openness.

Instruments

  1. Full range of leadership model. A model that depicts seven managerial leadership styles on a continuum: (1) laissez-faire, (2) management by exception, (3) contingent reward leadership, (4) individualized consideration, (5) intellectual stimulation, (6) inspirational motivation, and (7) idealized influence.
    • Laissez-faire style. Leadership style of someone who lets the group make decisions and complete the work in whatever way it sees fit.
  2. Managerial grid. A two-dimensional grid for appraising leadership styles.
  3. Fiedler contingency model. A model that suggests that effective group performance depends on the proper match between a leader's orientation, whether he or she is task-oriented or people-oriented, and the degree to which the situation allows the leader to control and influence. The model (1) uses a least preferred coworker questionnaire to classify leaders, (2) assumes that leaders cannot be both task-oriented or people-oriented, and (3) suggests that people orientation is the best match to the situations with moderate control, while those leaders who are task-oriented best perform in situations with high or low control.
  4. Path-goal model. A model that suggests that the leader's job is to assist followers in attaining their goals and to provide direction or support needed to ensure that their goals are compatible with the goals of the group or organization.

Practices

Bookkeeping Quarter is the successor lecture. In the enterprise implementation series, the next lecture is Resource Planning Quarter.

Materials

Recorded audio

Recorded video

Live sessions

Texts and graphics

See also