Leadership-Chapter 16
Achievement behavior
Aimed as setting challenging goals for followers to reach and expressing and demonstrating confidence that they will measure up to the challenge.
Supportive Behavior
Aimed at being friendly with followers and showing interest in them as human beings.
Participative Behavior
Aimed at seeking suggestions from followers regarding business operations to the extent that followers are involved in making important organizational decisions.
Servant Leadership
Approach to leading in which leaders view their primary role as helping followers in their quests to satisfy personal needs, aspirations, and interests.
Position Power
Determined by the extent to which the leader has control over the rewards and punishments followers receive.
Directive Behavior
Directive behavior is aimed at telling followers what to do and how to do it.
Leader Flexibility
Idea that successful leaders must change their leadership styles as they encounter different situations.
Job-Centered Behavior
Leader behavior that focuses primarily on the work a subordinate is doing.
Transformational leadership
Leadership that inspires organizational success by profoundly affecting followers' beliefs in what an organization should be, as well as their values, such as justice and integrity.
Coaching
Leadership that instructs followers on how to meet the special organizational challenges they face.
Entrepreneurial Leadership
Leadership that is based on the attitude that the leader is self-employed.
Superleadership
Leading by showing others how to lead themselves.
CII Decision Style
Manager and subordinates meet as a group to discuss the situation, but the manager makes the decision.
AII Decision Style
Manager asks for information from subordinates but makes the decision alone. Subordinates may or may not be informed about what the situation is.
A1 Decision Style
Manager makes the decision alone.
CI Decision Style
Manager shares the situation with individual subordinates and asks for information and evaluation. Subordinates do not meet as a group, and the manager along makes the decision.
Leadership
Process of directing the behavior of others toward the accomplishment of some objective.
Life Cycle Theory of Leadership
Rationale for linking leadership styles with various situations to ensure effective leadership.
Maturity
The ability of followers to perform their job independently, to assume additional responsibility, and to desire to achieve success.
Leadership Style
The behavior a leader exhibits while guiding organization members in appropriate directions.
Task Structure
The degree to which the goals--the work to be done--and other situational factors are outlined clearly.
Structure Behavior
any leadership behavior that reflects friendship, mutual trust, respect, and warmth in the relationship between leader and followers.
Trait Approach to Leadership
based on early leadership research that assumed a good leader is born, not made.
Situational Approach to Leadership
based on the assumption that each instance of leadership is different and therefore requires a unique combination of leaders, followers, and leadership situations.
Contemporary management
believe that leadership ability cannot be experience by an individual's traits or inherited characteristics. They believe, rather, individuals can be trained to be good leaders. In other words, leaders are made, not born.
Vroom-Yetton-Jago (VYJ) model of leadership
focuses on how much participation to allow subordinates in the decision-making process. Built upon two premises of organizational decisions should be of high quality and subordinates should accept and be committed to organizational decisions that are made.
Employee-centered Behavior
leader behavior that focuses primarily on subordinates as people.
Contingency Theory of Leadership
leader-member relations, task structure, and the position power of the leader are the three primary factors that should be considered when moving leaders into situations appropriate for their leadership styles.
GII Decision Style
manager and subordinates meet as a group to discuss the situation, and the group makes the decision.
nonbehavioral as well as behavioral issues. Behavioral.
managing focuses upon while leading primarily focuses on what?
Path-goal theory of leadership
suggests the primary activities of a leader are to make desirable and achievable rewards available to be performed to earn those rewards.
Leader-member relations
the degree to which the leader feels accepted by the followers.