MGMT Ch. 12
impoverished leadership style
1,1 on the blake/mouton grid, this is the worst; leaders who show little concern for people or production and does the bare minimum needed to keep his or her job
country club leadership style
1,9 on the blake/mouton grid; occurs when leaders care about having a friendly, enjoyable work environment but don't really pay much attention to production or performance
middle of the road leadership style
5,5 on the blake/mouton grid; leadership style that occurs when leaders show a moderate amount of concern for both people and production.
authority compliance leadership style
9, 1 on the blake/mouton grid; when leaders have a high concern for production and a low concern for people
team management leadership style
9,9 on the blake/mouton grid; called this because leaders who use it display a high concern for people (9) and a high concern for production (9) and this is the best type
management by exception
A method of leadership done passively or actively that describes when leaders should intervene to increase a subordinate's effort to meet standards
leader member exchange theory
A method of leadership in which leaders treat each member differently, and as a result, develop unique relationships with each member
managerial grid
A two-dimensional grid showing leaders' different levels of task-oriented and relations-oriented behavior, which results in particular styles of leadership
leadership neutralizers
Aspects of a situation that hinder a leader's ability to act a particular way
leadership substitutes
Aspects of a situation that make leadership unnecessary
relations oriented behavior
Behaviors that prioritize interpersonal relationships, the value of workers as humans, and a strong commitment to the unit and its mission
task oriented behavior
Behaviors that prioritize the accomplishment of a task in an efficient and reliable way
positional power
Extent to which a leader has authority to evaluate performance and administer rewards or punishments
task structure
Extent to which standard procedures are in place to complete a task
in groups
Favored subordinates who are assigned more interesting tasks, given greater responsibility and authority, and receive more tangible rewards and more resources
charismatic leaders
Individuals who arouse strong followership through inspirational visions and/or compelling personal attributes
fiedler's contigency theory
Leaders are more effective depending on the favorability of a leadership situation, which is described by leader-member relations, task structure, and positional power of the leader
situational leadership theory
Leaders have the flexibility and range of skills to adapt their leadership behavior
relationship life cycle
Phases in which a leader and follower undergo a process that dictates whether followers become part of the in-group or out-group
leader member relations
Quality of relationships between leaders and followers
out groups
Subordinates who are expected to simply comply with formal rules and do what is required of them; as a result, they receive the standard benefits of the job
contingent reward
The exchange process between leaders and followers in which leaders offer rewards to subordinates in exchange for their services; aka the carrot and stick method
path goal theory of leadership
The most important aspect in leadership is the follower's expectation that a task can be accomplished and that it will lead to rewards
leadership style
The pattern of behaviors that leaders use in situations
transactional leadership
The process of a leader providing something the subordinates want
transformational leadership
The set of behaviors that leaders use to transform, or change, their organization and individuals for the better
interpersonal skills
a leader's ability to interact with others
cognitive skills
a leader's ability to understand the internal and external environments, use sound reasoning to make decisions, and communicate effectively
technical skills
a leader's knowledge about an organization and job related activities
great man theory
a theory of leadership that explained leadership by examining the traits and characteristics of individuals considered to be historically great leaders; aka trait theory
traits based leadership theory
a theory of leadership that tries to reveal a set of universal trains and skills that are relevant in all leadership situations
passive mbe
dictates that managers should take corrective action only when subordinates fall below expectations; avoids micromanaging; riskier in the short term but more effective in the long term
stranger phase
part 1 of the RLC; Leaders and subordinate interactions are formal and based on organizational policies
acquaintance phase
part 2 of the RLC; When a leader offers the subordinate a chance to increase his or her responsibility in the group and the subordinate must accept the new role
mature partnership phase
part 3 of the RLC; Leaders and followers develop strong mutual trust, respect, and obligation
least preferred coworker
questionnaire used by Fiedler to measure leadership style, assumes the way that leaders treat people now is probably the way they've always treated others; 64+ (positive) means relationship oriented and 57- (negative) means task oriented
traits
relatively stable characteristics such as abilities, psychological motives, or consistent patterns of behavior
character
the core values and fundamental beliefs that drive behavior in variable situations
initiating structure
the degree to which a leader structures the roles of followers by setting goals, giving directions, setting deadlines, and assigning tasks; leader's ability to do this primarily affects subordinate's job performance
consideration
the extent to which a leader is friendly, approachable, and supportive and shows concern for employees; primarily effects subordinates job satisfaction
high relationship low task
these individuals are most concerned about the needs and feelings of others. they operate under the assumption that as long as people are happy and secure, they will work hard
high task low relationship
these individuals believe that work is simply a means to an end. they believe that employees' needs are secondary to the need for efficient and productive workplaces
low task low relationship
these individuals do not have a high regard for creating systems, getting the job done, or developing relationships with others
high relationship high task
these individuals integrate production and people concerns in a mutually reinforcing effort where all behaviors enhance each other. this is a goal centered, team approach
blake mouton leadership grid
two leadership behaviors, concern for people (i.e., consideration) and concern for production (i.e., initiating structure), to categorize five different leadership styles. Both behaviors are rated on a 9-point scale, with 1 representing "low" and 9 representing "high."
active mbe
when managers constantly monitor employees to make sure they are meetings standards and avoiding mistakes