Chapter 8 Leadership Review
Free-rein leader
hands off leadership means setting goals for your managers and employees, then leaving the employees alone to get the job done Ex. These managers don't have time to run everything.
Bureaucratic
is not a style of leadership, but autocratic, democratic, and free-rein are styles of leadership.
Democratic leader
leadership style where you make the final decision, but explain reasons to
Styles of leadership
autocratic, democratic, and free rein.
Delegating
giving managers and employees the power to run things. You should not delegate responsibility in an area where you are not confident as a management decision.
Leader
good leader is willing to make a mistake and learn from them. A good leader has confidence and delegates responsibility intelligently by providing direction and vision for a company. A manager and a leader are not necessarily the same thing. Integrity is paramount to being a good leader.
Autocratic leader
runs everything yourself and answers to no one Ex. One manager makes all the decisions.
Vision
someone that is a good leader; if vision is lacking then you can probably still be a good manager.
Initiative
someone with initiative does not want to be told what to do Ex. Taking action without being told.
Human relations
the ability to communicate and associate with people.
Self-managed team
the leader is a team player rather than a boss. Work groups that supervise themselves are self-managed teams. These teams are faster and more efficient, can solve own problems, and are more goal-oriented than task-oriented. They do complicate the decision-making process. The role of the manager is replaced by the role of the team leader. Began in Japan.
Integrity
the most highly-valued quality of a leader... honesty, trustworthiness, and moral.
Team leader
typically make decisions with a team instead of unilaterally giving orders.
Confident leader
uses his/her ability to be decisive. A confident leader also conveys a sense of knowing what they are doing. Employees have more trust or confidence in a leader who is willing to admit mistakes.