Leadership&Organizational Change: Lecture 4 The Nature of Leadership
Leadership&Organizational Change: Lecture 4 The Nature of Leadership
Leadership&Organizational Change: Lecture 4 The Nature of Leadership
CHANGE
• Definition of leadership.
• Leadership function.
• Source of power and influence.
• Motivation approaches to management.
• Classical theory of management.
• Analyzing work processes.
• Position power and formal authority.
Introduction;
• Early researchers believed that notable leaders, (such as Lincoln,
Napoleon, Joan of Arc, Gandhi) had some unique set of qualities or
traits that distinguished them from their peers.
• These traits were also thought to be relatively stable and enduring.
Following this trait approach to leadership, researchers focused on
identifying the essential leadership traits.
• Although the trait approach was all but abandoned several decades
ago, in recent years, it has resurfaced.
• For example, some researchers have again started to focus on a
limited set of traits.
• These traits include emotional intelligence, mental intelligence,
drive, motivation, honesty and integrity, self-confidence, knowledge
of the business, and charisma.
• Some people even believe that biological factors, such as appearance
or height, may play a role in leadership.
Definition
• LEADERSHIP the processes and behaviors used by someone,
such as a manager, to motivate, inspire, and influence the
behaviors of others.
• One of the biggest errors people make is assuming that
leadership and management mean the same thing when they are
really different concepts. A person can be a manager, a leader,
both, or neither.
• Organizations need both management and leadership if they are
to be effective.
• For example, leadership is necessary to create and direct change
and to help the organization get through tough times.
Movie; 7 Essential Qualities of All
Great Leaders;
https://youtu.be/eG16EmA2Fe0
Leadership function
• Establishing direction. Developing a vision of the future, often
the distant future, and strategies for producing the changes
needed to achieve that vision.
• Aligning people. Communicating the direction by words and
deeds to all those whose cooperation may be needed to
influence the creation of teams and coalitions that understand
the vision and strategies and accept their validity.
• Motiwating and Inspiring. Energizing people to overcome
major political, bureaucratic, and resource barriers to change
by satisfying very basic, but often unfulfilled, human needs.
• Produces change, often to a dramatic degree, and has the
potential to produce extremely useful change (e.g., new
products that customers want, new approaches to labor
relations that help make a firm more competitive).
SOURCES OF POWER AND
INFLUENCE
• The essence of leadership is influence over followers.
• However, the influence process between a leader and
followers is not unidirectional. Leaders influence followers,
but followers also have some influence over leaders.
• Moreover, in large organizations, the effectiveness of
middle-level and lower-level managers depends on their
influence over superiors and peers as well as their influence
over subordinates.
• To understand what makes managers effective requires an
analysis of the complex web of power relationships and
influence processes found in all organizations.
Movie; Max Weber Bureaucracy;
https://youtu.be/zp554tcdWO8
Power