Leading Teams.

Leading Teams.

Those leaders who have the greatest impact are those who can influence a group or team. Briefly discuss the difference between a group and a team, and the strategies a leader should consider to influence a group or team.

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Required Resources
Text
Warrick, D.D. (2016). Leadership: A high impact approach [Electronic version]. Retrieved from https://content.ashford.edu/
This text is a Constellation™ course digital materials (CDM) title.
• Chapter 7: Teamwork and Group Skills
Recommended Resources
Article
Salahuddin, M. M. (2010). Generational differences impact on leadership style and organizational success. Journal of Diversity Management, 5(2), 1-6. Retrieved from the ProQuest database.

McLaurin, J. R. (2006). The role of situation in the leadership process: A review and application. Academy of Strategic Management Journal, 5, 97-114. Retrieved from the ProQuest database

Multimedia
INTELECOM (Producer). Different leadership styles (Links to an external site.) [Video file]. Retrieved from http://searchcenter.intelecomonline.net:80/playClipDirect.aspx?id=4870EEC7664070BBC7A04533604A03CF971D109CD99C09CFF3E0B4233E9173F7C23635D7D2B2AA4413AD3789EC202C02
TED (Producer). (2010). TEDTalks: Simon Sinek – How great leaders inspire action [Video file]. Retrieved from the Films On Demand database

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Week Four Lecture

Leadership Pipeline

According to Bennis (1989), leaders are made, not born, and “made more by themselves than by any external means” (p. 5). By following leaders at the top of their organizations, Bennis found that “such people have no interest in proving themselves, but an abiding interest in expressing themselves. The difference is crucial, for it’s the difference between being driven and leading” (p. 5). With Bennis’s work, the age of interviewing top leaders to gain access to how they do their work came into its own.

Charan, Drotter, and Noel’s (2001) work supports the idea that a leadership base among its employees will help the organization make its selections to critical executive leadership positions, even in a large, decentralized organization. Their hierarchy is pictured by a pipeline bent in six places, each being a rise in leadership function. At the bottom, the leaders begin with managing self, then managing others, managing managers, managing functions, managing a business, a business group, and ending at managing an enterprise.

The model recognizes several potential leader failures: failing to seek or listen to feedback, identification of failures, leaving the wrong person in the job too long, poor job definition, and selecting the wrong person for the job. Organizations that do not grow their own managers tend not to know their people well enough to understand what risks they are taking when they hire or promote someone, so using a pipeline model would reduce risk in an already volatile environment. One of Northouse’s (2007) criticisms of trait theory is that it fails the utility test for leadership training and development. Growing leaders from inside the organization makes sense because it reduces risk for the organization and still allows for application of trait theory in selection of leaders and skill theory in leader development programs.

Followership

Traditional trait and behavior theories assume that a leader adopts a general leadership style that is used with all group members. A more recent approach to leadership behavior research, known as individualized leadership, looks at a specific relationship between leader and each individual member (Yammarino & Dansereau, 2002). Individualized leadership is based on the notion that a leader develops a unique relationship with each subordinate or group member, which determines how the leader behaves for the member and how the member responds to the leader. Individualized leadership examines why leaders have more influence and greater impact on some members over others. The leader-member exchange (LMX model) explores how leader-member relationships develop over time and how the quality of exchange relationships impacts outcomes. Studies evaluating characteristics of the LMX relationship explore topics such as communication frequency, value agreement, characteristics of followers, job satisfaction, performance, drive climate, and commitment.

Followers have different relationships with the leader, and the ability of the leader to develop a positive relationship with each subordinate contributes to team performance. The leader-member exchange theory says that high-quality relationships have a positive outcome for leaders, followers, work units, and the organization. Leaders can attempt to build individualized relationships with each subordinate as a way to meet needs for both consideration and structure. To understand the effects of leadership upon outcomes, one must consider the specific relationship behavior between a leader and each follower.

Forbes School of Business Faculty

References

Bennis, W. G. (1989). On becoming a leader. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.

Charan, R., Drotter, S., & Noel, J. (2001). The leadership pipeline: How to build the leadership-powered company. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

Northouse, P. G. (2007). Leadership: Theory and practice (4th ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Yammarino , F. J., & Dansereau, F. (2002). Individualized leadership. Journal of Leadership and Organizational Studies, 9(1), 90-99. doi:10.1177/107179190200900107

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