2. THE NATURE OF LEADERSHIP
LEADERSHIP- it is a term that is often used
in everyday conversation, you might
assume that it has a common and
accepted meaning. In fact just the
opposite true like several other key
organizational behavior term such as
personality and motivation.
3. THE MEANING OF LEADERSHIP
We will define leadership in terms of both
process and property, as a process
leadership is the use of noncoercive
influence to direct and coordinate the
activities of group members to meet a
goal.
4. LEADERSHIP VERSUS
MANAGEMENT
Leadership and management are related
but they are not the same. A person can
be manager a leader both or neither
some of the basic distinctions between
the two
6. EARLY APPROACHES TO
LEADERSHIP
Although leaders and leadership have
profoundly influenced the course of
human events , careful scientific study of
them began only about a centure ago.
Early studies focused on the traits, or
personal characteristics of leaders
7. TRAIT APPROACHES
Lincoln. Napoleon, joan of arc, Hitler and
Gandhi are names that most of us know
quite well early researchers believed that
leaders such as these had some unique
set of qualities or traitsthat distinguish
them from their peers.
8. BEHAVIORAL APPROACHES TO
LEADERSHIP
In the late 1940s most researchers began
to shift away from the traits approach and
started to look at leadership as an
observable to process or activity.
9. THE MICHIGAN STUDIES
The Michigan studies leadership studies
were a program of research conducted
at the university of Michigan. The goal of
this work was to determine the patterns of
leadership behaviors that results in
effective group performance.
10. LEADERSHIP GRID
Provides a means for evaluating leadership styles and
then training managers to move toward an ideal style
of behavior
THE EMERGENCE SITUATIONAL LEADERSHIP MODELS
The leader- behavior theories have played an
importantant role in the development of more realistic,
albeit more complex approaches to leadership.in
particular urge us not to be so preoccupied with what
properties may be possessed by leaders but to instead
concentrate on that leaders actually to do.
11. THE LPC THEORY OF
LEADERSHIP
SITUATIONAL
FAVORABLE
NESS
Very
favorable
Moderately
favorable
Very
unfavorable
RECOMMEN
DED
LEADER
BEHAVIOR
Task
oriented
behavior
Person
oriented
behavior
Task
oriented
behavior
12. LEADER SITUATION MATCH
What happens if a person oriented leader faces a very
favorable or very un favorable situation or a task
oriented leaders faces a situation of intermediate
favorable
13. VROOMS DECISION TREE APPROACH TO LEADERSHIP
The third major contemporary approach
to leadership is vroomS decision tree
approach. The earliest version of this
model was propoed by victor vroom and
Philip yetton and latter revided and
expanded by vroom and Arthur jago.
14. BASIC PREMISES
Vrooms decision tree approach assumes
that the degree to which subordinates
should be encouraged to participate in
decision making depends on the
characteristic of the situation
15. EVALUATION AND
IMPLICATIONS
Because Vrooms current approach is
lelatively new it has not been fully
scientifically tested. The original model
and its subsequent refinement however
attracted a great deal of attention and
were generally supported by research.