The Four Leadership Styles
The Four Leadership Styles
The Four Leadership Styles
W. C. HOWARD, Ph.D.
The Four Styles narrative of Leadership is written in three sections, which are
Overview of Leadership Styles, Analysis
of Leadership Styles, and Applications of
Leadership Styles. While the primary foundation for its development was generated
from more than 30 years of research and
studying leadership styles in education, the
secondary foundation is generated from
clients and colleagues representing more
than 100 schools, colleges, and universities. This article is designed to facilitate
awareness and provide instruction for leaders struggling with identification of their
own leadership styles, as well as the identification of the most appropriate leadership
style of subordinates. Perhaps, the most
important work that influenced the author's
position was the brain quadrant research
conducted by Ned Herrmann. Ned Herrmann, who mentored the author during
the late 8O's in North Carolina, provided
the cognitive framework for the styles of
leadership based upon his extensive work
with research on brain quadrants. Additionally, data were generated from various
research/case studies done by the author at
The University of Alabama, Harvard University, Fort Valley State University,
Talladega College, Atlanta Metropolitan
College, Miles College, Stetson University, The Citadel University, Webster
University, and numerous school districts
and technical colleges. It is from these
sources that this classification system for
preferred leadership styles has emerged.
Leadership in General
384
Chart 1
Type-A (Fact Based)
Expects others to perform at a high level,
with emphasis on the bottom line.
Factual
Formal
Logical
Conservative
Technical
High Task
Analytical
Quantitative
Mathematical
Theoretical/ Scientific
Artistic
Flexible
Imaginative
Synthesizing
Spontaneous
Holistic
Controlled
Detailed
Planned
Sequential
Conservative
Organized
Dominant
Highly Structured
High Task
Formal
Emotional
Talker (without reservation)
Emphatic
Intuitive
Interpersonal
Flexible
expect all subordinates to play a submissive role with them, and they provide
rewards accordingly. They choose control,
details, planning, sequencing, and strict
organization to respond to people, tasks,
and environment. They are inflexible,
unimaginative, and lack spontaneity. Ideally, you want your Chief Finance Officer
(CFO) to use Type-D leadership style. You
would not want your CFO to use creative
accounting methods. A creative accountant is not a positive contributor in any
organization. There are many aspects of
an accountant's job that require many of the
elements of a Type-D leadership style.
Audit trails must be established and maintained for all incoming fiscal resources,
which require a sequential and orderly
process by the chief financial officer. Consequently, different people, tasks, and
environments need different styles of leadership to accomplish desired results.
Leaders of this type are advocates and firm
supporters of tradition because, " This is
what worked yesterday." They neither
encourage nor do they use creative problem-solving primarily because they are
afraid of failure. This approach is positive
for accountants, but it could prove to be
problematic for a leader attempting to motivate teachers and students to improve
school ratings. Therefore, the leadership
style must be dictated by the situation.
Applications of Leadership Style
References
Bennis, W. (1997). Organizing Genius: The
Secrets of Creative Collaboration. Reading,
MA: Addison Wesley.
Fiedler, F. E. (1967). A Theory of Leadership
Effectiveness. New York, New York: McGrawHill
Ghiselli, E.E. (1971). Explorations in Managerial
Talent. Santa Monica, CA: Goodyear.
Goleman, D. (2000). Leadrship That Gets Results.
Harvard Business Review, 1, PP.78-90
Ivancevich, J. M. & Matteson, M.T. (2002). Organizational Behavior and Management. New
York, New York: McGraw-Hill.
Shockley-Zalabak, P. (2002). Fundamentals of
Organizational Communication. Boston, MA:
Allyn & Bacon
Stogdill, R. M. (1974). Handbook for Leadership.
New York: Free Press, 43-44.