Leadership and Decision Making: Daisy Chauhan
Leadership and Decision Making: Daisy Chauhan
Leadership and Decision Making: Daisy Chauhan
Making
Daisy Chauhan
structure
Relies on control
Short-range view
Eye on the bottom line
Imitates
Accepts status quo
Surrenders to external
forces
Does things rightly
Innovates
Develops
Focuses on people
Inspires trust
Long-range view
Eye on the horizon
Originates
Challenges the status
quo
Conquers over volatile,
turbulent and ambiguous
surroundings
Does the right things
What Differentiates a
A Leader sees:
Leader
More
Farther and
Before
Others.
It is not the position that makes a leader
It is the leader that makes a position.
In the case of a manager things happen
when he is there;
In the case of a Leader, things happen
even when he is not there.
1. Passion
2. Vision
3. Self Discipline
4. Initiative
5. Courage
6. Integrity and Trust
7. Risk Taking Capacity
8. Building a Team
9. Creativity
10. Competence
Theories of Leadership
Trait Theories
Behavioral Theories
Contingency Theories
Trait Theories
Trait theories differentiate leaders from non-
Trait Theories
Extroversion is the most important trait of
effective leaders
Extroversion more strongly related to leader
emergence than to leader effectiveness
Behavioural Theories
Ohio State Studies:
Two dimensions relating to behaviour:
Initiating structure : Extent to which a leader
is likely to define and structure his/her role
and those of employees for the attainment of
goals
Consideration: The extent to which a leader is
likely to have job relationships characterised
by mutual trust, respect for employees ideas
and regard for their feelings
Has concern for employees comfort,
wellbeing, status and satisfaction
Behavioural Theories
Michigan Studies:
People Oriented Leader: emphasise
interpersonal relations, take personal
interest in the needs of the employees
Production Oriented Leader: emphasise the
technical and task aspects of the job.
Their concern is accomplishing tasks and
employees are only a means to that end.
Behavioural Theories
The Managerial Grid (Blake and Mouton):
Nine possible positions (styles) along each
axis on people orientation and production
orientation.
Managers are found to perform best under
9,9 style (High on people and production
orientation)
Leader-Member Exchange
Due to time constraint leaders establish a
Theory
special relationship with a small group of their
followers.
These individuals make the in-group
Leader chooses those members who have similar
attitude and personality characteristics as theirs
They are trusted, get disproportionate amount of
leaders attention and special privileges
Other followers fall into the out-group
In-group persons get higher performance ratings
and have higher satisfaction than the out-group
members
Category
II
III
IV
VI
VII
VIII
L-M
Relations
Good
Good
Good
Good
Poor
Poor
Poor
Poor
Task
Structure
High
High
Low
Low
High
High
Low
Low
Weak
Strong
Weak
Strong
Weak
Strong
Weak
Posi- Strong
tion
Power
G
o
o
d
Task oriented:
Relationship Oriented:
P
o
o
r
Moderate
vourable
Contingency Theories
Contingency Theories
Least Preferred Coworker (LPC)
A high LPC score on 16 dimensions (pleasant-unpleasant) is
indicative of relationship orientation and a low LPC score
is indicative of task orientation basic leadership style
Leadership effectiveness depends on a match between the
style and three situational factors:
(1) Leader-member relations: The degree to which members
have confidence, trust and respect in their leaders
(2) Task Structure: The degree to which job assignments are
procedurised (structured/unstructured)
(3) Position Power: The degree of influence a leader has
over matters relating to hiring, firing, discipline,
promotions and salary increases.
Situational Leadership
Able but
unwilling
Follower
Directed
S4
Delegating
Observing
Fulfilling
Unable but
willing
Unable and
unwilling
Leader Directed
Leader
Behavior S2
S3
Understandin
g
Encouraging
Collaborating
Training
Explaining
Monitoring
S1
Telling
Guiding
Directing
How to do
Turn over
responsibilit
y for
decisions
and
executing
it
Explain your
decisions and
provide
opportunity
for
clarification
Provide specific
instructions and
closely
supervise
performance
High Relationship/
Low Task
S3: Participating/
Encouraging
High on Relationship/
High on Task
S2:Selling/
Explaining
Low Relationship/
Low Task
Low Relationship/
High Task
S4: Delegating/
Monitoring
S1: Telling/
Directing
Task Behaviour
1. Rationality
2. Acceptance
ACCEPTANCE
1. Information:
1. Conflict Rule
2. Fairness Rule
3. Acceptance Priority
Relevant
Sufficient
Complete
2. Complexity
3. Goal Congruity
TIME AVAILABILITY