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Leadership
& Team Management MGMT
623
VU
Lesson
11
TRANSACTIONAL,
CHARISMATIC AND TRANSFORMATIONAL
LEADERSHIP
Effective
leaders don't use a single
style; they use many
different styles and make
adjustments based on
the
situation. An important but
often overlooked contingency
variables is national
culture
New
Approaches of Leadership: following
are the new approaches of
leadership;
1.
Transactional
2.
Charismatic
3.
Transformational
First
of all we need to understand the
difference between Transactional and
Transformational
leadership.
After this, we will be
discussing the Charismatic
leadership.
1.
Transactional Leadership:
These
types of leaders focus on rewards in exchange
for motivation, productivity and
effective task
accomplishment.
2.
Transformational:
These
types of leaders focus on influencing
attitudes and assumptions of staff.
Building commitment to
the
mission and always try to achieve the
objective of the organisation.
Transactional
leaders differ from
transformational leaders
·
Most
of the leadership theories presented in this
chapter address the issue of
transactional leaders.
·
These
leaders guide or motivate
their followers in the direction of
established goals by
clarifying
role and task requirements.
·
Transformational
leaders inspire followers to
transcend their own self-interests
for the good of the
organization
and are capable of having a profound
and extraordinary effect on
his or her followers.
·
Transformational
leaders pay attention to the
concerns and developmental needs of
individual
followers;
they change followers'
awareness of issues by helping
those followers to look at
old
problems
in new ways; and they
are able to excite, arouse,
and inspire followers to put
out extra
effort
to achieve group goals.
·
Transactional
and transformational leadership are
not opposing
approaches.
·
Transformational
leadership is built on transactional
leadership.
·
Transformational
leadership produces higher levels of
employee effort and performance.
·
It is
more than charisma.
·
The
transformational leader will attempt to
instill in followers the ability to
question not only
established
views but eventually those
established by the leader.
·
The
evidence supporting the superiority of
transformational leadership over the
transactional
variety
is overwhelmingly impressive.
·
In
summary, the overall evidence indicates that
transformational leadership is more
strongly
correlated
with lower turnover rates,
higher productivity, and higher
employee satisfaction.
Differences:
Categories
Transactional
Transformational
Rank,
position
Character,
competence
Leader's
source of power
Compliance
Commitment
Follower
reaction
Short
term
Long
term
Time
frame
Pay,
promotion, etc.
Pride,
self-esteem, etc.
Rewards
Important
Less
important
Supervision
Evaluation
Development
Counseling
focus
33
Leadership
& Team Management MGMT
623
VU
Charismatic
Leadership:
Charismatic
leaders have a combination of charm
and personal magnetism that contribute to
a
remarkable
ability to get other people to
endorse to their vision and
promote it passionately.
Charisma
Defined: Charisma
has been defined various
ways. Charisma is a Greek word
meaning
"divinely
inspired gift". In leadership, charisma
is a special quality of leaders whose
purposes, powers,
and
extraordinary determination differentiate
them from others.
Charisma:
A Relationship: Key to
charismatic leadership is the interaction between leader and
group
members.
Charismatic qualities must be attributed
to the leader by group members and
Charismatic
leaders
use impression management to cultivate
their relationships with
group members.
·
Charismatic
leadership theory is an extension of
attribution theory.
·
It
says that followers make
attributions of heroic or extraordinary
leadership abilities when
they
observe
certain behaviors.
·
Several authors
have attempted to identify personal characteristics of
the charismatic leader.
·
Robert
House has identified three:
extremely high confidence, dominance, and
strong
convictions.
·
Warren
Bennis found that they had
four common competencies: they had a
compelling vision
or
sense of purpose; they could communicate
that vision in clear terms
that their followers
could
readily identify with; they
demonstrated consistency and focus in the
pursuit of their
vision;
and they knew their own
strengths and capitalized on them.
·
Jay
Conger and Rabindra Kanungo at
McGill University--charismatic leaders
have an
idealized
goal that they want to
achieve and a strong personal commitment to that
goal; they are
perceived
as unconventional; they are
assertive and self-confident; and they
are perceived as
agents
of radical change rather than as
managers of the status
quo.
·
There
is an increasing body of research that
shows impressive correlations between
charismatic
leadership
and high performance and satisfaction among
followers.
·
Charismatic
leadership may be most appropriate
when the follower's task has
an ideological
component.
·
Second,
charismatic leaders may be ideal
for pulling an organization
through a crisis but
become
a liability to an organization once the
crisis and the need for dramatic change
subside.
Trait
of a Charismatic Leader:
Self-confidence
A
vision
Strong
conviction in that
vision
Out
of the ordinary behavior
The
image of a change agent
Followers
feelings towards
Charismatic
Leaders
·
High
Trust
·
Obedience
·
Emotional
involvement
·
Satisfaction
·
Self-esteem
·
Motivation
·
Belief
in likeliness of success
34
Leadership
& Team Management MGMT
623
VU
Two
Types of Charismatic Leaders:
Visionary
Leadership:
·
Visionary
leadership goes beyond charisma.
Visionary leadership is the ability to
create and
articulate
a realistic, credible, attractive
vision of the future for an
organization or organizational
unit
that grows out of and improves
upon the present.
·
A
vision differs from other
forms of direction setting in several
ways:
·
"A
vision has clear and compelling
imagery that offers an
innovative way to improve,
which
recognizes
and draws on traditions, and
connects to actions that people
can take to realize
change."
·
Vision
taps people's emotions and
energy.
·
The
key properties of a vision seem to be
inspirational possibilities that
are value centered,
realizable,
with superior imagery and
articulation.
·
Visions
should be able to create
possibilities that are
inspirational, unique, and offer a
new
order
that can produce organizational
distinction.
·
Desirable
visions fit the times and
circumstances and reflect the uniqueness
of the organization.
·
People
in the organization must also
believe that the vision is
attainable.
Crisis-Based
Charismatic Leaders:
The
crisis-produced charismatic leader communicates
clearly what actions need to be
taken and what
their
consequences will be in the
crisis.
Transformational
v. Charismatic Leaders: Some experts
say yes, transformation and
charismatic are
same
but emerging view is
that:
Charisma
is distinct from transformational
leadership
A
personal trait that might
help transform, or might
just help the leader
Charismatic
leadership might have opposite effect --
creates dependence, not
empowerment
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