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Leadership
& Team Management MGMT
623
VU
Lesson
20
LEADERSHIP
AND EMPOWERMENT
During last
two lectures we tried to understand the
concept of power and its
relationship with the
process
of leadership. In this lecture we will
try to understand the concepts of empowerment and
its
relationship
with leadership.
What
is Empowerment?
Empowerments
is the process of enabling or authorizing
an individual to think, behave, take
action, and
control
work and decision making in autonomous
ways. It is the state of feeling self-empowered to
take
control
of one's own destiny. OR
Empowerment is a social action process
that promotes participation of
people,
organizations, and communities towards
the goals of increase individual and
community
control,
political efficacy, improved
quality of community life and social
justice." (Wallerstein,
1992)
Some
other definitions/facts about empowerment
are:
It
is a management approach designed to give
frontline employees the authority they
need to do
what
needs to be done without having to
ask/check with
management.
In
spite of the entire favorable buzz, there
is little hard evidence that it has
really made much
difference
in routine organizational
life.
The
concepts of encouraging and authorizing
workers to take the initiative to
improve operations,
reduce
costs, and improve product
quality and customer service.
Some
empowerment does exist and, when
accompanied by accountability and
appropriate
guidance,
it can lead to increased
employee and customer
satisfaction.
Significant
employee empowerment is rare, and it is
not easy to initiate or
maintain.
What
are some of the Common Myths
about Empowerment?
·
Everybody's
doing it.
·
It's
easy.
·
Every
manager wants empowered employees.
·
Every
employee wants to be empowered.
·
All
the manager needs to do is leave
the empowered employees
alone.
The
organization has the responsibility to
create a work environment
which helps foster the ability
and
desire
of employees to act in empowered ways. The
work organization has the
responsibility to remove
barriers
that limit the ability of
staff to act in empowered ways. Because
every body wants
empowerment
and every manager/leader wants empowered
employees.
Always
keep in your mind "Empower
your employees"- The most
important asset in the
organizations.
Empowered
personnel have "responsibility, a sense of
ownership, satisfaction in
accomplishments,
power
over what and how things
are done, recognition for
their ideas, and the knowledge
that they are
important
to the organization" (Turney 1993:
30). Without productive employees, the
organization is
nothing
and can do nothing. Empowerment
works the best when employees
need their organization
as
much
as the organization needs them, "and the
need is much more than a paycheck
and benefit
package"
(Johnson, 1993: 47).
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Leadership
& Team Management MGMT
623
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Why
Important? Powerlessness
·
Living in poverty
Powerlessness
·
Relatively low in hierarchy
·
Chronic Stress
Disease
·
Lack of Social Support
Lack
of Control Over
·
Income Inequities
Destiny
·
Racial Discrimination
What
is Empowerment, and How Can
Empower Others?
The
power keys to empowerment: there are
two views about power
keys to empowerment;
1.
Traditional
view: in
traditional view power is
relational in terms of
individuals.
2.
Empowerment
view: In empowerment
view, the emphasis is on the ability to
make things
happen.
Power is relational in terms of problems and
opportunities, not
individuals.
\Power
as an expanding pie: With
empowerment, employees must be trained to
expand their
power
and their new influence
potential. Empowerment changes the dynamics
between
supervisors
and subordinates.
Ways
to Expand Power: there are
different ways to expand
power;
1.
Clearly define roles and
responsibilities to the employees.
2.
Provide opportunities for
creative problem solving
coupled with the discretion to
act. This
is
the responsibility of top
management.
3.
Emphasize different ways of exercising
influence to make sure that
every thing is going
on
smoothly.
4.
Provide support and help to individuals
so they become comfortable
with developing their
power.
5.
Expand inducements for thinking and
acting, not just
obeying.
Empowerment
Outcomes-Organizational:
Well-Functioning
Services
Publicly
accountable
Efficient
Integrated
Culturally
appropriate
Maintained
overtime
Organizational
Effectiveness and
Capacity
Sustainability
Produce
outcomes
Effective
leadership
Empowering
to members
Bridging
social capital
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Leadership
& Team Management MGMT
623
VU
Empowering
Organizations:
"At
the organizational level, OE
[organizational empowerment] refers to
organizational efforts
that
generate
PE [personal empowerment] among members
and organizational effectiveness needed
for goal
achievement"
·
Provide
opportunities for staff to be
involved in organizational
decision-making, program
development,
and evaluation.
·
Reduce
organization hierarchies and supervisory structure so
that workers have more control
over
their
work.
·
Encourage
professional development and
team-building among staff.
·
Provide
resources that facilitate the
development of political power among
people.
·
Regard
workers as partners rather than
subordinates.
What
Is the Bottom
line?
Appropriate
employee empowerment is essential to
organizational success.
Everyone
claims to empower employees, but this is
easier said than
done.
A
failed organizational empowerment
initiative is at best a waste of
time.
Power
sharing and Empowerment:
Power
sharing: The
delegation of power or authority to
subordinates in the organization.
What's
wrong
with this concept? Most of
the times, after sharing of power or
authority, people think
that,
employee
misuse it and their influence on
employee will reduce
consequently.
Empowerment:
being
enabled
to
make independent decisions and
take effective
action.
Guidelines
for effective employee
empowerment:
·
·
Share
authority instead of giving it
up.
Select
the right managers.
·
·
Encourage
dissent.
Choose
the right employees.
·
·
Give
it time.
Provide
training.
·
·
Accept
increased turnover.
Offer
guidance.
·
·
Share
information.
Hold
everyone accountable.
·
·
Build
trust.
Realize
that empowerment has
its
·
limitations.
Focus
on relationships.
·
·
Involve
employees in decision-making.
Stress
organizational values.
·
Transform
mistakes into
opportunities.
·
Reward
and recognize.
Chose
the Right Managers for proper
empowerment:
·
Select
leaders who are already
empowering their colleagues
routinely.
·
Confront
dictatorial leaders.
·
Give
them a fair chance to change,
but make it clear that their
odds of success are not
good.
·
Call
attention to leaders who are
doing it right, and
encourage young leaders to
select them as
mentors.
Select
the Right Employees:
·
Identify
those people already taking
the initiative.
·
Explain
the risks and benefits of empowerment, and then
wait for those who
want to stretch to
step
forward.
·
Share
information openly, and then
identify those with good
instincts, confidence and the
willingness
to take risks.
Provide
Adequate Training:
·
Identify
the most common challenges they will
face.
·
Demonstrate
attitudes and behaviors most
likely to be successful.
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Leadership
& Team Management MGMT
623
VU
·
Point
out that nothing works
every time.
·
Celebrate
every incremental improvement;
perfection is in short supply.
·
Enlist
them as trainers ASAP.
Share
Information:
·
Begin
by asking what information is
needed.
·
Encourage
everyone to contribute to the information
pool.
·
Except
for personal stuff, avoid
secrets.
·
Demonstrate
openness.
·
Invite
questions and challenges.
·
Change
your position readily when
new information demands
reconsideration.
Hold
Everyone Accountable:
·
Authority
without accountability becomes
self-centeredness.
·
Every
little bit of power is
seductive.
·
Find
out what happened.
·
Ask
why it happened?
·
Inquire
whether, on looking back, a better
option might have been
employed.
·
Let
the emotion of the moment pass.
·
View
mistakes as opportunities to
grow
Leadership
and Empowerment: Empowerment
involves sharing or giving power or
influence to
another.
It is the process through which
leaders enable and help others to
gain power and achieve
influence
within the organization. When employees
feel powerful they are more
willing to make
decisions
and take action.
How
Leaders Can Empower
Others
·
A
leader can involve others in selecting
their work assignments and
tasks
·
He
creates an environment of cooperation,
information sharing, discussions, and
shared ownership
of
goals.
·
He
encourages others to take
initiative, make decisions, and use their
knowledge.
·
He
finds out what others
think and let them help
design solutions.
·
Leader
can give others the freedom
to put their ideas and
solutions into practice.
·
He
recognizes successes and encourages
high performance.
Participative
leadership: some
characteristics of a participative
leader;
·
Begins
with involving people
·
Involvement
leads to understanding, which
leads to commitment
·
Taps
the constructive power of
people
·
Creates
a humanistic and productive
workplace
·
Means
understanding the views and interests of
all affected
Making
a Difference: Treat
people as if they were what
they should be, and you
help them become
what
they are capable of
becoming." Johann von Goethe.
Empowerment!
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