Tag Archives: Leadership styles

Engineering Your Leadership

Creating a multidimensional approach for successful leadership development is increasingly becoming a challenge in industries facing significant change. In my healthcare career, I have seen a great deal of shrinkage in the services healthcare centers and facilities offer. Just as consistent, administrative teams are reducing the expenditures of programs surrounding areas of staff development, both in a professional approach (such as for leadership) and a skills approach (OJTs). Leadership development is being left to minimal involvement with a growing focus on books, webinars, websites, assessments and articles. These things are great, so long as they are structured in a manner that strategically develops leaders.

When considering the topics of leadership development, there are a few core areas that should be reviewed. First, and foundationally, is leadership research. The focus and study of leadership research reveals a history of evolution of thought and approaches to leadership development. This includes strengthened assessments and models over time, as well as analyses on what successful and effective leaders have regarding traits, skills and behaviors.

As leadership research is broken down, the study of leadership styles can provide leaders with a great deal of information as they analyze their own leadership styles while considering the characteristics of other styles. This opens up expanded views and provides education to the leader on how to expand their own style. A lot of focus in leadership styles is centered on answering the question of ‘what style makes the most effective and successful leader’. Frankly, there isn’t a magic bullet style; it’s situational and individually based, which flows naturally into the next element of study in leadership development. Effective leaders have the finely tuned ability to apply situational leadership and contingency approaches, based on the situation, environmental variables, followers and tasks. The models in this area provide leaders with a pragmatic approach to the various situations that are frequently faced.

The next critical area of review for leadership development is understanding followers and employees. The key is to be able to identify follower and employee types, as well as understanding what traits, behaviors and characteristics that effective employees and followers possess. Understanding these items is like looking into a crystal ball; you can more accurately predict the likely success and struggles of an employee and/or group of employees.

The last, most critical, element is the alignment and optimization of the leader with the variables above. If a leader is able to develop the skills, traits, characteristics and behaviors of effective leaders while also developing their own leadership style, the leader’s development is immensely advanced. Stepping beyond these items, applying situational leadership gives the leader an entirely new level of transformative leadership through the ability to respond and effectively lead in rapidly changing environments. When you couple this with the understanding of individual follower and employee dynamics, the leader becomes deeply aligned with an effective leadership approach that is applicable in any environment. A great tool to address these areas is The Optimized Leader, as it is developed around these very topics, strategically structured to answer the challenges leaders face with a key approach: it applies to all leaders, individually more than (versus) all leaders, collectively.

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Leadership Styles – Participative Leadership

Also known as democratic leadership, participative leadership is the most common form of leadership practiced in the corporate world and political scene. The participative leadership model favours decision making by a group. In this model, the leader consults his team and seeks their opinion, making the decision subsequently. Compared to the autocratic leadership model, this model allows the views of the team members to be heard and encourages team members to participate, hence its name. It is worthy to note that in this style of leadership, the decision is still made by the leader, only that it is based on opinions and perspectives from the team as a whole.

Participative leadership is successful as a leadership style that allows an all rounded decision to be made. It allows a team to make a decision on the matter together. Often, a leader would seek the opinion of the team and possibly encourage discussion and debate to stimulate the thinking process of the team. This way, the every member of the team would feel that his views are being heard, and even if their views are not accepted, they know that it was for a reason and not merely overlooked or brushed away. This, according to Patrick Lecioni in his book, Five Dysfunctions of a Team, is critical in achieving buy-in, failure of which would result in a team to be dysfunctional.

The mode of decision making of a participative leader is known as the consult-and-decide method. In his book, The First 90 Days, Michael Watkins explained that the consult-and-decide method essentially has the brainstorming done by the group, and the decision to be made by the leader. This is as opposed to both the seeking out of ideas and the decision to be done by the leader. The team also has a part in directing the decision by participating in the discussions.

However, participative leadership may fail should the team be relatively inexperienced. For instance, should a team deciding on the appearance of a physical product sold be a company consists mostly of fresh members, the quality of discussions and debate with relation to the final decision would be superficial and possibly even irrelevant, hence making the decision of how the product should be will not be well thought out. Evidently, a precondition for effective participative leadership is to have a team that is sufficiently experienced and competent at their job.

Participative leadership is particularly popular in the corporate world as the decisions made often has consequences in multiple levels and would require the inputs and expertise of various professionals. In addition, the pace of events often does not allow a free rein style of leadership where the leader allows the team to reach a consensus with a luxury of time.

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Behavioral Leadership

Behavioral leadership is not really a type of leadership. Instead, it is the study of the kinds of actions and behaviors that make up what we can call a leadership style. This field of study relies on inter-disciplinary approach to understand the phenomenon of leadership and how leaders can effectively engage their followers.

Behavioral leadership is different from situational leadership, which tends to focus on the effectiveness of leadership styles depending on the various stimuli that can be found in the environment of the leader and the organization.

This is a kind of social science study because it does not rely on “hard” sciences to achieve understanding. Rather, it looks at case studies and quantitative approaches occasionally so as to look at the behaviors exhibited by leaders in various times and situations.

Among those who advocated behavioral leadership are Kurt Lewin, Ronald Lipitt and Ralph White. They started doing this back in 1939 with the publication of their work on the influence of leadership performance and styles. Based on their research, they identified three leadership styles based on the behavior of the leaders.

1) Authoritarian leadership style. This kind of leaders makes decision alone and they do not involve others. They give orders and expect to be followed 100% of the time. The leader also prescribes the right way of doing it and is aloof from the followers.

2) Democratic leadership style. There is more participation and consultation in this kind of leadership. The democratic leader relies on group discussions and inputs from knowledgeable experts. The choices are arrived at based on consensus or voting. This works best in a setting where people know each other and they are fairly assertive of what they want to happen.

3. Laissez faire leadership. The group rules in this kind of situation! The leader has abandoned his leadership and just let his people do their own thing. This is dangerous in situations that require hands on assistance from the leader. But in situations where every member of the team is capable and can be considered an expert, this leadership style can easily work!

These types of leadership can be easily implemented in various situations in the organization. You just have to be sensitive to the situation and needs of your organization. If you just apply one over another because it is your preference, you become rigid. More than that, you also become unstable. And that will be a source of weakness in your leadership and in your organization. Choose carefully. The style of leadership is secondary to achieving the vision and the goals of your organization.


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Leadership – Motivation From the Heart

“Whosoever would become great among you shall be your minister; and whosoever would be first among you shall be your servant: even as the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many.” (ASV, Mt. 20: 26-28).

Are you a leader? What type of leader are you? Why?

Many management books point out various types of leadership styles based on achieving organizational goals as well as provide guidance to leaders on influencing followers to meet and exceed those goals. Some leadership books teach people leadership transformation by providing practical, “how-to” sections, such as changing behaviors or attitudes. Although researching and writing these books is certainly a noble endeavor, real leadership change occurs from the inside–out. The leader looking for actual leadership style transformation must first explore his or her intrinsic motivations from the heart and, then, acknowledge the behavioral impacts on the people and the organization.

Organizational Leadership Styles

Many types of leadership styles used in organizations achieve outcomes with the hope of producing effective results. For instance, charismatic leadership may produce loyalty to the leader and his passionate ideals; transactional leadership may achieve urgent project goals through the use of bonuses; while humane-oriented leadership, preferred in Southern Asia, shows achievement based on collaboration. Regardless of which leadership style is socially and culturally accepted, leaders are influenced both by their own intrinsic motivations, as well as perceived outcomes, when operating within organizational parameters trying to achieve “effective results.”

Whether an individual or a group achieves effective results is a subjective opinion laced with cultural, personal, and ethical biases–one manager may demand fast-paced task completion to achieve goals, while another manager may discourage the intense pace because he considers it employee hounding. According to author Peter Northouse, balancing both types of leadership styles, task-oriented and relationship-oriented, make it possible to achieve organizational goals. However, Northouse’s research does not show “a consistent link between task and relationship behaviors and outcomes such as morale, job satisfaction, and productivity.” Therefore, it is doubtful employees operating with low morale, mediocre job satisfaction, and average productivity generate effective results. Is this effective leadership?

Consideration: the Heart of the Matter

Although management and leadership books champion effective leadership, surprisingly, researchers “have not been able to identify a universal set of leadership behaviors that would consistently result in effective leadership,” according to Northouse. Gary Yukl, leadership scholar and author, purports “the only strong finding about leadership styles is that leaders who are considerate (emphasis added) have followers who are more satisfied.” In essence, this satisfaction encourages follower motivation, which, in turn, produces desired organizational outcomes.

Merriam-Webster defines consideration as: continuous and careful thought; thoughtful and sympathetic regard, esteem; an opinion obtained by reflection. Imagine a self-centered leader with greed as his motivation trying to have real “consideration” for other people. It just does not work. Consideration is rooted in thinking about others and, therefore, a heart-felt value not instantly attained by reading about leadership behaviors in a book. Trying to change leadership behaviors on the surface may produce short-term results; however, people see right through somebody acting insincere and inconsiderate. Therefore, a leader attempting to transform leadership style without transforming values in the heart, still finds it difficult to reach organizational goals.

Change of Heart, Attitudes, and Behaviors

Author Bruce Winston believes a leader who embraces the leadership values and behaviors as described in The Beatitudes of the Bible ultimately achieves leadership effectiveness. A person striving for this type of values-based leadership operates in a continuous self-reflective mode, filtering feedback from others, whether followers, peers, mentors, or other leaders. According to leadership consultants Chris Watkin and Ben Hubbard, “the willingness to engage personally and change as a result of feedback is what differentiates the best leaders from the rest.”

Once a leader makes a decision for heart transformation, changes in attitudes and behaviors evolve based on embracing a new or transformed set of values. Followers notice because the leader exhibits true behaviors on the outside reflecting internal motivations. Christians believe values engraved in the heart eventually come out in spoken words, whether good or bad, in healthy conversation or heated debate. Further, although leadership experts and organization development theorists group people by leadership style labels, every leader has a unique moral foundation and, therefore, a different leadership style.

“Consider-Others” Leadership

Many moral values exist within religious and social belief systems. The Buddhists believe in “Right Intent,” a commitment to ethical and mental self-improvement, such as the intention of harmlessness, meaning not to think or act cruelly, violently, or aggressively, and to develop compassion. Hindus believe in “karma,” a moral law of cause and effect, and “moksha,” a realization of the unity of all existence–perfect unselfishness and knowledge of the Self. Muslims embrace Islam by accepting, surrendering or submitting to God. Christians believe in loving one another, loving your enemies, and loving your neighbor as yourself. One aspect stands out among all these religions–a dying to self. A type of selflessness that puts the believer last and the other person first–true consideration.

Jesus believed in serving others; what leadership experts consider a “servant-leadership” style. Robert Greenleaf first coined the term “servant-leadership” in an essay: “The servant-leader is servant first… It begins with the natural feeling that one wants to serve, to serve first. Then conscious choice brings one to aspire to lead. That person is sharply different from one who is leader first; perhaps because of the need to assuage an unusual power drive or to acquire material possessions…The leader-first and the servant-first are two extreme types.” Leaders, motivated by a deep sense of consideration, look at others first and not at their own interests, and this shapes their personal leadership style.

Motivate Your Leadership Style

Leaders motivated by consideration from the heart courageously and genuinely exhibit outward behaviors of honesty, trust, respect, friendliness, and helpfulness, regardless of social norms or what others say. Once leaders embrace heart-felt consideration, then motivation is directed toward achieving organizational goals using transformed leadership styles. Followers experiencing consideration through their leaders transformed leadership style exhibit increased job satisfaction and higher morale that enables motivation, which, in turn, produces desired organizational outcomes.

Once a leader recognizes his or her leadership style is based on intrinsic motivation, achieving effective organizational goals suddenly seems much easier.

What motivates your leadership style?

LISA R. FOURNIER is a doctoral student in the Doctor of Strategic Leadership (DSL) program with the School of Global Leadership & Entrepreneurship at Regent University, Virginia Beach, Virginia. Lisa is also the President of Idea Evolutions LLC, a consulting company serving entrepreneurial leaders.
Email: lisafou@regent.

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Motivation – A Transformational Leadership Skill

How many times have you awakened in the morning and did not want to go to work? But you went in anyway, not because you wanted to or had to, but because your commitment to the organizational goal and the leadership was important. That is the effect of transformational leadership, it motivates you not only to believe in the vision, but also to commit and stay the course until the goal has been attained. The ability to motivate, inspire, and coach followers to want to go the extra mile and find the energy to attain or maintain competitive advantage in this global economy is not an anomaly, but a necessity. Combine these characteristics with the ability to set a clear direction and create an organizational culture where everyone is aware of their contribution, and you have a recipe for success.

How do we define transformational leaders?

Over the last two decades there has been an emergence of a relatively new leadership theory known as “transformational” leadership. A transformational leader not only formulates and articulates a vision, he/she also delegates responsibility, assigns accountability and develops their followers. Researchers such as Titchy and Devanna identified transformational leadership as “when a leader transforms, or changes, his or her followers in three important ways that together result in followers trusting the leader, performing behaviors that contribute to the achievement of organizational goals”. Lewin’s study on leadership shows that this leadership style is the most practical, because the leader not only transforms the organization, but the followers and themselves. A Transformational leader offers guidance to followers, participates in the group as a follower and requests input from members, As a result, followers are more engaged in the process, better motivated and creative.

Shamir, House and Arthur in their article for the Journal of Organization Science concurs with Titchy and Devane, but adds that a transformational leader enhances follower emotions with respect to the vision and goal, instills an emotional attachment through trust and confidence in their leadership. Transformational leaders are leaders as well as colleagues that collaborate with their team and disseminate information and communicate feedback on a timely basis because their focus is on changing “the needs, values, preferences and aspirations of followers from self interests to collective interests”, continues Shamir, House and Arthur on the development of the different ways in which transformational leaders strive to refocus followers intrinsic motivation.

Motivation: What motivates people?

Motivation is a collection of learned attitudes and beliefs suggests Success Performance Solutions, a Consulting firm in Lancaster, PA. Or the manner in which an individual is driven towards a goal, what keeps one going even in the face of adversity, the reason one sticks to a leader or gives a little more to a project. Psychologists often refer to the motivators as the initiators of behavior because they give us a sense of satisfaction and accomplishment. They add depth and breadth to behaviors by providing insight into “why we do what we do.” While, most behavioral theories include motivation as a function of primary drives such as hunger, sex, sleep, or comfort. Weiner points out that behavioral theories tend to focus on either intrinsic (fundamental) or extrinsic (inessential) motivators which have also been associated with arousal, attention, anxiety, and feedback/reinforcement.

Motivation is commonly defined as getting people to do what you want them to do, either through persuasion (getting their cooperation) or incentive (monetary reward). There are a multitude of positive and negative motivators and it is a pivotal concept in most leadership theories. Traditionally, leaders use power as a form of motivation either through coercion or influence. Transactional leaders on the other hand use more than rewards to motivate employees. This leadership style is not a style that has a blame factor when goals are not attained or plans go wrong; rather this style is useful when leaders trust and have a high level of confidence in his/her followers.

Individuals and corporations use motivators for goal setting, leadership development and organizational culture. The incentives are seen in Ames and Ames’ cognitive theories which deal with intrinsic motivation such as goal-setting acts and goals (personal or organizational).

Studies indicate that motivators are flexible and vary depending on the structure and culture of the organization. As a result this allows employees to adapt to the motivational system of an organization. Alderfer’s ERG Theory, states that the motivation for achievement is a function of an individual’s self actualization.

The types of motivators (financial or status) are clearly defined by Hull’s drive reduction theory. Tolman states that an individual’s crucial drive is an intrinsic motivation creating an internal state such as wants or needs. The rewards and recognition (monetary and nonfinancial) persuade individuals to pursue their goals by aligning their personal goals with the goals of the organization. Transformational leaders need to be aware that, motivators are not only in the form of monetary rewards; they also encompass the goals that people want to attain including experience benefits, organizational position (title), and career opportunities such as coaching and mentoring. McClelland’s Theory explains that motivators are a reflection of personality characteristics that are acquired through experiences, expectancies, and achievements. Thus, as individuals grow and change, the motivators use by the leadership must also change in order to satisfy their needs and wants.

The fit: leadership style and organizational structure

William Quisenberry wrote in Helium that “Motivation is essentially described by the textbook as ‘the extent to which persistent effort is directed towards a goal.'” Essentially, it is important for leaders to understand the different forms and characteristic values of motivation theories, and how to properly implement them in their organization. He defines four approaches to motivation and their emphasis on management practice: paternalistic approach, scientific management approach, participative management, and the combination approach.

A leader will find him/herself instinctively switching between styles and motivators in accordance to not only the people but also the organization. This is often referred to as “situational leadership” indicates Gary Neilson and Bruce Pasternack of Booz Allen Hamilton, a global consulting firm. They continue that there is a reason some companies succeed and others do not and that the ability to achieve results is not an accident but the combination of the correct leadership style for the organizational structure and culture. The combination discussed motivation and behavior in work organizations, which includes; drives, needs, outcomes, satisfaction, extrinsic rewards, performance, and influences.

Results: the combination of a transformational leader and the right motives?

During their tenure leaders must confront one of the most important issues asking an important practical question, “What leadership style(s) work best for me and my organization?” The answer to this question lies in the understanding that there are many styles and theories to choose from. A major factor in leadership development is to consider developing a new leadership style which combines more than one style in order to deal with not only the culture, but also the high level of diversity of employees.

Followers do not automatically accept new leaders. One reason is the element of the unknown. There have been countless examples of leaders taking over a new organization or group and their failures because they did not take into account the current culture and needs of the people within the organization. Edward Liddy’s failure at AIG is one such example. He thought that the leadership style he had developed at Allstate could be transferred to AIG without any problems. It is not the easiest of tasks to expect individuals to be creative, improve work quality, perform as a team, work more with less and provide outstanding customer service; while not taking into account the right motivations for these people and the need for him as a leader to build trust, adapt his leadership style and overall transform the people and the organization toward a prosperous direction. Liddy assumed that he could take the helm of the organization and transform it without him changing or making any adaptation.

Although the Transformation Leadership approach is often highly effective, there is no “right” method that fits all situations. According to Booz Allen Hamilton in choosing the most effective approach one must consider:

o The skill levels and experience of the members of your team

o The work involved

o The organizational environment

Building consensus for change is easy; implementing these changes, however, is next to impossible without a compelling vision and mission from the top as well as a strong foundation of common values at the base. An organization headed by a transformational leader seems destined for greatness. It is a well balanced organization infused with the right motives from a leadership with the correct style tends to react quickly to market developments. And often long term global opportunities without losing sight of the big picture (the goals of both the organization and its people). Just-in-Time organizations, as they are tagged, can turn on a dime because the leadership inspires creative outbursts, innovative processes and maintains competitive advantage due to the fact that everyone knows his or her role and implements it diligently in this organization, creating the overall effect of flawless effectiveness and consistent execution.

“The right people-imbued with the right values, armed with the right information, and motivated by the right incentives-are the driving force behind a winning organization” states Neilson and Pasternack. The challenge for leaders has always been to align all of these factors so that individual self-interests are in accord with the organization’s goals; otherwise, you will never get out of that bed and get to work.

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