Situational Leadership
(noun)
The theory that different leadership styles are required for different contexts.
Examples of Situational Leadership in the following topics:
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Leadership and Followers: Hersey and Blanchard
- Hersey and Blanchard's model defines effective leadership based on leadership style and maturity of follower(s).
- Paul Hersey and Ken Blanchard introduced their theory of situational leadership in the 1969 book Management of Organizational Behavior.
- Situational leadership states that there is no single, ideal approach to leadership because different types of leadership are required in different contexts.
- The Hersey and Blanchard model explains effective leadership in terms of two variables: leadership style and the maturity of the follower(s).
- Because maturity level varies based on the group and the task (for example, professional football players are an M4 group on the football field, but an M1 group if asked to play baseball), the leadership style must adapt based on the situation.
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Leadership Styles
- Leaders may adopt several styles according to what is most appropriate in a given situation.
- Engaging styles of leadership involve reaching out to employees and understanding their concerns and working situations.
- This leadership style can help retain employees for the long term.
- Different situations call for particular leadership styles.
- Each style of leadership can be effective if matched with the needs of the situation and used by a skilled leader who can adopt a deft approach.
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Leadership and Situational Context: Fiedler
- Fred Fiedler's model of leadership states that different types of leaders are required for different situations.
- This situational contingency understanding of leaderships suggests, for instance, that a leader in a strict, task-oriented workplace would have different qualities than a leader in a more open, idea-driven workplace.
- Fiedler subsequently enhanced his original model to increase the number of leadership traits it analyzed.
- The Fiedler situational contingency model measures leadership traits with a test that provides a leadership score corresponding to the workplace where the leader would be most suited.
- The situation analysis has three components:
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Four Theories of Leadership
- Theories of effective leadership include the trait, contingency, behavioral, and full-range theories.
- These findings also show that individuals emerge as leaders across a variety of situations and tasks.
- Stogdill and Mann found that while some traits were common across a number of studies, the overall evidence suggested that persons who are leaders in one situation may not necessarily be leaders in other situations.
- As such, the theory predicts that effective leaders are those whose personal traits match the needs of the situation in which they find themselves.
- Fiedler's contingency model of leadership focuses on the interaction of leadership style and the situation (later called situational control).
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Fulfilling the Leading Function
- Management is often associated with the former and leadership with the latter.
- In contrast to individual leadership, some organizations have adopted group leadership.
- In this situation, more than one person provides direction to the group as a whole.
- In some situations, the team members best able to handle any given phase of the project become the temporary leaders.
- Different situations call for different leadership styles.
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Choosing Leaders
- Although the leader may or may not have any formal authority, students of leadership have produced theories involving traits, situational interaction, function, behavior, power, vision and values, charisma, and intelligence, among others.
- According to researchers of leadership, all individuals can and do emerge as leaders across a variety of situations and tasks.
- Situational theory also appeared as a reaction to the trait theory of leadership.
- This theory assumes that different situations call for different characteristics; according to this group of theories, no single optimal psychographic profile of a leader exists.
- In the laissez-faire leadership style, a person may be in a leadership position without providing leadership, leaving the group to fend for itself.
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A Blended Approach to Leadership
- The full-range leadership theory blends the features of transactional and transformational leadership into one comprehensive approach.
- The full-range theory of leadership seeks to blend the best aspects of transactional and transformational leadership into one comprehensive approach.
- Transactional leadership focuses on exchanges between leaders and followers.
- Depending on the objectives and the situation, a leader may move from using one approach to the other as needed.
- Assess the intrinsic value of blending transactional leadership behaviors with transformational leadership behaviors
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Channel Power, Control, and Leadership
- Channels perform better if a party is in charge, providing a level of leadership to coordinate goals and efforts.
- Channels usually perform better if a party is in charge, providing some level of leadership.
- Essentially, the purpose of this leadership is to coordinate the goals and efforts of channel institutions.
- The level of leadership can range from very passive to quite active—verging on dictatorial.
- In a given situation, any of these leadership styles may prove effective.
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Leadership
- Leadership is organizing a group of people to achieve a common goal.
- Leadership is "organizing a group of people to achieve a common goal".
- Scholars of leadership have produced theories involving traits, situational interaction, function, behavior, power, vision and values, charisma, and intelligence, among others.
- Equipped with new methods, leadership researchers revealed that individuals can and do emerge as leaders across a variety of situations and tasks.
- They found significant relationships between leadership and individual traits such as the following:
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Leadership Traits
- Researchers now attest that while trait theory may still apply, individuals can and do emerge as leaders across a variety of situations and tasks.
- These models rests on two basic premises about leadership traits.
- First, leadership emerges from the combined influence of multiple traits, as opposed to coming from various independent traits.
- The second premise suggests that leadership traits differ in their proximal (direct) influence on leadership.
- Summarize the key characteristics and traits that are predictive of strong leadership capacity