(SUMMARY) Perilaku Keorganisasian (Chapter 12) PDF
(SUMMARY) Perilaku Keorganisasian (Chapter 12) PDF
(SUMMARY) Perilaku Keorganisasian (Chapter 12) PDF
CHAPTER 12 – LEADERSHIP
Leadership >> The ability to influence a group toward the achievement of a vision or
set of goals
Trait Theories
Theories that consider personal qualities and characteristics that differentiate leaders from nonleaders,
Leadership traits : etxtraversion (like being around people and are able to assert themselves),
conscientiousness (disciplined and able to keep commitments they make),
openness to experience (creative and flexible), and emotional intelligence
(qualified)
Limitations :
Behavioral Approach
“Trait research provides a basis for selecting the right people for leadership. But, behavioral studies
implied we could train people to be leaders.”
1. Initiating structure – the extent to which a leader is likely to define and structure his or her role
and those of employees in the search for goal attainment.
This structure is closely related to production-oriented leader, which emphasized the technical
or task aspects of the job.
2. Consideration - the extent to which a leader is likely to have job relationships characterized by
mutual trust, respect for subordinate’s ideas, and regard for their feelings.
This structure is closely related to employee-oriented leader, which emphasized interpesersonal
relationship by taking a personal inerest in the needs of employees and accepting individual
differences among them.
3 approaches: 1. THE FIEDLER MODEL – proposes that effective group performance depends on
the proper match between the leader’s style and the degree to which the
situation gives the leader control
3) PATH-GOAL THEORY
Leader must help followers attaining goals and reduce roadblocks to
success provide followers with the information, support, or other
resources necessary to achieve their goals
4) LEADER-PARTICIPATION MODEL
Rule based decision tree to guide leaders about when and when not to
include subordinate participation in decision making
I. CHARISMATIC LEADERSHIP - A leadership theory that states that followers make attributions of
heroic or extraordinary leadership abilities when they obeserve certain behaviours
Characteristics:
have vision
willing to take personal risk to achieve that vision
they are sensitive to follower needs
exhibit extraordinary behaviours
1. Articulating an appealing vision, a long-term strategy for attaining a goal by linking the
present with a better future for the organization
2. A vision is incomplete without an accompanying vision statement – a formal articulation
of an organization’s vision or mission
3. The leader conveys a new set of values and sets an example for followers to imitate
4. The leader engages in emotion-inducing and often unconventional behavior to
demonstrate courage and conviction about the vision.
There are impressive correlation between charismatic leadership and high performance and
satisfaction among followers.
The darkside : charismatic leaders who are larger than life dont necessarily act in the best
interests of their organizations.
Authentic Leadership
Authentic leaders know how they are, know what they believe in and value, and act on those values and
beliefs openly and candidly.
Socialized charismatic leadership – leadership that conveys other centered (not self-
centered) values by leaders who model ethical conduct
Trust - a positive expectation that another will not act opportunistically
Key characteristics that a leader is trustworthy:
1. Integrity, refers to honesty and truthfulness
2. Benevolence, means the trusted person has your interests at heart, even if
yours arent necessarily in line with theirs
3. Ability, encompasses an individual’s technical and interpersonal knowledge and
skills
Trust propensity refers to how likely a particular employee is to trust a leader. Leaders who
break the psychological contract with workers, demonstrating they arent trustworthy, will
find employees are less satisfied, less committed, have higher intensions to turnover,
engage in less citizenship behaviour, and have lower task performance.
Consequences of Trust:
Mentoring
A mentor is a senior employee who sponsors and support a less-experienced employee. They present
ideas clearly, listen well, and emphatize with proteges.