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Combines all sub-competencies within the Leadership Competency
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Leadership & Navigation
The knowledge, skills, abilities, and other characteristics (KSAOs) needed to create a compelling vision and mission for HR that aligns with the strategic direction and culture of the organization, accomplish HR and organizational goals, lead and promote organizational change, navigate the organization, and manage the implementation and execution of HR initiatives
What in leadership and navigation enables HR professionals to keep the organization focused on its goal, to use the talent in the organization fully by generating greater collaboration among employees and fostering continuous growth, and to help the organization overcome obstacles?
Expertise
What critical skills does effective HR leadership combine?
The ability to see opportunities and problems, to envision a different future and design a path toward it, to really necessary support within the organization, and to manage initiatives that create measurable and sustainable benefits
Fayol's definition of the functions of management
Planning, organizing, staffing, directing, and controlling
According to Goleman, what does leadership style affect in the workplace?
Employee ability to make informed decisions
Employee sense of responsibility to the organization
Standards employee seek to meet or exceed
Employee belief that they will be rewarded for work
Understanding of missions and shared values
Feeling of commitment to a shared goal
Six approaches to leadership
Coercive
Authoritative
Affiliative
Democratic
Pacesetting
Coaching
Coercive leadership
Leader imposes a solution on the team and demands the team to follow
Authoritative leadership
Leader creates the solution and invites the team to join the solution
Affiliative leadership
Leader and team members have a strong relationship and team members are motivated by loyalty
Democratic leadership
Leader invites team to collaborate together on the solution
Pacesetting leadership
Leader sets high expectations and challenges team to meet these expectations
When is coercive leadership effective and ineffective?
Effective- During crisis and immidiate action is needed
Ineffective- When it damages employee sense of work ownership
When is authoritative leadership effective and ineffective?
Effective- When solution captures team's engagement
Infective- When leader lacks expertise
When is affiliative leadership effective and ineffective?
Effective- All times, but especially when leader has inherited a dysfunctional/dispirited team
Ineffective- When used without team support
When is democratic leadership effective and ineffective?
Effective- When leader relies on team to create vision
Infective- When time is short
When is pacesetting leadership effective and ineffective?
Effective- When teams are highly competent and intrinsically motivated
Infective- When expectations are too high and team is tired and discouraged
Coaching leadership
Leaders focus on developing team skills that aligns with company goals and employee personal/professional goals
When is coaching leadership effective and ineffective?
Effective: When leaders are highly skilled in strategic management, communication, and motivation and make time for coaching when team members are receptive
Ineffective: When team resists changing their performance
Mentoring
Leader focuses on both employee character and fostering their skills by helping them navigate and understand the organization
Coaching
Focus on developing employee's skills that align with organization
When is mentoring effective and ineffective
Effective- When mentor has time to commit to the relationship and mentee is looking for more than just career advancement
Ineffective- When mentor cannot commit to development and the mentee is not focused on their development
What does effective leadership look like?
Develops and coaches
Builds positive relationships
Exhibit values and fulfill promises/commitments
Is functional expertise
What does ineffective leadership look like?
Focuses on leader's self instead of big picture of organization
Lacks strategic perspective and focuses on short-term tasks
Reactive to change
Lacks efficiency in innovation and long-term goals
Trait Leadership theory
Leaders are born, not made
Behavioral Leadership theories
Leaders influence group members through certain behaviors
Blake-Moulton Leadership Theory
Says there are 5 types of managers: Country Club, Impoverished, Authoritarian, Middle-of-the-Road, Team Leaders
Country Club Managers
(Low task, high relationship) tends to avoid jeopardizing relationship with team
Impoverished Managers
(Low task, low relationship) delegate and disappear
Authoritarian Managers
(High task, low relationship) expects team to do what they're told without question
Middle-of-the-Road Managers
(Midpoint on task and relationship) Gets work done, but not considered leaders
Team leaders
(High task, high relationship) leads by example and fosters team development and individualism
What are situational theories?
Says that leaders can adapt to meet the needs of a situation
Hersey-Blanchard situational leadership theory
Adaptive leaders exhibit:
Telling- Employee not yet motivated or competent
Selling- Employee still gaining focus and motivation (why we are doing this)
Participating- Competent employee can be included in problem solving and coached
Delegating- Employee exhibits autonomy and self-direction
Fielder's Contingency situational leadership theory
Leaders change the situation to be more favorable to produce good outcomes.
According to Fielder's Contingency leadership theory, situational favorableness occurs when?
Leader/team relationship is strong, task requirements are strong, and leader has the energy to obtain team's goal
According to Fielder's Contingency leadership theory, how can situational unfavorableness be solved?
Improving leader/team relationship, changing aspect of task for understanding, and adjusting leader's power to fit team needs
Path-Goal situational leadership theory
Leaders coach and develop team by:
Directive- Help employee understand task and goal
Supportive- Fulfill employee relationship needs
Achievement- Motivation by setting challenging goals
Participative- Uses team expertise and participation for decision making solutions
Emergent leadership theory
Leaders are not appointed, but emerge from the group based on interactions
Transactional leadership theory
Emphasis on leader preference for order and structure, control, and short-term planning. Found in military and large organizations
What does transactional leadership look like?
Team is expected to follow orders, motivated by rewards/punishments, closely monitored, creativity is discouraged
Transformational leadership theory
Leader inspires employees to embrace change and add value to the organization
What does transformational leadership look like?
Team has more autonomy, leader leads by example, and encourages communication and collaboration
Leader-Member Exchange (LMX) leadership theory
Leader mentors a selected group (in-group) and gives more information and resources to strengthen trust and support
What does LMX leadership look like?
In-group is strengthened and supports leader's decisions while out-group lags in development and productivity and feels excluded
Servant leadership theory
Leader seeks to serve the needs of their team
What does servant leadership look like?
Leader is highly empathetic and trusted by employees. Greater innovation, collaboration, performance, and participation.
Formal structures of the organization
Decision-making processes
Funding processes
Organization's missions and values
Instances that have shaped the decision maker's assessments
Informal structures of organization
Organization's culture and social dynamics
Values demonstration through action (respect, honesty)
Communication
French and Raven's 5 ways leaders can create power
Legitimate power- By title/position
Reward power- Value in exchange for commitment
Expert power- Leader has smarts, insights, and experience
Referent power- Attracts loyalty
Coercive power- Punishment
When is legitimate power effective and ineffective?
Effective- Time saver
Ineffective- When leader is not competent
When is reward power effective and ineffective?
Effective- Appeals to motivators
Ineffective- Leader must be able to provide rewards
When is expert power effective and ineffective?
Effective- Offers advice and gains team respect
Ineffective- Can create team dependency on leader
When is referent power effective and ineffective?
Effective- Appeals to team social needs
Ineffective- Weak if leader is not competent
When is coercive power effective and ineffective?
Effective- Immediate results
Ineffective- Damages team motivation
Motivation
Factors that initiate, direct, and sustain human behavior over time
X motivational theory
Believe employees don't like work and need micromanagement
Needs theory
Employees are motivated by a desire to satisfy certain needs
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs needs theory
All 5 needs must be met in ascending order-
1. Physiological
2. Safety & security
3. Belonging
4. Esteem
5. Self-actualization
Herzberg's 2 Factor Motivation-Hygiene needs theory
Believes behavior is driven by intrinsic motivators and extrinsic hygiene factors.
Only satisfying hygiene factors is not enough to improve motivation. Hygiene factor must be acceptable in order for motivation factor to be operable
Servant leadership theory
Leader serves the needs of their team and shares their power
McClelland's needs theory
Says that employees are motivated by
1. Achievement
2. Affiliation
3. Power
Self-determination needs theory
Employees are motivated by innate needs (competence and relatedness) but also motivated by autonomy and purpose
Expectancy needs theory
If a positive outcome is desired, employee effort and confidence will increase
Vroom's expectancy theory
Motivated employees are created when the employee has outcome expectancy, instrumentality of outcome, and valence (value to employee)
Attribution theory
The way an employee interprets the causes for previous success or failure is related to the present level of motivation
Heider & Weiner's attribution theory
Success or failure can be attributed to internal factors or external factors
Goal-Setting theory
Motivation can be increased by involving employees in the creation of goals against which they can assess their achievement
Equity theory
Motivation is based on an employee's sense of fairness and their perceived values with others
Ethical practice
The KSAOs needed to maintain high levels of personal and professional integrity, and to act as an ethical agent who promotes core values, intergrity, and accountability throughout the organization.
3 Subcompetencies in the Ethical Practice competency
1. Personal integrity- HR is ethical, admit shortcomings, speaking upm and holding others to standards
2. Professional integrity- HR understands ethical risk to organization
3. Ethical agent- HR ensures policies/processes are ethical and compliant, create means to report issues confidently
Basic framework for ethical decision making
1. Recognize ethical situations
2. Establish facts about situation
3. Evaluate possible ethical actions
4. Apply codes of ethics and behavior to action
5. Consult with others
6. Make decisions and own and learn from mistakes
Ethical transparency
Supports trust, discloses details, and provides assurance
Ethical honesty
Reflect a commitment to truthfulness and fairness. Requires an avoidance of conflicts of interest and the use of bribery
Ethical conflicts of interest
Situtations where someone or company may benefit from undue influence due to involvement.
Bribery
Exchange of anything of value to gain greater influence or preference
Steps to implement a sustainable anti-corruption program
Identify risk
Instituting controls
Providing training and communication programs
Embedding disciplinary actions in business model
Implementing monitoring, detection, and auditing process
Reassessing corporate governance and compliance
Authenticity
Individual's approach to forming and maintaining relationships with colleagues and others
How do organizations communicate their ethical expectations to their members?
Through codes of conduct
Code of conduct/ethics
Principles of conduct wihin and organization that guide decision making and behavior
What is an efficient way the organization can promote ethical behavior?
By providing employees with a code of conduct.
2 Parts of code of conduct
Vaules-based- Missions, values, visions, principles
Rules-based- Policies, ethical behavior, complies with laws and regulations
Steps to creating an effective code of conduct
1. Gather information
2. Draft and review
3. Adopt code and communicate to organization
4. Monitor enforcement
5. Evaluate and revise perioically
Steps for an effective investigation
1. Appoint investigator
2. Investigate
3. Document
4. Confidentiality
5. Assess credibility
6. Conclude
Diversity
Similarities and differences between individuals, accounting for all aspects of one's personality and individual identity
3 Types of diversity
Legacy diversity- Traits that are recognizable and visible
Experimental diversity- Diversity based on lived experience
Thought diversity- Diversity based on different perspectives, resulting from education and socioeconomic background
What can help guard against "group think"?
Thought diversity. Allows new insights into decision making
Inclusion
The extent to which each person in an organization feels welcomed, respected, supported, and valued
What does diversity ask?
"Who do we bring into our organization?"
What does inclusion ask?
"How do we make them feel welcome and valued?"
What does an inclusive organization look like?
All members feel involved and empowered to contribute, and organization works to sustain this state
When does inclusiveness happen?
Only when an organization has created a culture and an environment in which the talents, skills, and perspectives of everyone in the organization are recognized and appreciated
What is a strategic benefit of inclusion?
Attracting talent. People want to work for a company who will value them
What does equity ask?
"How do we ensure that everyone has the same ability to contribute to their fullest potential?"
Finance equity
Means ownership
Compensation equity
Relative fairness in total rewards
Hiring equity
Providing additional resources to those who need them to take fair advantage of opportunities within a company
Equity
Lift all employees, break demo barriers, and empower all employees to perform at their best
Equality
State of fairness for all employees are provided equal rights
Benefits of DEI
Improved creatvity and innovation
DEI Benefits and its characteristics
Improved creativity and innovation
Better recruitment and retention
Stronger consumer markets
Positive branding
Robust global integration and local differentiation
Increased revenue