Lussier4ePPT ch02
Lussier4ePPT ch02
Lussier4ePPT ch02
4th Edition
Christopher F. Achua and Robert N. Lussier
Chapter 2
Leadership Ethics
and Traits
Copyright 2010 by South-Western/Cengage Learning
All rights reserved.
Chapter 2
Learning Outcomes
Personality
Is a combination of traits that classifies an
individuals behavior
Agreeableness
Conscientiousness
Adjustment
Openness to
experience
Source: Adapted from T. A. Judge, D. Heller, and M. K. Mount. Five-Factor Model of Personality and Job Satisfaction:
A Meta-Analysis. Journal of Applied Psychology 87 (June 2002), 530(12).
Agreeableness
Traits related to getting along with people
Sociable, friendly
Adjustment
Traits related to emotional stability
Stable = self-control, calm, good under pressure,
relaxed, secure, and positive
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Openness to experience
Traits related to the willingness to try new
things
Seek change
Personality Profiles
Identify individual stronger and weaker
traits
Are used to ensure a proper match
between the worker and the job
Are also used to categorize people as a
means of predicting job success
High energy
Dominance
Integrity
Traits of
Effective
Leaders
Flexibility
Sensitivity
to others
Intelligence
Self-confidence
Stability
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High energy
Drive, hard work, stamina, persistence
Tolerate stress well
Self-confidence
Trust own judgments, decisions, ideas,
capabilities
Related to effectiveness and advancement
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Stability
Emotionally in control, secure, positive
Associated with managerial effectiveness and
advancement
Integrity
Honest, ethical, trustworthy
Essential to running a successful business
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Social awareness
The ability to understand others
Self-management
The ability to control disruptive emotions
Relationship management
The ability to work well with others
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Sensitivity
Understand group members as individuals,
communicate well, people centered
Requires empathy
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Characteristics of the
Need for Achievement (n Ach)
Moderate risks
Competitive
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Characteristics of the
Need for Power (n Pow)
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Characteristics of the
Need for Affiliation (n Aff)
Strong personal relationships
Sensitivity to others
Joiners
Prefer helping professions
Concerned about what people think of
them
Usually have low need for power
Avoid leadership
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Personalized power
Used for personal gain at the expense of others
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Nine Traits of
Effective Leaders
Achievement
Motivation Theory
and LMP
Surgency
Domination
Agreeableness
Sensitivity to others
Adjustment
Stability
Socialized power
(LMP)
Conscientiousness
High energy
Self-confidence
Integrity
Need for
achievement
Openness to
experience
No separate need;
included within other
needs
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Leadership Attitudes
Are positive or negative feelings about
people, things, and issues
Job attitudes and performance are
perhaps the two most central sets of
constructs in individual-level
organizational analysis research
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Pygmalion effect
Proposes that leaders attitudes toward and
expectations of followers, and their
treatment of them, explain and predict
followers behavior and performance
Self-concept
Refers to the positive or negative attitudes
people have about themselves
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Theory Y Attitude:
Employees like to work
Employees do not need
to be closely supervised
Managers display more
participative leadership
Managers use internal
motivation and rewards
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Discussion Question #1
McGregor published Theory X and
Theory Y over 30 years ago. Do
we still have Theory X managers?
Why?
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Discussion Question #2
In text examples related to the
Pygmalion effect, Lou Holtz calls
for setting a higher standard.
Have the standards in school,
society, and work increased or
decreased over the last five years?
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Self-Concept
Refers to the positive or negative
attitudes people have about themselves
Self-efficacy is the belief in ones own
capability to perform in a specific
situation
Both are closely related to selfconfidence, the belief that one can be
successful
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Theory X Attitudes
Expects others to
succeed
Critical
Autocratic
Pessimistic
Promotes
hopelessness
Self-blaming
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Ethics
Are the standards of right and wrong that
influence behavior
Right behavior is considered ethical
Wrong behavior is considered unethical
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Discussion Question #3
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Personality Traits,
Attitudes, and Ethics
Ethical behavior is related to individual
needs and personality traits
To gain power, people may be unethical
Irresponsible persons may unethically cut
corners
Self-confidence can allow a person to
make ethical choices
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Personality Traits,
Attitudes, and Ethics (cont.)
Unethical behavior is more likely found in
people with the following characteristics:
Emotionally unstable
External locus of control
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Conventional
Based on expectations of others
Postconventional
Based on universal principles of right and
wrong, regardless of the leader or groups
expectations
Source: Adapted from Lawrence Kohlberg, Moral Stages and Moralization: The Cognitive-Development
Approach. In Thomas Likona (ed.), Moral Development and Behavior: Theory, Research, and Social Issues
(Austin, TX: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1976): 3153.
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Displacement of responsibility
Blaming ones unethical behavior on others
Diffusion of responsibility
Using the unethical behavior with no one
person being held responsible
Advantageous comparison
Comparing oneself to others who are worse
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Attribution of blame
Claiming the unethical behavior was caused
by someone elses behavior
Euphemistic labeling
Using cosmetic words to make the behavior
sound acceptable
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Four-Way Test
Is it the truth?
If it fair to all concerned?
Will it build goodwill and better friendship?
Will it be beneficial to all concerned?
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Discussion Question #4
Do you believe that if you use
ethical behavior it will pay off in
the long run?
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