79dc2b4ff9a4905f3f85961adb2b6700.ppt
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The Effect of Path-Goal Leadership Behaviors on Subordinates’ Innovativeness David Morgan University of Baltimore
My Interest ¢ Recruiting l ¢ Innovation l l ¢ U. S. Navy What is it? What causes it? Leadership l Path-Goal (House & Mitchell, 1974)
Purpose ¢ Specifically, this study presents evidence that House’s path-goal theory can be applied such as to induce innovation in the organizational setting.
The Problem ¢ Explanations of innovativeness in organizations Size of a company l Education level and tenure of top managers l Public v. private l Influence of leaders (i. e. , transformational leadership) l • Not path-goal theory
The Literature ¢ Organizations undeniably benefit from sufficient leadership, especially in today’s constant pursuit of new and innovative means to reach an industry-leading end. ¢ Successful leaders (Arad, Hanson, & Schneider, 1997; Aragón-Correa, García-Morales, & Cordón-Pozo, 2007; Damanpour & Schneider, 2006; Howell & Higgins, 1990) l l l Motivate employees Effectively evaluate employee behaviors and outcomes Facilitating success Provide a clear mission and Adopt organizational policies and resources in support of a broader vision
The Literature ¢ Innovation (Arad, Hanson, & Schneider, 1997; Herold, Fedor, & Caldwell, 2007; Sternberg, Pretz, & Kaufman, 2003; Nyström, 1990) l Potential outcome of leadership styles that are conducive to fostering pioneering cultures l A product of the interaction between strategy (e. g. , leadership) and structure, with organizational culture and climate as important intervening variables l Innovative outcomes require effective leadership
House’s (1974; 1996) Path-Goal Theory ¢ ¢ ¢ Effective leaders engage in behaviors that harmonize with the abilities of subordinates Motivational functions of leaders lead to personal gain for subordinates via a clear path to the goal Reducing or eliminating road blocks along that path are important determinants of subordinate satisfaction and motivation
House’s (1974; 1996) Path-Goal Theory ¢ Four leader behaviors: l l Directive leadership—focuses on coordinating work tasks, and is best used with subordinates with limited job-related abilities Supportive leadership—concerns subordinates’ well-being through a supportive work environment, and is best demonstrated when characteristics of subordinates’ work environments call for a more “caring” leader
l l Achievement-oriented leadership—focuses on causing subordinates to have increased confidence in their ability to meet goals, and is best used when it is imperative that subordinates have the resources they need in order to thrive Participative leadership—directed toward subordinate input with respect to decisionmaking and influence, and is best utilized when subordinates elicit a great deal of declarative and procedural knowledge
The Study ¢ Research hypothesis l Participants assigned to the achievementoriented leadership group condition (i. e. , the condition where the team leaders have received formal training in using achievement-oriented leadership) would display higher mean innovativeness [acceptance] as compared to those assigned to the control group condition (i. e. , the condition where the leaders did not receive formal leadership training)
The Study ¢ IVs l l l ¢ Covariate l ¢ type of leadership received by each group leader biological sex leader experience leader age—tested for its role as a concomitant variable DV l a measure of attitudes and beliefs about the innovation(s) employed (Real & Poole, 2005)
Method ¢ Participants l n = 195 randomly selected from a Federal list of current enlisted recruiters, or “subordinates, ” in the Navy • 50% male (23. 5 mean age) and 50% female (22. 5 mean age) l n = 65 officer-level recruitment “leaders” • 60% male and 40% female • 63% experienced and 37% inexperienced • 98% held Bachelor’s degrees
Design and Procedure ¢ 2 pilot studies l l ¢ ¢ ¢ relationships between three leadership styles the effect of “leader experience” (represented by two levels) on subordinate innovativeness and three path-goal leadership styles Subordinates randomly assigned to a group (3 -4 participants), with n = 65 groups (to the experimental or control condition) Leaders randomly assigned to achievement-oriented training condition (a 1 hour training based on House’s [1974; 1996] theory of achievement-oriented leadership) or the control condition (no formal training), and again randomly assigned to lead one of the groups Administrative leave
Design and Procedure ¢ Each group of subordinates—facilitated by a recruitment leader—given a scenario in which they devised a web-based recruitment strategy given limited instruction l l ¢ no previous exposure to newly a developed web design software package 2 hours to complete Questionnaire was used to evaluate subordinate attitudes l l total “innovation acceptance score” r =. 86
Results ¢ Pilot study 1 l positive significant relationship between the achievement-oriented leadership style and innovativeness (r =. 44, p =. 02) • as use of achievement-oriented leadership style increases, the potential for organizational innovativeness increases as well l significant negative relationship between the directive leadership style and innovativeness (r = -. 37, p =. 05) • as use of directive leadership increases, the potential for organizational innovativeness tends to decrease
Means, Standard Deviations and Correlations for Innovativeness and Three Path-goal Leadership Styles M SD 1 2 3 4 Innovativ eness 40. 33 13. 51 - - Achieve ment 26. 00 12. 48 . 44* - - - Directive 19. 33 11. 72 -. 37* . 64 - - Supportiv e 20. 67 11. 43 . 29 . 63 -. 33 Variables Note. n = 30. *p ≤. 05. -
Results ¢ Pilot Study 2 l significant effect of leader experience on subordinate innovativeness, F(1, 28) = 4. 62, p =. 04 • leader experience affects subordinate innovativeness l l significant effect of leader experience on achievement -oriented leadership style, F(1, 28) = 4. 73, p =. 04 ANOVA examined the effects of leader experience on leadership style and subordinate innovativeness • leader experience affects achievement-oriented leadership style • no significant effects found for leader experience on either supportive or directive leadership styles
Analysis of Variance for the Effect of Leader Experience on Innovativeness and the Three Path-Goal Leadership Styles
Results ¢ 2 x 2 between-subjects factorial ANCOVA design l leader gender and experience, and experimental condition as IVs, leader age as a covariate l advantages over a regular ANOVA design • with the latter, only cell means can be compared • with the former, cell means can be compared after covariance—leader age in this case—is adjusted out • between-group differences that do not contribute to the effects of interest, i. e. , differences between leaders experience on subordinate innovativeness, are minimized • smaller error term—more power to detect a significant effect
Results ¢ ¢ after adjusting for the covariates, leadership type varied significantly with subordinate innovativeness F(1, 181) = 4. 62, p <. 05, η² =. 14 subordinate innovativeness did not vary significantly with leader biological sex, F(1, 181) = 3. 52, p =. 06, η² =. 02 subordinate innovativeness, however, was higher for female leaders (M = 41. 66, SD = 14. 51) than for male leaders (M = 39. 22, SD = 12. 51) statistically significant main effect of experience, F(1, 181) = 7. 23, p <. 05, η² =. 12
Results not a significant three-way interaction between achievement-oriented leadership, leader gender, and leader experience, F(3, 181) = 2. 03, p =. 11, η² =. 01 ¢ as a covariate, leader age contributed a significant effect on subordinate innovativeness, F(1, 181) = 11. 03, p < . 01, η² =. 11 ¢
Analysis of Covariance for Effects of Types of Leadership, Leader Biological Sex and Leader Experience on Subordinate Innovativeness, with Leader Age as a Covariate SS df MS F Leader Age 4. 16 1 1. 08 11. 03** Leadership Type 3. 89 1 1. 06 4. 62* Leader Sex 1. 89 1 . 63 3. 52 Leader Experience 1. 79 1 . 38 7. 23* Type*Sex*Experience 1. 89 3 . 63 2. 03 Error 22. 20 181 . 20 Total 35. 82 193 Source Note. n = 195. *p <. 05. **p <. 01.
Discussion ¢ Hypotheses supported l leaders’ adoption of an achievement-oriented leadership results in higher mean subordinate innovativeness than the control (no specific leadership style) certain leader qualities and characteristics influence organizations’ potential for innovativeness House’s (1974; 1996) path-goal theory can be applied such as to induce innovation
Discussion ¢ Leaders concerned with setting challenging goals, making sure innovative resources are available, providing development opportunities, etc. , share relationships with environments where innovation is present ¢ Amount of leadership experience predicts subordinate innovativeness and achievement-oriented leadership style ¢ Leaders with fewer years of experience in a leadership role tend to cause higher subordinate innovativeness, l ¢ why? younger leaders more open to new ideas? Leaders with fewer years of experience exhibited higher means for achievement-oriented leadership l moderates the relationship between younger leaders and their subordinates’ innovation outputs?
Conclusion ¢ Applications selecting achievement-oriented leaders to lead subordinates—at least in the realm Naval recruitment—has a substantial impact on innovation l more experienced leaders should be trained to increase their awareness and techniques of achievementoriented path-goal behaviors l
Conclusion ¢ Implications l Longitudinal cohort effects taking place, or some other mechanism not identified? • Further research should be conducted to examine these effects more closely • Leader experience should be further segmented to study the experience effects supported in this study and consistently found in other research l Replicate these findings in other workplace settings (addresses a limitation of this study)
References Arad, S. , Hanson, M. A. , & Schneider, R. J. (1997). A framework for the study of relationships between organizational characteristics and organizational innovation. The Journal of Creative Behavior, 31, 42 -58. Aragón-Correa, A. , García-Morales, V. J. , & Cordón-Pozo, E. (2007). Leadership and organizational learning’s role on innovation and performance: Lessons from Spain. Industrial Marketing Management, 36, 349 -359. Conger, J. A. , & Kanungo, R. N. (1987). Toward a behavioral theory of charismatic leadership in organizational settings. Damanpour, F. (1991). Organizational innovation: A meta-analysis of effects of determinants and moderators. Academy of Management Journal, 34, 555 -590. Damanpour, F. , & Schneider, M. (2006). Phases of the adoption of innovation in organizations: Effects of environment, organization and top managers. British Journal of Management, 17, 215 -236. Herold, D. M. , Fedor, D. B. , & Caldwell, S. D. (2007). Beyond change management: A multilevel investigation of contextual and personal influences on employees’ commitment to change. Journal of Applied Psychology, 92, 942 -951. House, R. J. (1996). Path-goal theory of leadership: Lessons, legacy and a reformulated theory. Leadership Quarterly, 7, 323 -352. House, R. J. , & Mitchell, T. R. (1974). Path-goal theory of leadership. Journal of Contemporary Business, 3, 81 -97. Howell, J. M. , & Higgins, C. A. (1990). Leadership behaviors, influence tactics, and careers experiences of Champions of technological innovation. Leadership Quarterly, 1, 249264. Nyström, H. (1990). Organizational innovation. In West, M. A. & Farr, J. L. (Eds. ), Innovation and creativity at work: Psychological and organizational strategies (pp. 143 -161). Oxford, England: John Wiley & Sons. Real, K. , & Poole, M. S. (2005). Innovation implementation: Conceptualization and measurement in organizational research. In Woodman, R. W. & Pasmore, W. A. (Eds. ), Research in Organizational Change and Development (pp. 63 -134). Greenwich, CT: Elsevier Science/JAI Press. Sternberg, R. J. , Pretz, J. E. , & Kaufman, J. C. (2003). In Shavinina, L. V. (Ed. ), The international handbook on innovation (pp. 158 -169). New York, NY: Elsevier Science.
79dc2b4ff9a4905f3f85961adb2b6700.ppt