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Chapter 3
Contingency Approaches

1


Chapter Objectives
Understand how leadership is often contingent on people
and situations.
Apply Fiedler’s contingency model to key relationships
among leader style, situational favorability, and group task
performance.
Apply Hersey and Blanchard’s situational theory of leader
style to the level of follower readiness.
Explain the path-goal theory of leadership.
Use the Vroom-Jago model to identify the correct amount of
follower participation in specific decision situations.
Know how to use the power of situational variables to
substitute for or neutralize the need for leadership.

2


Ex. 3.1 Comparing the Universalistic
and Contingency Approaches to
Leadership
Universalistic
Approach

Outcomes


Leadership
Traits/behaviors

(Performance, satisfaction,
etc.)

Leader

Contingency
Approach

Followers

Style
Traits
Behavior
Position
Needs
Maturity
Training
Cohesion

Task
Structure
Systems
Env.

Outcomes
(Performance, satisfaction,
etc.)


Situatio
n
3


Contingency Approaches
Contingency approaches:
approaches that seek to delineate the
characteristics of situations and
followers and examine the leadership
styles that can be used effectively

Fiedler’s contingency model: a
model designed to diagnose whether a
leader is task-oriented or relationshiporiented and match leader style to the
situation

4


Ex. 3.2 Metacategories of Leader
Behavior and Four Leader Styles

TASK
BEHAVIOR

High

High Task-Low

Relationship

High Task-High
Relationship

Low Task-Low
Relationship

High
Relationship
-Low Task

Low
Low

RELATIONSHIP BEHAVIOR

High

5


Situational Theory
Hersey and Blanchard’s extension
of the Leadership Grid focusing on
the characteristics of followers as
the important element of the
situation, and consequently, of
determining effective leader
behavior


6


Ex. 3.4 Hersey and Blanchard’s
Situational Theory of Leadership
Follower Characteristics

Appropriate Leader Style

Low readiness level

Telling (high task-low relationship)

Moderate readiness level

Selling (high task-high relationship)

High readiness level

Participating (low task-high rel.)

Very high readiness level

Delegating (low task-low relationship)
7


Path-Goal Theory
A contingency approach to

leadership in which the leader’s
responsibility is to increase
subordinates’ motivation by
clarifying the behaviors necessary
for task accomplishment and
rewards

8


Ex. 3.5 Leader Roles in the PathGoal Model Increase Rewards
Path Clarification
Leader defines what follower
must do to attain work
outcomes

Leader learns follower’s
needs

Leader clarifies follower’s
work role

Leader matches follower’s
needs to rewards if work
outcomes are accomplished

Follower has increased
knowledge & confidence to
accomplish outcomes


Leader increases value of
work outcomes for follower

Follower displays increased effort and
motivation
Organizational work outcomes are
accomplished

9


Ex. 3.6 Path-Goal Situations and
Preferred Leader Behaviors
Situatio
n

Leader Behavior

Impact on Follower

Followers lack
self-confidence

Supportive
Leadership

Ambiguous job

Directive
Leadership


Lack of job
challenge

AchievementOriented
Leadership

Set and strive for
high goals

Participative
Leadership

Clarifies followers’
needs to change
rewards

Incorrect
reward

Outcome

Increases confidence
to achieve work
outcomes

Clarifies path to
reward

Increased

effort;
improved
satisfaction
and
performance

10


The Vroom-Jago Contingency
Model
A contingency model that
focuses on varying degrees of
participative leadership, and how
each level of participation
influences quality and
accountability of decisions

11


Ex. 3.7 Five Leader Decision Styles

Area of Freedom for Group
Area of Influence by Leader

Decide

Consult
Individually


Consult
Group

Facilitate

Delegate

12


Substitute and Neutralizer
Substitute: a situational
variable that makes
leadership unnecessary
or redundant

Neutralizer: a situational
characteristic that
counteracts the leadership
style and prevents the
leader from displaying
certain behaviors
13


Ex. 3.10 Substitutes and
Neutralizers for Leadership
Variable


Task-Oriented
Leadership

PeopleOriented
Leadership

Organizational
variables

Group cohesiveness
Formalization
Inflexibility
Low positional power
Physical separation

Substitutes for
Substitutes for
Neutralizes
Neutralizes
Neutralizes

Substitutes for
No effect on
No effect on
Neutralizes
Neutralizes

Task
characteristics


Highly struct. task
Automatic feedback
Intrinsic satisfaction

Substitutes for
Substitutes for
No effect on

No effect on
No effect on
Substitutes for

Follower
characteristics

Professionalism
Training/experience
Low value of rewards

Substitutes for
Substitutes for
Neutralizes

Substitutes for
No effect on
Neutralizes

14




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