Sunday, April 30, 2017

MSLD 511 Module 6 - A Leader from the Past



A Leader from the Past




          House (1976) published a theory of charismatic leadership, which is similar to, if not synonymous with, transformational leadership (Northouse, 2016, p.164). For House (1976), the personality characteristics of a charismatic leader include being dominant, having a strong desire to influence others, being self-confident, and having a strong sense of one own’s moral values. Sets strong role model, shows competence, articulates goals, sets high expectations, express confidence and arouses motives, are some common behaviors of a charismatic leader (House, 1976).

Bass (1999, p.191) says that leaders are authentically transformational when they increase awareness of what is right, good, important and beautiful, when they help to elevate followers’ needs for achievement and self-actualization, when they foster in followers higher moral maturity, and when they move followers to go beyond their self-interests for the good of their group, organization, or society. 
One of the leaders of my past that exhibited some of the qualities of a transformational leader is Alexandra Caprioli, and this is one of the reason I chose her to interview, as part of my final paper tasks for this class.

The first moment I was impacted by her traits, it was in one of her speeches to students of Tourism and Hospitality, where I was the orator of the event. At this point I had not met her before, and I clearly remembered how she impressed me with her communication abilities, her professional achievements, her confidence, her technical knowledge as professor and owner of business in the field, and her open mind when she invited me to work with her.

While working with her, the main leadership traits and skills I observed in Alexandra’s was assertiveness, efficiency, readiness to face challenges, continuous self-development, humility and motivation. She was always seeking opportunities to develop other. First, she invited, without knowing me, to work with her as a trainee. Afterwards, she invited me to work with her in random events she organized, until one day, after a year we did not see each other, she contacted me to assist her in one of her most important events, which she organizes yearly.

The fact of being role-model, of trusting on me when I was only 17 years old and keeping looking for my professional contributions for three years made me work harder on every opportunity I was working with her. The fact of sharing with me her personal life, taking me inside her house while working (which is very uncommon in my culture), being so approachable and humble while being so well known in my city (owning along with her family the main bus company, event agency and an airline) transformed me professionally.

I remember my first thought when I watched her speech: “I want to be like her one day”. She inspired me to keep learning new languages, to work hard in order to achieve my goals, to keep working on my professional dreams while majority of people around me criticized the field I chose. She inspired me to be humble no matter what is my rank in an organization, treating people as human beings and with dignity, while being confident, assertive and directive at appropriate times. An example on how transformational she was, and I believe still is, is the fact she was the first leader who came to my mind when I needed to choose I leader to interview, and now, again, to pick a leader from my past.


“The way people make us feel lasts longer, because it is stored in our emotional memory”

Debora Arantes

                   

REFERENCES



Bass, B. M., Steidlmeier, P. (1999). Ethics, Character, and Authentic Transformational Leadership Behavior. Leadership Quarterly, 10(2), 181–217. 

House (1976). A 1976 Theory of Charismatic Leadership. In J. G. hun & L. L. Larson (Eds), Leadership: the cutting edge (pp. 189-207). Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.


Northouse, P. G. (2016). Leadership: theory and practice. (7th edition). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.


Sunday, April 23, 2017

MSLD 511 Module 5 - Mid-Term Reflection



Mid-Term Reflection


There are a lot of theories and concepts associated with leadership due to its subjectivity. There is no single truth related to it. Not a correct definition neither a proven effective theory. Some of the theories are descriptive and others prescriptive, all has strengths and weaknesses, however each company, leader, government, researcher and so on chooses which thepry fits best in their reality.

     Talgam (2009) on his speech about leadership, compare leaders, independent of spheres, with orchestra conductors. The idea of this comparison amazed me since conductors do not talk to their followers on the most important moment of their work, have a great amount of people to lead (from different ages, background and different accountabilities) and their posture and body language is what define them as leaders.

     Talgam’s ideas about leadership is aligned with mine, based on my previous and current professional experience and my reading materials throughout this class. There are few points he made which I find very interesting.

     First is his opinion about happiness and the effect it has on followers. “Effective happiness” in leaders is the one which spreads and is based not only on the leader itself, but coming from the followers who are heard and who know their opinions and feelings matter. In an organizational environment, this is the effect on the relationship between leader and followers. Positive energy, happiness and consideration directly affect the motivation on individuals or on a group of them. The interaction of all the parts in the system affects and is affected by every single detail. To understand how leadership works, different perceptions, perspectives and feelings must be considered, and not only that, but all the human parts involved need to know they are being valued as human with its singularities.

     On the second video presented by Talgam, he suggests how direct leaders can be as effective as supporting ones, however with some limitation. Being extremely clear blocks creativity, neglect opinions and feelings and intimidate followers which could be partners on goal achievement and problem solving. Directive leadership, when not used strictly for specific situations can lead to exhaustion. Allow the entire team to develop their selves, to be part of the change, of solutions, of the daily work as important parts, has a significant impact on performance. They must feel they impact directly on the organization results, not only for their production but simply for who they are. Every single individual has something to add, enriching, in different ways, the organization, their family, social circle and their selves.

    On Talgam’s last video, he touches on a point which I think contributes deeply on our learning, illustrating what we have read so far on Northouse (2016) and recommended articles. Being positive, supportive and sometimes directive, allow creativity, provide high and physical energy and knowledge to your member, show trust and respect all individuals with their uniqueness is important, however we need to make clear the authority when needed, we need to compliment good works and reward a job well done, we still need to make the followers understand that besides everything, the professionalism is there, and must remain not matter what.

     In my opinion, being a leader is not simply running the show. Being a leader is providing support behind the curtains, acting along with your team on stage, giving entirely yourself to the scene and to your partners. Being a leader is sitting beside the director and together find solutions and ideas and when the “act” is over, share your thoughts and feelings, get and make everyone ready for the next show.

  

“Individuals need to feel they are not only human resources, but human beings. It isthea leader’s responsibility to make them feel this way, without compromising the organization success.”

Debora Arantes

 

REFERENCES

Northouse, P. G. (2016). Leadership: theory and practice. (7th edition). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Talgam, I. (2009). Lead like the Great Conductors. Retrieved from https://www.ted.com/talks/itay_talgam_lead_like_the_great_conductors. Retrieved on April 23, 2017.

Friday, April 14, 2017

MSLD 511 Module 4 - Locus of Control



Locus of Control


According to the definition of Gillian Fournier (2016), based on the concept of Julian Rotter, locus of control is “the extent to which people believe they have power over events in their lives. A person with an internal locus of control believes that he or she can influence events and their outcomes, while someone with an external locus of control blames outside forces for everything”. Manktelow (2017) says as the environment around us changes, we can either attribute success and failure to things we have control over, or to forces outside our influence. 

     Based on the Rotter’s Test, the results show I have internal locus of control. Manktelow (2017) states that people who develop an internal locus of control believe that they are responsible for their own success. According to the author, people with an internal locus of control, in general, engage in activities that will improve their situation, emphasize striving for achievement, work hard to develop their knowledge, skills and abilities, are inquisitive, and try to figure out why things turned out the way they did, take note of information that they can use to create positive outcomes in the future, have a more participative management style and they are more likely to succeed.

     Making a self-reflection of my leadership behavior and the test result, I can easily see how the result is accurate. Regarding to my career development, I constantly attend workshops at the company and I try to link and apply all the knowledge learnt in my Master Degree to my work environment. When a situation happens in my work environment, the first thing I do is critically think about it, evaluating all the possible reasons behind the incident, the best solutions and possible consequences before taking an action and I make sure my entire team communicates with me about everything is going on regarding to service, safety and security. I build trust on my relationship with my team members for them to feel safe on sharing with me all the adhoc situation, therefore I have the maximum control over it, and if not, I immediately inform to those who has.

     Apart from the subjective characteristics, I directly work with my team, as closely as I can, to make sure I am instantly ready to solve any problem they do not have the knowledge or do not feel confident to do so. At the beginning of every day at work, I set up a sheet of paper with each member name and their responsibilities and duties throughout the day and verbally brief them about it. Doing so, I make their tasks clear and if something goes out of order, I know exactly who to talk to, thus I am able clarify accurately what is happening.

     Another trait that shows my locus of control is my communication skills. I always keep my team updated about everything, no matter if they are involved directly or indirectly on the situation, and with team I mean the inclusion of my superiors. There is a situation I passed through two days ago, which illustrate my internal locus of control.

     One of my team members noticed a ground staff breaking a security rule. My employee followed the correct SOPs (Standard Operation Procedures) and made sure no security threat was actually taken place. Even though, she informed me as soon as I approached her. I knew it was not something major or to worry about at that point, but I started thinking through it, with a holistic point of view and future consequences. In a minute time, I informed my superior about it, even knowing that someone’s job was at risk now (ground staff). I passed only factual information, with no assumptions and conclusion and left the decision to my superior since I cannot override his position and decisions. He took the first necessary steps towards the situation. While other decisions were taken, I need to comfort my team member, while she was feeling guilty knowing what could happen to the staff. I explained to her the importance of sharing all the information with her seniors, why I decided to follow up and passed the information and the reason why the incident was escalating to security authorities. After I was confident she felt she did the right thing I went to my superior to know what was going on and if I could assist somehow. Measures were taken by authorities and the head of airport security, who took over the situation.

     I gathered with all team members, even the ones I was not directly working with to inform them about the incident and the outcome, and I requested extra vigilance. By the end of the day I approached my employee to praise her regarding to her situational awareness and communication skills, and an official report was raised to her manager to recognize her strengths and motivate her to keep them up.

     Reflecting through this incident, I noticed I was trying to have control in barely every single step, directly influencing in most of the outcomes, and even in people’s future behaviors.

     Manktelow (2017) covers some negative traits that people with a strong internal locus of control tend to have, as: being very achievement-oriented and wanting to control everything, which can lead to difficulties in taking direction and relating with others.

     In my personal life I face this challenges as consequences of my internal locus of control. I want influence in every difficult decision my parents are passing through and sometimes I notice I am giving orders to them, as I am in the position of doing so. My fiancée gets overwhelmed sometimes as well, since I want to know every single detail of his day (people he met, what he did, what he will do, decision he took and so forth). I do not do it intentionally or consciously. It is my natural habits and the way I deal with the world as a whole.

     There are a lot of positive outcomes on having internal locus of control, but if the negative side of it is not managed well, it can lead us to failure, not matter on which scope of our lives. We need to keep in mind that random events do occur for all sorts of reasons. While we can manage many of those with enough determination and hard work, some we cannot. (Manktelow, 2017). It rests on us a high leveled risk management and tolerance to deal with things that eventually will be out of our control, and this is my goal to be achieved in my personal life.


                      Image by Adam Sinicki





REFERENCES

Fournier, G. (2016). Locus of Control. PsychCentral. Retrieved from https://psychcentral.com/encyclopedia/locus-of-control/ on April 14, 2017.

Manktelow, J. (2017). Locus of Control: are you in charge of your destiny?. Mind Tools. Retrieved from https://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newCDV_90.html on April 14, 2017.

Rotter, J. B. (1966) Generalized expectancies for internal versus external control of reinforcement. Psychological Monographs: General and Applied, 80, 1-28. Retrieved from http://www.brandeis.edu/roybal/docs/Locus%20of%20Control_website.pdf on April 14, 2017.

Sinicki, A. (2017). The importance of a Central Locus of Control. Retrieved from http://www.healthguidance.org/entry/16868/1/The-Importance-of-a-Central-Locus-of-Control.html on April 14, 2017.

Saturday, April 8, 2017

MSLD 511 Module 3 - Directive and Supportive Behaviors


Directive and Supportive Behaviors



Situational Leadership varies in detail according to the authors. Blanchard (2008) summarized the subject stating there are four leadership styles (directing, coaching, supporting, delegating) representing different combinations of directive and supportive behaviors, then he goes into styles details and their applicability. Northouse (2016, p. 93-103), apart from covering the behaviors and styles, includes the development levels of followers in more details than Blanchard (2008). Even if it is called situational approach, suggesting the situation itself is the main idea, this approach focus a lot more on the followers. It includes goal achievement and the situation in general, but the focus behind the theory is the team and its individual whose will be led. Blake and Mouton (1981) cover Situational Approach as Northouse (2016) states being the Behavioral Approach (including task and relationship behaviors). Northouse even mention Blake and Mouton Managerial Grid in his Behavioral Approach chapter. In this case, it is difficult to define which one is exactly the Situational and the Behavioral approach, according to credible references.

     Based on Blanchard (2008) article regarding to the behaviors and styles of the Situational Approach, linking with my own life experience (personal and professional), I can say in my relationship with my fiancée I am high supportive and low directive since I think a relationship of a couple involves mutual respect (opinions, feelings, background) and a great amount of support on decisions taken. In this relationship sphere the direction comes as suggestion. In my professional environment, I am high directive and low supportive most of the times (since I lead different teams every day and do not get to know the individuals well enough, apart from the fact that majority of them has high school education level and do not have previous experience in the field). It does not mean I do not support my team and that I do not shift into styles, but it is just a matter of fact that some situations and flights does not allow me to. As a cabin supervisor, I need the crew to accomplish their tasks, and in this case, it is all short-term tasks and outcomes. There are other roles in my job, but its main role is direct, supervise and provide feedback on a daily basis, then, if time permits, develop my team member.

     The styles highlighted on Blanchard (2008) article are the most interesting and valuable of his inputs in my opinion, because he mentions when to apply each style and does not define one being better than another. It all depends on the situation and the development level of the followers/partners.

     Going through these styles I can say I am supporting in my love life, and in general directing in my work environment. Since my work environment is very dynamic (constant change of followers, shifts, customer profiles, situations and time availability) I keep shifting from one style to another. Blanchard (2008) says in his conclusion that shifting backward and forward in style makes the Situational Leadership a dynamic developmental model, however he suggests the dynamism is based strictly on the follower which is not exactly my case.  One sentence that describes my professional and personal experience and explains the flexibility of my styles is stated by Northouse (2016, p. 93) when he says that different situation demands different kinds of leadership, so the leader need to adapt according to the demands of each situation, and by situation I understand as the overall context and the followers as individuals.

     To illustrate my flexibility, I can describe one situation I have been through recently, which exemplify my routine as a leader and how I choose my style each day at work. I spent seven days with the same team members, in a pairing of 5 flights (short, medium and long range). I had the opportunity to know each individual better than usually I do. The team had people from different nationalities, including Asians, North Americans, western and eastern Europeans and Middle Eastern. The back ground mixture itself was a challenge (which with three years of supervisory experience I already got to understand each culture and know how to lead them, obviously respecting the individuality of each person which differs slightly most of the times), however the greatest challenge is that each person had different motivations, competence and technical skills, different professional and personal history, and consequently different approach and reaction to others’ approach.

     Going into details, I had two crew members who were very active, hands on, organized and with serious posture. Noticing one of them in the first hour of the flight, I delegated the kitchen (galley) and allowed him to be responsible only for that. To make it possible I went in the cabin to replace him. No guidance was given at all except for doubts approached by him. In this particular case, I applied the delegating style (the support was not ignored but was left for the end of each journey, simply praising him in public and private and documenting his strengths to his manager). The second crew member I needed more time to figure out his competences and motivation since he was reserved and quitter. I needed also to increase my observation skills to figure out his abilities and then delegate the same task. For him the same style was used as previously, with the same supporting level and approaches. Both of them knew what to do, and I just asked if they were willing to take that responsibility. With so, there willing level increased since they clearly preferred  that task and appreciated my trust. As a consequence they did it very well, honestly better than me, in standards, organization, and time manner.

     There was third crew member who was clearly very skilled but lacked the will to go an extra mile. She was the type with high skill and low will, so in this case I chose the supporting style, engaging in conversations, personal chats and finally figured out why she was lacking in motivation. With her I directed only when needed and I had shown trust on her competences and respect of her space and maturity level. A fourth crew member looked mature but I noticed something was wrong, she spent enough time in the company to know her job very, but for some reason she had a vague look and was neglecting small details of her duties. Therefore, I decided to work closely to observe her better and have the chance to understand the reason behind her behavior, and then knowing which leadership style I would apply with her. Finally, I found out she had broken up with her boyfriend hours before the flight so her will (short term at least) was very low and her skill temporarily affected. A coaching style was the one I used, which worked perfectly and got the best outcome from her.

     Then there were two crew members who recently joined the company, with high motivation but still learning the tasks. They were different though, however the directing style was chosen to lead them (shifting sometimes to coaching style to keep them high motivated and avoid the paternalism style). Consistently, I like to make my team members feel I trust them and genuine mistakes are acceptable, so with that I gain honesty from the followers and have the chance to recover the mistake (service, safety, security).

     One curious fact regarding to the last crew members I mentioned, one of them approached in the end of the fifth sector to ask me for feedback. We spent half hour talking, in a two-way communication. During the conversation, he confessed that he felt intimidated by the other supervisor and start doubting his ability and capability for the job. We had a long chat regarding to his strengths and developing points, and how to deal with several types of leaders, how to keep motivated and work on his self-confidence. It was a great learning experience for me and I believe for both of us. The feedback was a perfect example which I found myself constantly shifting from directing to coaching, from one minute to another, back and forth.

     This flight was a typical illustration of how I chose my leadership style in a daily basis and which variables I take in consideration to do so. Thinking through the experienced mentioned, I realized that the choices of leadership styles comes automatically to me. I described case by case, follower by follower, and what I took in consideration to make my choice, but this detailed process does not happen in practice consciously. It is natural for me, as a subconscious action, which happens involuntary and most of the times in a matter of seconds. This self-reflection helped me to understand the theory behind my practices.

     Considering the theory mentioned linked with my experiences, I conclude that the Situational Approach is a great tool to leadership. I define it as a tool because of its prescriptive nature (Northouse, 2016, p. 99) and not descriptive. It is flexible, adaptive and it considers context and individuals involved (leaders/follower, partners). In my opinion, holistic perspective is crucial for the process of leadership and the Situational Approach, while using theory engaged into practice, scrutinize it, indeed!



REFERENCES

Blake, R.R., Mouton, J.S. (1981). Management by Grid Principles or Situationalism: Which? Group & Organizational Studies, 6(4), 439-455.

Blanchard, K. (2008). Situational leadership. Leadership Excellence, 25(5), 19.

Northouse, P. G. (2016). Leadership: theory and practice. (7th edition). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage


Sunday, April 2, 2017

MSLD 511 Module 2 - Reflecting on Leadership Traits



Reflecting on Leadership Traits



On the trait approach to leadership it is defended that an individual was born or has some innate characteristics which will influence her/his leadership effectiveness. There are a lot of criticism around this specific approach however it is undeniable that an individual trait influence the quality of the way situations will be led and their outcome.

     In my opinion, my main traits which add from my ability to lead are alertness, assertiveness, extraversion, responsibility and I am problem solving driven. In my work environment, I frequently get a positive feedback from my team and my superiors regarding to these traits, and personally I think they add a lot for my leadership level, which is supervisory, however I find that sometimes they can lead me to a negative perspective, depending on the situation and the individual who will be led. According to Northouse (2016, p. 31), the trait approach has failed to take situation into account and to look at traits in relationship to leadership outcomes, however, even if the approach officially does not consider these two variants, I could never mention my traits as positive while ignoring the uniqueness of each situation and individual. 

     For an instance, I lead an average of five to seven different set of people (coming from over 100 nationalities) every month, I spent my time with the same individuals up to thirty hours in my life time and I rarely see them again, ever. My assertiveness can be most of the time positive, but how it will be seeing and impact in other depends on the person I am dealing with (which is challenging in my reality) and the situation in full. My assertiveness can be seen as rudeness, lacking in details and extremist (in Asian culture, most probably, not even a man is assertive as I am, and naturally the Asian women might get defensive with this specific traits and consequently not respond to my guidance and direction the way I expect). I think alertness and responsibility is very positive overall, but extraversion, again, can be interpreted in a negative way.

     Since I am a child I have heard people saying I am a natural leader. I never really understood what they meant but now, studying the subject, I get some of their points. My traits as a human being is often found in people who hold a leadership position. I take initiative when things need to be done, my tone of voice (which is often mentioned as strong) and the pace I talk, I think are reasons which makes people listen to me. My patience and tolerance in my professional environment, while dealing with problems or teaching my team members, reached a high level along the years, and my dominance is a trait that I consider inborn (noted by my parents and teachers). I hear I am intelligent very often, but I do not agree with that. I might have a good level of intelligence but my strength related to this trait I would define as smartness, or what I describe as “what to do with your intelligence, no matter what level it is”. Smartness is the most crucial trait in my opinion, which is not found on published material. An individual can own a great amount of leadership traits, but will never be a great leader if does not know how to use the traits and if the traits are not shaped well.

     What I find most important when analyzing leadership traits, it is how it needs to be well evaluated in each occasion, applying critical thinking in full and how it must be a constant and maybe daily process. If this is analysis is done well, the traits of an individual in leadership position will definitely impact positively on the outcome and goal achievement.

     Another conclusion I came to, while reading about trait approach, is that since the list of traits is extensive (the ones published on my reading materials and the ones I agree to be essential), actually all the individuals will have at least one trait which will contribute to the leadership effectiveness. It is not clear how many traits a person might possess in order to be a great leader, so this gap leaves up with another thought regarding traits and leadership effectiveness. Is it only a specific group of people which will be able to succeed as leader? Is leadership available for everyone, as a process which can be developed and trained?

     The mentality of most organization’s head leaders needs to change. Seeking for people with specific and clear characteristics is important, but looking at potential and hidden leaders in the organization is essential. Most, if not all individuals, has a leadership trait which can contribute to the goal achievement as a leader. Leadership is not a rank defined in job positions, or available for few. Each occasion requires specific traits, and with that, maybe different individuals to lead the situation, so in this case, people designated for leadership official positions, needs not only to possess the common leadership traits, but to add humility and sensitiveness along with deep knowledge of their human resources.

REFERENCE

Northouse, P. G. (2016). Leadership: theory and practice. (7th edition). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.