Task Behavior
(noun)
The style of leadership that is concerned with instructing followers what actions to take.
Examples of Task Behavior in the following topics:
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Leadership and Followers: Hersey and Blanchard
- For Hersey and Blanchard, leadership style is determined by the mix of task behavior and relationship behavior that the leader shows.
- Task behavior concerns the actions required of followers and how they should be conducted.
- This is primarily task behavior.
- S2 leading is still primarily task behavior, but now it includes some relationship behavior.
- Participating leadership shifts the balance toward relationship behavior and away from task behavior.
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Leadership Model: University of Michigan
- The Michigan behavioral studies are an important link in the ongoing development of behavioral theory in a leadership framework.
- Individual ideas, actions, and behaviors have been identified as indicating leadership within societal structures.
- Leadership research continues as scholars observe, identify, and promote the emergence of new leadership styles and behaviors in the 21st century.
- The studies also identified three critical characteristics of effective leaders: task-oriented behavior, relationship-oriented behavior, and participative leadership.
- Discuss the Michigan Leadership Studies generated in the 1950s and 1960s in the broader context of behavioral approaches to leadership
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What is Organizational Behavior?
- Organizational behavior is the field of study that investigates how organizational structures affect behavior within organizations.
- Organizational behavior studies the impact individuals, groups, and structures have on human behavior within organizations.
- Understanding not only how to delegate tasks and organize resources but also how to analyze behavior and motivate productivity is critical for success in management.
- Organizational behavior also deals heavily in culture.
- Understanding and defining these work cultures and the behavioral implications they embed organizationally is also a central topic in organizational behavior.
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Leadership and Task/Follower Characteristics: House
- Directive, path-goal clarifying leader: The leader clearly defines what is expected of followers and tells them how to perform their tasks.
- The theory argues that this behavior has the most positive effect when the subordinates' role and task demands are ambiguous and intrinsically satisfying.
- This behavior is dominant when subordinates are highly personally involved in their work.
- This behavior is especially needed in situations in which tasks or relationships are psychologically or physically distressing.
- Identify the leadership and task/follower characteristics identified by Robert House in the Path-Goal theory (1971)
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Leadership Model: The Ohio State University
- These statements were used to develop the Leaders' Behavior Description Questionnaire (LBDQ).
- Respondents of the LBDQ-rated leaders cited how frequently they engaged in a certain behavior.
- This behavior is oriented towards interpersonal relationships, mutual trust, and affiliation.
- The Ohio researchers defined initiating structure as the extent to which a leader specifies group member roles, initiates actions, organizes group activities, and defines how tasks are to be accomplished by the group.
- This leadership style is task-oriented.
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Defining Teamwork
- Goal specification: identifying and prioritizing the tasks and activities needed to achieve the mission
- Monitoring milestones and goals: tracking progress toward completion of tasks and activities
- Coordination: organizing and managing the flow of team activities and tasks
- Team monitoring and support: assisting individuals with their tasks by, for example, providing feedback and coaching
- Rewards:recognition of achievement toward objectives and reinforcement of behavior that supports the team's work
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How Attitude Influences Behavior
- Attitudes can positively or negatively affect a person's behavior.
- Attitude and behavior interact differently based upon the attitude in question.
- When an organization appeals to people's logic and explains why it is assigning tasks or pursuing a strategy, it can generate a more positive disposition towards that task or strategy (and vice versa, if the employee does not recognize why a task is logical).
- Attitudes can be infectious and can influence the behavior of those around them.
- One key to altering an individual's behavior is consistency.
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Common Causes of Team Conflict
- Team conflict is caused by factors related to individual behavior as well as disagreements about the team's work.
- Different behavioral styles or preferences: Individuals may clash over their respective work habits, attention to detail, communication practices, or tone of expression.
- While these can affect coordination of interdependent tasks, they can especially inhibit direct collaboration.
- Competition over resources: Members may fight over the limited resources available to accomplish the team's tasks.
- Behavioral differences and personality clashes can cause conflict even among friends.
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Four Theories of Leadership
- These findings also show that individuals emerge as leaders across a variety of situations and tasks.
- He identified three relevant aspects of the situation: the quality of the leader's relationships with others, how well structured their tasks were, and the leader's amount of formal authority.
- Behavioral theory also incorporates B.F.
- Skinner's theory of behavior modification, which takes into account the effect of reward and punishment on changing behavior.
- The father of behavioral theory showed the connection between behaviors and reward and punishment.
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Interactive Leadership
- Interactive leadership involves leaders' engaging followers to increase their understanding of tasks and goals.
- The interactive style of leadership makes it a priority to inform followers about important matters related to their goals and tasks and to clarify understanding.
- This encounter facilitates behavior change; the better people understand what is expected of them, the more they can modify how they act.
- An interactive leader shares information and answers questions to clarify goals and tasks.