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Strategic Leadership: Creating an Learning and Ethical Organization
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11-2 Strategic Leadership Strategic leadership involves: the ability to anticipate, envision, maintain flexibility and empower others to create strategic change multi-functional work that involves working through others consideration of the entire enterprise rather than just a sub-unit a managerial frame of reference
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11-3Successful Strategic Actions Strategic Leadership and the Strategic Management Process Effective Strategic Leadership Strategic Intent Strategic Mission shapes the formulation of and influence
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11-4 Strategic Leadership and the Strategic Management Process StrategicCompetitiveness Above-Average Returns Formulation of Strategies Implementation Successful Strategic Actions yields
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11-5 Factors Affecting Managerial Discretion External Environment Industry structure Rate of market growth Number and type of competitors Nature and degree of political/legal constraints Degree to which products can be differentiated External Environment
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11-6 Factors Affecting Managerial Discretion Characteristics of the Organization Characteristics of the Organization SizeSize AgeAge CultureCulture Availability of resourcesAvailability of resources Patterns of interaction among employeesPatterns of interaction among employees External Environment
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11-7 Factors Affecting Managerial Discretion External Environment Characteristics of the Organization ManagerialDiscretion Characteristics of the Manager Tolerance for ambiguityTolerance for ambiguity Commitment to the firm and its desired strategic outcomesCommitment to the firm and its desired strategic outcomes Interpersonal skillsInterpersonal skills Aspiration levelAspiration level Degree of self-confidenceDegree of self-confidence Characteristics of the Manager
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11-8 Exercise of Effective Strategic Leadership Establishingbalancedorganizationalcontrols EmphasizingethicalpracticeDevelopinghumancapital Exploiting and maintainingcorecompetencies Sustaining an effective organizationalculture Determiningstrategicdirection Effective Strategic Leadership
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Leadership: Three Interdependent Activities Determining a direction Designing the organization Nurturing a culture dedicated to excellence and ethical behavior Successful leaders must recognize three interdependent activities Determining a direction Designing the organization Nurturing a culture dedicated to excellence and ethical behavior
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Setting a Direction Scan environment to develop Knowledge of all stakeholders Knowledge of salient environmental trends and events Integrate that knowledge into a vision of what the organization could become Required capacities Solve increasingly complex problems Be proactive in approach Develop viable strategic options
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Patterns of Growth of Large Corporations Difficulties in implementing the leaders’ vision and strategies Lack of understanding of responsibility and accountability among managers Reward systems that do not motivate individuals and groups toward desired organizational goals Inadequate or inappropriate budgeting and control systems Insufficient mechanisms to coordinate and integrate activities across the organization
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Overcoming Barriers to Change and the Effective Use of Power Reasons why organizations and managers at all levels are prone to inertia and slow to learn, adapt, and change Vested interests in the status quo Systemic barriers Behavioral barriers Political barriers Personal time constraints
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A Leader’s Bases of Power
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11-14 Emotional Intelligence: A Key Leadership Trait Accounting, business planning, etc. Analytical reasoning, quantitative analysis, etc. Ability to work with others, passion for work, etc. Successful traits of leaders at the highest level Technical skills Cognitive abilities Emotional intelligence
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11-15 Emotional Intelligence Five components of emotional intelligence Self-awareness Self-regulation Motivation Empathy Social skill Emotional intelligence
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11-16 Five Components of Emotional Intelligence at Work Self- management skills: Self-awareness DefinitionHallmarks The ability to recognize and understand your moods, emotions, and drives, as well as their effect on others. Self-confidence Realistic self- assessment Self-deprecating sense of humor The ability to control or redirect disruptive impulses and moods. The propensity to suspend judgment—to think before acting. Trustworthiness and integrity Comfort with ambiguity Openness to change Source: Adapted from D. Goleman, “What Makes a Leader,” Harvard Business Review, October-November 1998, p. 95 (with permission) Self-regulation
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11-17 Five Components of Emotional Intelligence at Work motivation DefinitionHallmarks A passion to work for reasons that go beyond money or status. A propensity to pursue goals with energy and persistence. Strong drive to achieve Optimism, even in the face of failure Organizational commitment The ability to understand the emotional makeup of other people. Skill in treating people according to their emotional reactions. Expertise in building and retaining talent Cross-cultural sensitivity Service to clients and customers Self-management skills: Managing relationships Empathy
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11-18 Five Components of Emotional Intelligence at Work Social skill DefinitionHallmarks Proficiency in managing relationships and building networks. An ability to find common ground and build rapport. Effectiveness in leading change Persuasiveness Expertise in building and leading teams Managing relationships Source: Adapted from D. Goleman, “What Makes a Leader,” Harvard Business Review, October-November 1998, p. 95 (with permission)
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11-19 Developing a Learning Organization Successful learning organizations Create a proactive, creative approach to the unknown Actively solicit the involvement of employees at all levels Enable all employees to use their intelligence and apply their imagination
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11-20 Developing a Learning Organization Learning environment Organization-wide commitment to change An action orientation Applicable tools and methods Guiding philosophy Inspired and motivated people with a purpose
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11-21 Salient elements of empowerment Start at the bottom by understanding needs of employees Teach employees skills of self- management Build teams to encourage cooperative behavior Encourage intelligent risk taking Trust people to perform Four Critical Processes of Learning Organizations Empowering employees at all levels
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11-22 Four Critical Processes of Learning Organizations Empowering employees at all levels Accumulating and sharing internal knowledge “Open book” management Numbers on each employee’s work performance and production costs generated daily Information is aggregated once a week from top level to bottom level Extensive training in how to use and interpret the numbers – how to understand balance sheets, cash flows and income statements
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11-23 Four Critical Processes of Learning Organizations Awareness of environmental trends and events Internet accelerates the speed with which useful information can be located “Garden variety” traditional sources for acquisition of external information Benchmarking Focus directly on customers for information Empowering employees at all levels Accumulating and sharing internal knowledge Gathering and integrating external information
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11-24 Four Critical Processes of Learning Organizations Empowering employees at all levels Accumulating and sharing internal knowledge Gathering and integrating external information Challenging the status quo and enabling creativity Challenging the status quo Create a sense of urgency Establish a “culture of dissent” Foster a culture that encourages risk taking Cultivate culture of experimentation and curiosity
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11-25 Creating An Ethical Organization Organizational ethics is a direct reflection of its leadership Unethical business practices Involves tacit, if not explicit, cooperation of others Reflect the values, attitudes, and behavior pattern that define the organization’s operating culture
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11-26 Creating An Ethical Organization Driving forces of ethical organizations Ethical values Integrity Ethical values Shape the search for opportunities Shape the design organizational systems Shape the decision-making process used by individuals and groups Provide a common frame of reference that serves as a unifying force
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11-27 Nurturing a Culture In nurturing a culture dedicated to excellence and ethical behavior, managers and top executives must Accept personal responsibility for developing and strengthening ethical behavior Consistently demonstrate that such behavior is central to the vision and mission Develop and reinforce Role models Corporate credos Codes of conduct Reward and evaluation systems Policies and procedures
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11-28 Integrity-Based versus Compliance-Based Approaches to Organizational Ethics Essential links between organizational integrity and individual integrity Cannot be high-integrity organizations without high-integrity individuals Individual integrity is rarely self-sustaining Organizational integrity, resting on a concept of Purpose Responsibility Ideals
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11-29 Approaches to Ethics Management Ethics Conformity with externally Self-governance according to imposed standards chosen standards CharacteristicsCompliance-BasedIntegrity-BasedApproach ObjectivePrevent criminal Enable responsible conduct misconduct LeadershipLawyer-drivenManagement-driven with aid of lawyers, HR, and others
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11-30 Approaches to Ethics Management MethodsEducation, reduced Education, leadership, discretion, auditing and accountability, organizational controls, penalties systems and decision processes, auditing and controls, penalties CharacteristicsCompliance-BasedIntegrity-BasedApproach Behavioral Autonomous beings Social beings guided by Assumptionsguided by material material self-interest, values, self-interestideals, peers
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11-31 Key Elements of Highly Ethical Organizations McGraw-Hill/Irwin Strategic Management, 3/e Copyright © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. These interrelated elements must be present and constantly reinforced Role models Corporate credos and codes of conduct Reward and evaluation systems Policies and procedures
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11-32 Key Elements of Highly Ethical Organizations McGraw-Hill/Irwin Strategic Management, 3/e Copyright © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Leaders are role models for their organizations Leaders must be consistent in their words and deeds Values and character of leaders become transparent to an organization’s employees Effective leaders take responsibility for ethical lapses within the organization Role models
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11-33 Key Elements of Highly Ethical Organizations McGraw-Hill/Irwin Strategic Management, 3/e Copyright © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Provide a statement and guidelines for norms, beliefs and decision making Provide employees with clear understanding of the organizations position regarding employee behavior Provide the basis for employees to refuse to commit unethical acts Contents of credos and codes of conduct must be known to employees Role models Corporate credos and codes of conduct
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11-34 Key Elements of Highly Ethical Organizations McGraw-Hill/Irwin Strategic Management, 3/e Copyright © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Inappropriate reward systems may cause individuals at all levels of the organization to commit unethical acts that they might not otherwise do Penalties in terms of damage to reputations, human capital erosion, and financial loss are typically much higher than any gains that could be obtained through such unethical behavior Role models Corporate credos and codes of conduct Reward and evaluation systems
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11-35 Key Elements of Highly Ethical Organizations McGraw-Hill/Irwin Strategic Management, 3/e Copyright © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Policies and procedures can specify proper relationships with a firm’s customers and suppliers Policies and procedures can guide employees to behavior ethically Policies and procedures must be reinforced Effective communication Enforcement Monitoring Sound corporate governance practices Role models Corporate credos and codes of conduct Reward and evaluation systems Policies and procedures
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