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Part of the book series: Management for Professionals ((MANAGPROF))

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Abstract

Leadership is defined as the way of motivating and directing a group of people to jointly work toward achieving common goals and objectives (Helmold & Samara, 2019; Fatma, 2015). The leader is the person in the group that possesses the combination of personality and leadership skills that makes others want to follow his or her direction. Leadership implies formal and informal power distribution. The Tannenbaum-Schmidt leadership continuum is a model showing the relationship between the level of authority you use as a leader and the freedom this allows your team (Tannenbaum & Schmidt, 2009). At one end of the continuum are managers who simply tell their employees what to do. At the other end of the continuum are managers who are completely hands off. As you move from one end of the continuum to the other, the level of freedom you give your team will increase and your use of authority will decrease. Most managers and leaders will lie somewhere in the middle between these two extremes (Fig. 14.1). The leadership continuum was developed by Robert Tannenbaum and Warren Schmidt in their 1958 Harvard Business Revie (HBR) article: “How to Choose a Leadership Pattern.” Tannenbaum was an organizational psychologist and professor at the UCLA Anderson School of Management. Schmidt was also a psychologist who taught at the UCLA Anderson School of Management. Most leadership models ring-fence a leadership style and analyze it in isolation from other leadership styles. However, in practice, a single leadership style is not appropriate for all situations. Sometimes you might want to borrow elements of another leadership style to use with an individual within your team. Other times you might completely change your style if the situation requires it. Tannenbaum and Schmidt argued that there are certain questions to be considered when selecting a leadership style (Fig. 14.2):

The Toyota style is not to create results by working hard. It is a system that says there is no limit to people’s creativity. People don’t go to Toyota to “work” they go there to “think.”(Taiichi Ohno (1912–1990))

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References

  • Fatma, P. (2015). The effect of organizational culture on implementing and sustaining lean processes. Journal of Manufacturing Technology Management, 26(5), 725–743.

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  • Helmold, M., & Samara, W. (2019). Progress in performance management. Industry insights and case studies on principles, application tools, and practice (Management for professionals). Springer.

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  • Helmold, M., & Terry, B. (2021). Operations and supply management 4.0. Industry insights, case studies and best practices. Springer.

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  • Tannenbaum, R., & Schmidt, W. H. (2009). How to choose a leadership pattern (Harvard business review classics). Harvard Business Press.

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Helmold, M. (2023). Leadership in Quality Management. In: Virtual and Innovative Quality Management Across the Value Chain. Management for Professionals. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-30089-9_14

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