Leadership 8e by DuBrin

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Leadership 8e by DuBrin is the 8th edition of the Leadership: Research Findings, Practice, and Skills textbook authored by Andrew J. DuBrin, Rochester Institute of Technology, and published in 2016 by Cengage Learning.

  • Achievement motivation. Finding joy in accomplishment for its own sake.
  • Assertiveness. Forthrightness in expressing demands, opinions, feelings, and attitudes. As a cultural value, the degree to which individuals are (and should be) assertive, confrontational, and aggressive in their relationships with one another.
  • Apprising. Influence tactic in which influence agent explains how carrying out a request or supporting a proposal will benefit the target personally, including advancing the target's career.
  • Authenticity. Being genuine and honest about your personality, values, and beliefs, as well as having integrity.
  • Autocratic leader. A person in charge who retains most of the authority for himself or herself.
  • Charisma. A special quality of leaders whose purposes, powers, and extraordinary determination differentiate them from others.
  • Coalition. A specific arrangement of parties working together to combine their power.
  • Coercive power. The power to punish for noncompliance; power based on fear.
  • Cognitive factors. Problem solving and intellectual skills collectively.
  • Commitment. The most successful outcome of a leader's influence tactic: The person makes a full effort.
  • Compliance. Partial success of an influence attempt by a leader: The person makes a modest effort.
  • Co-opt. To win over opponents by making them part of your team or giving them a stake in the system.
  • Consensus leader. The person in charge who encourages group discussion about an issue and then makes a decision that reflects general agreement and that group members will support.
  • Consideration. The degree to which the leader creates an environment of emotional support, warmth, friendliness, and trust.
  • Consultative leader. A person in charge who confers with group members before making a decision, but who retains the final authority to make decisions.
  • Contingency approach to leadership. The contention that leaders are most effective when they make their behavior contingent upon situational forces, including group member characteristics.
  • Cooperation theory. A belief in cooperation and collaboration rather than competitiveness as a strategy for building teamwork.
  • Core self-evaluations. A broad personality trait that captures bottom-line self-assessment, composed of self-esteem, locus of control, generalized self-efficacy, and emotional stability.
  • Corporate social responsibility. Responsibility of the organization that is part of external engagement, or the efforts a company makes to manage its relationship with the external world.
  • Creativity. The production of novel and useful ideas.
  • Crisis leadership. The process of leading group members through a sudden and largely unanticipated, intensely negative, and emotionally draining circumstance.
  • Cross-cultural training. A set of learning experiences designed to help employees understand the customs, traditions, and beliefs of another culture.
  • Crowdsourcing. The use of collective intelligence gathered from the public for accomplishing tasks, often by the use of social media.
  • Crucibles. Critical events and experiences that more often reflect failure than grand success.
  • Cultural intelligence (CQ). An outsider's ability to interpret someone's unfamiliar and ambiguous gestures the way that person's compatriots would.
  • Cultural sensitivity. An awareness of and a willingness to investigate the reasons why people of another culture act as they do.
  • Debasement. The act of demeaning or insulting oneself to control the behavior of another person.
  • Delegation. The assignment of formal authority and responsibility for accomplishing a specific task to another person.
  • Democratic leader. A person in charge who confers final authority on the group.
  • Dependence perspective. The point of view that a person accrues power by other being dependent on him or her for things they value.
  • Diversity training. A learning experience designed to bring about work-place harmony by teaching people how to get along better with diverse work associates.
  • Double-loop learning. An in-depth style of learning that occurs when people use feedback to confront the validity of the goal or the values implicit in the situation.
  • Drive. A propensity to put forth high energy into achieving goals and persistence in applying that energy.
  • Effective leader. One who helps group members attain productivity, including high quality and customer satisfaction, as well as job satisfaction.
  • E-leadership. A form of leadership practiced in a context where work is mediated by information technology.
  • Emergent leader. A group member who significantly influences another group member even though he or she has not been assigned formal authority.
  • Emotional intelligence. The ability to do such things as understand one's feelings, have empathy for others, and regulate one's emotions to enhance one's quality of life.
  • Employee network group (or affinity group). A group of employees throughout the company who affiliate on the basis of a group characteristic such as race, ethnicity, sex, sexual orientation, or physical ability status.
  • Empowerment. Passing decision-making authority and responsibility from managers to group members.
  • Engagement. The high levels of personal investment in the tasks performed on a job.
  • Entitlement. In relation to unethical behavior by executives, the idea that some CEOs lose their sense of reality and feel entitled to whatever they can get away with or steal.
  • Ethical mind. A point of view that helps the individual aspire to good work that matters to their colleagues, companies, and society in general.
  • Ethics. The study of moral obligations, or separating right from wrong.
  • Evidence-based leadership or management. The approach whereby managers translate principles based on best evidence into organizational practices.
  • Executive coaching. A one-on-one development process formally contracted between a coach and a management-level client to help achieve goals related to professional development and/or business performance.
  • Expectancy. An individual's assessment of the probability that effort will lead to correct performance of the task.
  • Expectancy theory. A theory of motivation based on the premise that the amount of effort people expend depends on how much reward they can expect in return.
  • Experience of flow. An experience so engrossing and enjoyable that the task becomes worth doing for its own sake, regardless of the external consequences.
  • Farsightedness. The ability to understand the long-range implications of actions and policies.
  • Feedback-intensive development program. A learning experience that helps leaders develop by seeing more clearly their patterns of behaviors, the reasons for such behaviors, and the impact of these behaviors and attitudes on their effectiveness.
  • Flexibility. The ability to adjust to different situations.
  • Future orientation. As a cultural value, the extent to which individuals engage (and should engage) in future-oriented behaviors such as delaying gratification, planning, and making investments for the future.
  • Gender egalitarianism. As a cultural value, the degree to which a culture minimizes, and should minimize, gender inequality.
  • Global leadership skills. The ability to exercise effective leadership in a variety of countries.
  • Goal. What a person is trying to accomplish.
  • Hands-on leader. A leader who gets directly involved in the details and process of operations.
  • Humane orientation. As a cultural value, the degree to which a society encourages and rewards, and should encourage and reward, individuals for being fair, altruistic, and caring others.
  • Implicit leadership theories. Personal assumptions about the traits and abilities that characterize an ideal organizational leader.
  • Influence. The ability to affect the behavior of others in a particular direction.
  • In-group collectivism. As a cultural value, the degree to which individuals express, and should express, pride, loyalty, and cohesiveness in their organizations and families.
  • Initiating structure. Organizing and defining relationships in the group by activities such as assigning specific tasks, specifying procedures to be followed, scheduling work, and clarifying expectations of team members.
  • Innovation. The process of creating new ideas and their implementation.
  • Insight. A depth of understanding that requires considerable intuition and common sense.
  • Instrumentality. An individual's assessment of the probability that performance will lead to certain outcomes.
  • Integrity. Loyalty to rational principles, thereby practicing what one preaches, regardless of emotional or social pressure.
  • Intergroup leadership. Leading a number of teams within the organization.
  • Knowledge management (KM). A concerted effort to improve how knowledge is created, delivered, and applied.
  • Leader-member exchange model (LMX model). An explanation of leadership proposing that leaders develop unique working relationships with group members.
  • Leader political support. Political acts and influence behaviors performed by leaders to provide followers with valuable resources to advance individual, group, or organizational objectives.
  • Leadership. The ability to inspire confidence and support among the people who are needed to achieve organizational goals.
  • Leadership diversity. The presence of a culturally heterogeneous group of leaders.
  • Leadership effectiveness. Attaining desirable outcomes such as productivity, quality, and satisfaction in a given situation.
  • [[Leadership GridTM]]. A framework for specifying the extent of a leader's concern for the production and people.
  • Leadership polarity. The disparity in views of leaders: They are revered or vastly unpopular, but people rarely feel neutral about them.
  • Leadership by storytelling. The technique of inspiring and instructing group members by telling fascinating stories.
  • Leadership style. The relatively consistent pattern of behavior that characterizes a leader.
  • Leadership succession. An orderly process of identifying and grooming people to replace executives.
  • Leading by example. Influencing others by acting as a positive role model.
  • Learning organization. An organization that is skilled at creating, acquiring, and transferring knowledge and at modifying behavior to reflect new knowledge and insights.
  • Legitimate power. The lawful right to make a decision and expect compliance.
  • Linguistic style. A person's characteristic speaking pattern.
  • Machiavellians. People in the work place who ruthlessly manipulate others.
  • Management openness. A set of leadership behaviors particularly relevant to subordinates' motivation to voice their opinion.
  • Making the rounds. The leader casually dropping by constituents to listen to their accomplishments, concern, and problems and to share information.
  • Meaningful work. The feeling of doing work that matters or makes a difference.
  • Mentor. A more experienced person who develops a protégé's abilities through tutoring, coaching, guidance, and emotional support.
  • Micromanagement. The close monitoring of most aspects of group member activities by the manager or leader.
  • Moral identity. The extent to which an individual holds morality as part of his or her self-concept.
  • Morals. An individual's determination of what is right or wrong influenced by his or her values.
  • Multicultural leader. A leader with the skills and attitudes to relate effectively to and motivate people across race, gender, age, social attitudes, and lifestyles.
  • Multicultural worker. A worker who is convinced that all cultures are equally good and enjoys learning about other cultures.
  • Normative decision model. A view of leadership as a decision-making process in which the leader examines certain factors within the situation to determine which decision-making style will be the most effective.
  • Open-book management. An approach to management in which every employee is trained, empowered, and motivated to understand and pursue the company's business goals.
  • Organizational politics. Informal approaches to gaining power through means other than merit or luck.
  • Outcome. Anything that might stem from performance, such as a reward.
  • Participative leader. A person in charge who shares decision making with group members.
  • Path-goal theory. An explanation of leadership effectiveness that specifies what the leader must do to achieve high productivity and morale in a given situation.
  • Performance orientation. As a cultural value, the degree to which a society encourages (or should encourage) and rewards group member for performance improvement and excellence.
  • Personal brand. Your basket of strengths that makes you unique.
  • Personal magnetism. A captivating, inspiring personality with charm and charismatic-like qualities.
  • Personal power. Power derived from the person rather than from the organization.
  • Personalized charismatic. A charismatic leader who exercises few restraints on the use of power in order to best serve his or her own interests.
  • Pet-peeve technique. A method of brainstorming in which a group identifies all the possible complaints others might have about the group's organizational unit.
  • Positive psychological capital. An individual's positive psychological state of development, characterized by four psychological resources: self-efficacy, hope, optimism, and resilience.
  • Power. The potential or ability to influence decisions and control resources.
  • Power distance. As a cultural value, the degree to which members of a society expect, and should expect, power to be distributed unequally.
  • Practical intelligence. The ability to solve everyday problems by using experience-based knowledge to adapt to and shape the environment.
  • Prestige power. The power stemming from one's status and reputation.
  • Proactive personality. A relatively stable tendency to effect environmental change.
  • Pygmalion effect. The situation that occurs when a managerial leader believes that a group member will succeed and communicates this belief without realizing it.
  • Resistance. The state that occurs when an influence attempt by a leader is unsuccessful: The target is opposed to carrying out the request and finds ways to either not comply or do a poor job.
  • Reward power. The authority to give employees rewards for compliance.
  • Self-awareness. Insightfully processing feedback about oneself to improve personal effectiveness.
  • Self-discipline. The ability to mobilize one's efforts to stay focused on attaining an important goal.
  • Self-efficacy. The confidence in one's ability to carry out a specific task.
  • Self-leadership. The idea that all organizational members are capable of leading themselves, at least to some extent.
  • Servant leader. One who serves constituents by working on their behalf to help them achieve their goals, not the leader's own goals.
  • Shadowing. An approach to mentoring in which the trainee follows the mentor around for a stated period of time.
  • Single-loop learning. A situation in which learners seek minimum feedback that might substantially confront their basic ideas or actions.
  • Situational Leadership II (SLII). A model of leadership that explains how to match the leadership style to capabilities of group members on a given task.
  • Social entrepreneurship. The use of market-based methods to solve social problems.
  • Socialized charismatic. A charismatic leader who restrains the use of power in order to benefit others.
  • Strategic contingency theory. An explanation of sources of power suggesting that units best able to cope with the firm's critical problems and uncertainties acquire relatively large amounts of power.
  • Strategic leadership. The process of creating or sustaining an organization by providing the right direction and inspiration.
  • Strategic planning. Those activities that lead to the statement of goals and objectives and the choice of strategy.
  • Strategy. An integrated, overall concept of how the firm will achieve its objectives.
  • Substitutes for leadership. Factors in the work environment that provide guidance and incentives to perform, making the leader's role almost superfluous.
  • SWOT analysis. A method of considering internal strengths, weaknesses, and external opportunities and threats in a given situation.
  • Team. A work group that must rely on collaboration if each member is to experience the optimum success and achievement.
  • Teamwork. Work done with an understanding and commitment to group goals on the part of all team members.
  • Territorial games. Also referred to as turf wars, political tactics that involve protecting and hoarding resources that give one power, such as information, relationships, and decision-making authority.
  • 360-degree feedback. A formal evaluation of superiors based on input from people who work for and with them, sometimes including customers and suppliers.
  • Time orientation. As a cultural value, the importance nations and individuals attach to time.
  • Tough question. One that makes a person or group stop and think about why they are doing or not doing something.
  • Transformational leader. A leader who brings about positive, major changes in an organization.
  • Trust. A person's confidence in another individual's intentions and motives and in the sincerity of that individual's word.
  • Uncertainty avoidance. As a cultural value, the extent to which members of a society rely (and should rely) on social norms, rules, and procedures to lessen the unpredictability of future events.
  • Upward appeal. A means of influence in which the leader enlists a person with more formal authority to do the influencing.
  • Valence. The worth or attractiveness of an outcome.
  • Virtuous circle. The idea that corporate social performance and corporate financial performance feed and reinforce each other.
  • Vision. The ability to imagine different and better conditions and ways to achieve them.
  • Whistleblower. An employee who discloses organizational wrongdoing to parties who can take action.
  • Win-win approach to conflict resolution. The belief that after conflict has been resolved, both sides should gain something of value.
  • Work orientation. As a cultural value, the number of hours per week and weeks per year people expect to invest in work versus leisure, or other nonwork activities.