[Empowering Communication thru the Leadership-Followership Process at a Southern Christian Organization]
By
Acknowledgement
I would take this opportunity to thank my research supervisor, family and friends for their support and guidance without which this research would not have been possible.
DECLARATION
I, [type your full first names and surname here], declare that the contents of this dissertation/thesis represent my own unaided work, and that the dissertation/thesis has not previously been submitted for academic examination towards any qualification. Furthermore, it represents my own opinions and not necessarily those of the University.
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ABSTRACT
We sought to establish whether mean level within-team assessments of a leader's transformational behavior and the extent of perceived variability (i.e., consensus) among team members' ratings around this mean level are separate yet related indicators of leader quality. To this end, using data from 108 work teams in a multinational field setting, we explored the relationship between managers' transformational leadership behavior and team performance as moderated by the extent of variability among team members' leadership behavior ratings. Recognizing that the relationship between leader behavior and team performance is indirect, we further examined whether team empowerment served as a mediating mechanism through which transformational leadership is evoked. Study results, based on ordinary least squares (OLS) regression analyses and bootstrapped estimates, were consistent with the hypothesized conceptual scheme of moderated mediation, in that the joint effects of transformational leadership behavior and consensus about transformational leadership were found to have an indirect effect on team performance through team empowerment. These findings broaden the focus of transformational leadership theory by illustrating that, within a team context, the transformational leadership-performance linkage is more nuanced than previously believed.
Table of Contents
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTII
DECLARATIONIII
ABSTRACTIV
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION1
Aims of the Study2
Follower-Centric Approach to Leadership: Conceptual Issues and Empirical Findings3
CHAPTER 2: LITERATURE REVIEW5
Theoretical Foundation and Construct Definition of IFTs6
Theoretical Relevance of IFTs8
Analytic Issues12
Leadership and Perceptions13
Level of analysis17
Leadership Behavior18
Social Influence22
Underlying processes23
Partitioning of variance24
Level of analysis25
Comparison of Leadership Perceptions, Behavior, and Influence26
Consensus among Team Members' Leadership Perceptions29
Empirical Research on Leadership Consensus30
Theoretical Model And Hypotheses32
The Mediating Role of Team Empowerment33
The Moderating Role of Consensus about Transformational Leadership35
CHAPTER 3: METHODOLGY38
Participants and Procedure38
Measures40
Transformational Leadership Behavior40
Transformational Leadership Consensus40
Team Empowerment40
Team Performance41
Controls42
Data analyses43
Data Aggregation and Confirmatory Factor Analyses45
CHAPTER 4: RESULTS48
Preliminary Tests48
Integrated test of the Study's Hypotheses49
Possibility of alternative models53
CHAPTER 5: DISCUSSION54
CHAPTER 6: CONCLUSION60
Limitations and Future Research62
Contributions to the Literature64
Implications for Research and Practice66
Summary68
REFERENCES69
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION
In an effort to understand the antecedents of job performance, leadership research has traditionally emphasized the relationship between managers and subordinates as individuals. With the widespread shift to team based organizations, however, there is mounting evidence that a manager's leadership behavior in supervising subordinates as a group influences the performance in and of teams. Recognizing this shift in emphasis has observed that a focus on group methods of leadership raises a series of yet unanswered questions (Chen, 2007). For example, what compromises may occur when managing both individuals and teams as a whole? Do efforts to lead and motivate teams affect individual leader-follower interactions, and what are the likely consequences for one-on-one relationships between team members?