Substitutes for leadership theory is a
leadership
Leadership, both as a research area and as a practical skill, encompasses the ability of an individual, group or organization to "lead", influence or guide other individuals, teams, or entire organizations. The word "leadership" often gets v ...
theory
A theory is a rational type of abstract thinking about a phenomenon, or the results of such thinking. The process of contemplative and rational thinking is often associated with such processes as observational study or research. Theories may ...
first developed by Steven Kerr and John M. Jermier and published in
Organisational Behaviour and Human Performance in December 1978.
The theory states that different situational factors can enhance, neutralise, or substitute for leader behaviours
(Den Hartog & Koopman, 2001). It has received criticism for shortcomings due to perceived
methodological
In its most common sense, methodology is the study of research methods. However, the term can also refer to the methods themselves or to the philosophical discussion of associated background assumptions. A method is a structured procedure for bri ...
issues.
4]
Empirical research
Empirical research is research using empirical evidence. It is also a way of gaining knowledge by means of direct and indirect observation or experience. Empiricism values some research more than other kinds. Empirical evidence (the record of on ...
has produced mixed results as to its ability to predict subordinate outcomes.
Origins
Over the years, researchers have developed many
leadership theories. Prior to the 1970s,
trait leadership theory and
path-goal theory were the two heavily researched theories. (Den Hartog & Koopman, 2001). Proponents of trait leadership theory held that the ability to lead is a characteristic some people innately have and others do not. The effort was put forth to uncover which characteristics and abilities leaders had that separated them from non-leaders.
Leadership
Leadership, both as a research area and as a practical skill, encompasses the ability of an individual, group or organization to "lead", influence or guide other individuals, teams, or entire organizations. The word "leadership" often gets v ...
style was another angle researchers took. Proponents of this approach did not believe the ability to lead was innate; rather, it was a set of behaviours anyone could learn (Den Hartog & Koopman, 2001).
In the mid-1970s, a great deal of research was dedicated to the
contingency model and path-goal theory.
The contingency model stated that various leadership styles would be more or less effective depending on the situation.
(Den Hartog & Koopman, 2001; Fiedler, 1965). The path-goal theory proposed that subordinates would be satisfied with their leader if they perceived that their leader's
behaviour
Behavior (American English) or behaviour ( British English) is the range of actions and mannerisms made by individuals, organisms, systems or artificial entities in some environment. These systems can include other systems or organisms as w ...
would bring them future satisfaction. Subordinates would be motivated by their leader if they perceived that completing work tasks would bring them satisfaction and if the leader provided proper coaching, support, rewards, and guidance. Frustrations with not being able to find significant results with anyone's theory resulted in the development of reexaminations and new approaches, including questioning which situations necessitated a leader figure and which did not (Den Hartog & Koopman, 2001).
Steven Kerr and Anne Harlan were two of the researchers who publicly expressed their frustrations with current leadership theories. In the 1970s, Kerr was at
Ohio State University
The Ohio State University, commonly called Ohio State or OSU, is a public land-grant research university in Columbus, Ohio. A member of the University System of Ohio, it has been ranked by major institutional rankings among the best pu ...
, actively involved in leadership research. Kerr was studying existing proposed subordinate constructs such as organisational independence
and proposed leadership constructs such as consideration and initiating structure (put forth by the Ohio State Leadership Studies).
Subordinates who are organisational independents do not feel tied to one company and are internally motivated instead of motivated by the characteristics of the organisation, such as leader behavior.
Leaders are high on initiating structure to clarify their own roles and their subordinates’ roles in obtaining a goal.
Kerr and colleagues noticed many studies had found significant
moderators that played a part in the relationship between initiating structure, leader behaviour, and subordinate outcomes. For example, when a task was ambiguous, the relationship between the leader initiating structure and subordinate satisfaction was stronger than if the task was clear. These findings made it apparent that there were variables that affected the relationship between leader behaviour and subordinate outcomes, making the relationship stronger or weaker.
In 1973, Kerr was the first to coin substitutes for leadership as elements in the work setting that lessened leader effectiveness on subordinate outcomes. Further publications
led to Kerr and Jermier's 1978 paper, which unveiled substitutes for leadership theory. This paper presented two types of elements in the job environment: substitutes and neutralizers. These elements were proposed to serve as moderators in the relationship between leader behaviour and subordinate outcomes.
The theory originally classified substitutes as characteristics of the subordinate, characteristics of the task, and characteristics of the organization. Howell, Dorfman, and Kerr proposed an alteration to the theory in terms of subordinate classification. They argued that moderators should be grouped based on their effect on the criteria. The original theory had already proposed moderators that act as substitutes and moderators that act as neutralizers. Howell and colleagues added enhancers to these.
Substitutes for leadership theory were a heavily researched area until the late 1980s, when
transformational leadership became the focus of the majority of leadership research.
Definitions
Substitutes for leadership theory
Substitutes for leadership theory states that different situational factors can enhance, neutralize, or substitute for leader behaviors
(Den Hartog & Koopman, 2001).
Substitutes
Substitutes are variables that make leadership unnecessary for subordinates
and reduce the extent to which subordinates rely on their leader
Examples of substitutes
* Characteristics of the subordinate
** Subordinate ability
** Subordinate's professional orientation
* Characteristics of the task
** Unambiguous and routine task (when all subordinates are performing menial labor, there is little role leadership can play; Den Hartog & Koopman, 2001)
** Task that provides its own feedback as to how well the task is being done
** Task that is intrinsically satisfying
* Characteristics of the organization
** Cohesive work groups (a tight-knit group of employees has less need for a leader; Den Hartog & Koopman, 2001)
** Organizational formulation (clear job goals that are written down, performance appraisals that are written down;
Kerr and Jermier, 1987)
** Self-managed work teams (employees rely on each other, not their leader)
Enhancers
Enhancers are variables that serve to strengthen leaders influence on subordinate outcomes
(Den Hartog & Koopman, 2001
Examples of enhancers
** Characteristics of the subordinate
*** Subordinates having experience (those more experienced will be able to translate even the most ambiguous instructions into results
** Characteristics of the task
*** Task is non-routine
** Characteristics of the organisation
*** Having group norms that encourage cooperation with leaders (Den Hartog & Koopman, 2001)
*** A leader having the ability to reward subordinates
Neutralizers
* Neutralizers are variables that serve to weaken or block the leader's influence on subordinate outcomes
(Den Hartog & Koopman, 2001).
Examples of neutralizers
*** Characteristics of the subordinate
**** Subordinates are indifferent when it comes to rewards
*** Characteristics of the organisation
**** Whether or not subordinates are rewarded is not the leader's decision
*** Kerr & Jermier never specified an example of a task characteristic that acts as a neutralizer.
Scales used to measure
Kerr and Jermier
** The original scale to measure the effects of various substitutes was developed by Kerr and Jermier. They assessed leadership substitutes via a questionnaire that contained thirteen subscales with a total of 55 items. The items were on a
Likert scale
A Likert scale ( , commonly mispronounced as ) is a psychometric scale commonly involved in research that employs questionnaires. It is the most widely used approach to scaling responses in survey research, such that the term (or more fully th ...
ranging from 1 (almost always untrue or completely untrue) to 5 (almost always true or almost completely true). The subscales included were:
**# Ability, experience, training, and knowledge
**# Professional orientation
**# Indifference towards organisational rewards
**# Unambiguous, routine, and methodically invariant tasks
**# Task-provided feedback concerning accomplishment
**# Intrinsically satisfying tasks
**# Organisational formalisation
**# Organisational inflexibility
**# Advisory and staff functions
**# Close-knit, cohesive, interdependent work groups
**# Organisational rewards are not within the leader's control.
**# Spatial distance between superiors and subordinates
**# Subordinate need for independence
Kerr and Jermier tested nine of these subscales in a lab setting and found that they were independent and had adequate internal reliability. They claim that the subscales produce easily interpretable data that describes the extent to which substitutes for leadership are present or absent in a given work situation. They went on to test their subscales in a field setting using police officers and concluded that the subscales met acceptable standards of reliability and can be used to assess the
validity
Validity or Valid may refer to:
Science/mathematics/statistics:
* Validity (logic), a property of a logical argument
* Scientific:
** Internal validity, the validity of causal inferences within scientific studies, usually based on experiments
...
of the substitutes for leadership construct in future studies.
Podsakoff, Niehoff, MacKenzie, and Williams
Podsakoff, Niehoff, MacKenzie, and Williams noted that studies testing the substitutes for leadership model had not been fully supportive of the theory and believed that one reason for this may be that the quality of the scale developed by Kerr and Jermier to measure the substitutes constructs may be to blame. In response to this, they designed their own 74-item list of substitutes for leadership. To test their scale, they administered it to 372 business students. Their analyses of the
psychometric
Psychometrics is a field of study within psychology concerned with the theory and technique of measurement. Psychometrics generally refers to specialized fields within psychology and education devoted to testing, measurement, assessment, and ...
properties of the revised measure revealed their scale to be superior to Kerr and Jermier's scale, as evidenced by the better
dimensionality
In physics and mathematics, the dimension of a mathematical space (or object) is informally defined as the minimum number of coordinates needed to specify any point within it. Thus, a line has a dimension of one (1D) because only one coordi ...
and
reliability
Reliability, reliable, or unreliable may refer to:
Science, technology, and mathematics Computing
* Data reliability (disambiguation), a property of some disk arrays in computer storage
* High availability
* Reliability (computer networking), ...
of the revised scale.
Consequences
Kerr and Jermier proposed that substitute variables should render leader behaviours unable to predict subordinate outcomes.
Researchers that have tested this characteristic of substitutes have found mixed results.
A study involving hospital personnel found that tasks that gave feedback regarding performance were negatively correlated with
job satisfaction
Job satisfaction, employee satisfaction or work satisfaction is a measure of workers' contentedness with their job, whether they like the job or individual aspects or facets of jobs, such as nature of work or supervision. Job satisfaction can be ...
. Routine, repetitive work tasks were correlated with
organisational commitment. Intrinsically satisfying work, organisational formulation, and cohesive workgroups were substitutes that were significantly correlated with both job satisfaction and organisational commitment. However, they found little evidence that substitutes prevented or replaced a leader's effect on subordinate job satisfaction or organisational commitment. The only substitute that served as a replacement was organisational formulation, which replaced leader behaviour's predictive power in explaining subordinate job satisfaction and organisational commitment.
Another study looked at 1,235 employees working for 265 leaders in a variety of job settings. Among their findings were that intrinsically satisfying tasks were positively related to subordinate satisfaction, indifference to rewards was negatively related to
organisational commitment, and the organisational formulation was negatively related to subordinate perceptions of role
ambiguity
Ambiguity is the type of meaning in which a phrase, statement or resolution is not explicitly defined, making several interpretations plausible. A common aspect of ambiguity is uncertainty. It is thus an attribute of any idea or statement w ...
. The researchers in this study concluded that substitutes for leadership were useful in predicting subordinate outcomes, but leader behaviours and substitutes should always be studied together because together they explained about a third of the total
variance
In probability theory and statistics, variance is the expectation of the squared deviation of a random variable from its population mean or sample mean. Variance is a measure of dispersion, meaning it is a measure of how far a set of number ...
in subordinate outcomes in their sample.
A more recent study conducted by Dionne and colleagues
collected data from 940 subordinates. Unsatisfied with the fact that prior studies had tested substitutes, enhancers, and neutralizers as moderators, they tested the effect of substitutes as
mediators as well as moderators. Testing a variety of different substitutes and outcomes, the researchers found only very weak evidence that substitutes make a difference and concluded that leader behaviours are the only important variable in predicting employee outcomes.
Podsakoff, MacKenzie, and Bommer conducted a
meta-analysis
A meta-analysis is a statistical analysis that combines the results of multiple scientific studies. Meta-analyses can be performed when there are multiple scientific studies addressing the same question, with each individual study reporting m ...
in which they took the results of 22 studies that examined the main effect of substitutes for leadership on the relationship between leader behaviours and subordinate outcomes. They found evidence supporting the theory that taking into account both leader behaviours and the effect of substitutes accounted for more of the variance in subordinate outcomes than taking into account leader behaviours alone.
Applications
Autonomous work groups
Bass (1990) suggested that
autonomous work groups could substitute for formal leadership. In this scenario, employees are divided into groups that are responsible for managing their own day-to-day work (i.e., collective control over the pace, distribution of tasks, organisation of breaks, recruitment, and training; Gulowsen, 1972). A
quasi-experiment found that implementing autonomous workgroups of 8 to 12 shop-floor employees in a manufacturing setting positively affected both the intrinsic and extrinsic job satisfaction of employees while obviating some supervisory positions.
Self-management
Self-management is defined by Thoresen and Mahoney (1974) as occurring when an individual behaves in a way he would not normally behave and there are no external forces dictating that the person maintain that behavior. Self-management requires self-observation (e.g., keeping a log of what one has discussed with others on the phone), specification of goals (e.g., being responsible for setting one's own schedule and priorities), cueing strategies (e.g., putting a checkout board by the exit to remind an employee to let their secretary know where they are going and when they expect to return), rehearsal (e.g., recording one's presentation to clients and making corrections as needed), self-evaluation (e.g., using a chart to keep track of work quality and quantity), and self-reinforcement (accomplished by building intrinsic rewards for the performance of tasks; Bass, 1990; Manz & Sims 1980). These strategies can be understood as substitutes for leadership. Instead of requiring that a supervisor monitor a subordinate's progress on a work task, a subordinate can self-manage by utilising one of the strategies listed above. This makes the supervisor's guidance unnecessary for the subordinate.
Criticisms and methodological problems with research
Common-source bias
Dionne and colleagues argued that the significant effects of substitutes found in prior studies may be a statistical artefact due to ''
common-source bias'', or bias occurring when independent and dependent variables are collected from the same person or group of people. In a study sampling 49 organisations, Dionne and colleagues controlled for the effect of common-source bias and found no moderating or mediating effects of substitutes on the relationship between leader behaviour and group effectiveness.
In a study by Podsakoff and Mackenzie, the predictor variables, as well as the job attitude and role perception variables, were both taken from individual employees, while the performance measures were taken from supervisors. They found that their predictors accounted for a higher proportion of variance in job attitudes and role perceptions than in employee performance. They posit that the reason for this was that their predictors shared a common source with the job attitudes and role perception criterion measures but not with the employee performance criterion measures. They suggested that common-source bias may not be the only reason for this, but that it should be controlled in future research.
Lack of longitudinal studies
Keller conducted a
longitudinal study
A longitudinal study (or longitudinal survey, or panel study) is a research design that involves repeated observations of the same variables (e.g., people) over short or long periods of time (i.e., uses longitudinal data). It is often a type of ...
in which he pointed out that the vast majority of studies conducted on substitutes for leadership theory are
cross-sectional
Cross-sectional data, or a cross section of a study population, in statistics and econometrics, is a type of data collected by observing many subjects (such as individuals, firms, countries, or regions) at the one point or period of time. The anal ...
in nature, making it more difficult to discern a causal relationship between substitutes and their effects on employee performance. Cross-sectional research is focused on finding relationships between variables at a specific point in time, whereas longitudinal studies involve taking multiple measures over a longer period of time. Keller's longitudinal study of the effect of substitutes on research and development teams found that two of the seven substitutes (ability and intrinsic satisfaction) affected team performance over time.
Conceptual weakness
Yukl (1998) pointed out that it is hard to identify specific substitutes and neutralizers for broad behaviour categories and that an improvement on the theory would be to use more specific behaviours in place of "supportive and instrumental leadership haviors." Yukl said that recent studies testing the theory have used specific behaviours (e.g., contingent reward behaviour and role clarification); however, the development of the theory does not reflect these developments.
Closely related constructs
Contingency model
The
contingency model of leadership was developed by Fred Fiedler in the 1960s after Fiedler spent 12 years collecting data from over 800 groups of employees. This model predicts that the most effective method of leadership will vary depending on the situation. A study that supported the model was one Fiedler did with 48 petty officers and 240 recruiters at a Belgian naval training centre (Fiedler, 1965). Fiedler found that a leader's fit with the group and the task was more important in predicting outcomes than the leader's characteristics. For example, controlling leaders work best with heterogeneous groups with low positional power.
(Fiedler, 1965). There are many different theories within the contingency paradigm that differ on what situational factors change leadership effectiveness. The most influential theory within this model is the path-goal theory (Den Hartog & Koopman, 2001).
Path-goal theory
Proposed by Robert House in 1971,
path-goal theory predicts that subordinates will be satisfied with their leader if they feel their leader's behavior will lead them to satisfaction. Also, subordinates will be motivated when they feel that their satisfaction depends on their performance and their leader acts in a way to help them reach goals (Den Hartog & Koopman, 2001; House, 1971). Path-goal theory predicts that when goals and the paths to those goals are clear, subordinates may not need leader guidance (Kerr & Jermier, 1978).
See also
*
Leadership
Leadership, both as a research area and as a practical skill, encompasses the ability of an individual, group or organization to "lead", influence or guide other individuals, teams, or entire organizations. The word "leadership" often gets v ...
*
Industrial and organizational psychology
Industrial and organizational psychology (I-O psychology), an applied discipline within psychology, is the science of human behavior in the workplace. Depending on the country or region of the world, I-O psychology is also known as occupational ...
*
Path–goal theory
*
Contingency Model
*
Fiedler contingency model
References
* Bass, B. M. (1990). ''Bass & Stogdill's handbook of leadership: Theory, research, and managerial applications'' (3rd ed.). New York, NY: Free Press.
* Den Hartog, D. N., & Koopman, P. L. (2002). Leadership in organizations. In N. Anderson, D. S. Ones, H. K. Sinangil, & C. Viswesvaran (Eds.), ''Handbook of industrial, work and organizational psychology, Volume 2: Organizational psychology'' (166-187). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, Inc.
* Fiedler, E. (1965). A contingency model of leadership effectiveness. In H. Proshansky, & B. Seidenberg (Eds.), ''Basic studies in social psychology'' (538-551). New York, NY: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston.
* Gulowsen, J. (1972). A measure of work group autonomy. In L. E. Davis, & J. C. Taylor (Eds.), ''Design of jobs'' (374-390). Harmondsworth, UK: Penguin.
* House, R. J. (1971). A path-goal theory of leader effectiveness. ''Administrative Science Quarterly'', ''16,'' 321-338.
* Manz, C. C., & Sims, H. P. (1992). The potential for "groupthink" in autonomous work groups. In R. Glaser (Ed.), 'Classic readings in self-managing teamwork: 20 of the most important articles'' (401-411). King of Prussia, PA: Organization Design and Development.
* Thoreson, C. E., & Mahoney, M. J. (1974). ''Behavioral self-control.'' New York, NY: Holt, Rinehart, & Winston.
* Yukl, G. (1998). ''Leadership in organizations'' (4th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
External links
6.7 SUBSTITUTES FOR LEADERSHIP
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Leadership studies