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Situational Leadership

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Leading with Impact Workbook
SITUATIONAL LEADERSHIP
Course Overview
Welcome to Performance Management. To support your ongoing development and set you up
for success, we have created the Leading with Impact Series. This workshop has been
designed to focus on the key skills you will need to help others develop, learn new skills, and
find their personal success.
Learning Objectives
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Define Situational Leadership
Understand your leadership style and adapt it according to the situation
Apply the Situational Leadership Model to manage your people more effectively
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Leading with Impact Workbook
Situational Leadership
Situational Leadership is based on the premise that to be an effective manager, you must:
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Be comfortable with more than one style
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Recognize which style to use based on the situation
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Be open to discussing your leadership style
The Situational Leadership Model
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Situational Leadership Profiles
Profile S1/S3
• See some people as lazy, unreliable, and
irresponsible
• Think people need to be coerced, rewarded,
punished and closely supervises them.
• Leaders who adapt this style often are doing little to
develop the potential of the people they don’t like.
Profile S1/S4
• Suggest that if you are competent you will be left
alone, but if you are incompetent, they will closely
supervise your activities.
• “Telling” or “delegating” style.
• Leaders with this style are effective at crisis
intervention.
Profile S1/S2
• Tend to be able to raise and lower their relationship
behavior, but they often feel uncomfortable unless
they are providing the structure and direction.
• Also tends to be characteristic of employees who
have become supervisors of other employees but
are reluctant to give up doing the work.
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Situational Leadership Profiles cont.
Profile S2/ S3
• Do well working with people of average levels of
readiness, but they find it difficult to handle discipline
problems and low readiness work groups.
• Have difficulty delegating to competent people.
Profile S2/S4
• Feel less secure if they are not providing much of the
direction as well as developing a personal relationship
with people in an environment characterized by twoway communication (high supportive behavior).
• Only occasionally do leaders with this style find a
person to whom they feel comfortable delegating.
Profile S3/S4
• While this style profile is appropriate for working with
moderate to high levels of development, it may
undergo problems with inexperienced people who
require more direction during the early phases of the
developmental cycle.
• Common with leaders that have a competent staff that
needs little direction from the “top.”
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Situational Leadership Assessment Observations & Learnings
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Leading with Impact Workbook
Competence and Commitment
To determine which leadership style is most appropriate, assess the situation and the needs of
your people.
Competence
Task Knowledge and skill
Experience
Transferable skills
Commitment
Motivation
Confidence
Competence (or skill) refers to whether the person has the expertise, the training, and the
ability to perform a task to the standards required.
Commitment (or will) refers to whether the person has the motivation and confidence to
perform the task to the standards required.
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Developmental Levels
Enthusiastic Beginner- These individuals tend to be new to a role or trying something for the
first time. They lack the skills, knowledge, and experience, but they are excited about the work.
Disillusioned Learner- These individuals tend to be frustrated, unmotivated, and lacking the
necessary skills and abilities to perform.
Capable but Cautious Performer- These individuals tend to have the skills and abilities
required for the role but lack the interest and the motivation to get things done. They know the
job, but their heart isn’t in it.
Self-Reliant Achiever- These are high performing individuals, possessing the skills and abilities
to get things done while enjoying doing it. This is what we all strive to be!
Activity
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Think about a direct report, client, manager or colleague with whom you work. On the diagram
provided, plot a point that represents your assessment of the individual’s development level.
Please list some of the reasons that lead you to make this assessment.
Notes
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Applying Your Style
Directing- A directing style tends to work well with enthusiastic beginners. These are individuals
that need and appreciate close guidance and direction.
Coaching- A coaching style tends to work well with disillusioned learners. Individuals who find
themselves here need leaders that help them break out of their circumstances by finding a role
or a project that impacts their motivation (moving them toward D1) or that taps into their skills
(moving them toward D3).
Supporting- A supporting style works well with capable but cautious performers. These
individuals benefit from a style that requires them to reflect on their real interests, the things that
motivate them most, so that they can ultimately make the necessary changes.
Delegating- A delegating style works well with self-reliant achievers. These individuals tend to
thrive when they’re given the autonomy to make decisions and get things done their way.
Three Skills of a Situational Leader
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Diagnosis
The ability to assess an individuals need for direction and support (their development level).
Flexibility
The ability to use a variety of leadership styles comfortably.
Partnering for Performance
The ability to create agreements about what you and your team members need from each
other as you work together.
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Leading with Impact Workbook
Situational Leadership Takeaway
I plan to incorporate the following concepts and/or tasks based on what I have learned
about this topic:
1.
2.
3.
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