Text of Transactional Leadership THE TRANSACTIONAL – TRANSFORMATIONAL LEADERSHIP TYPOLOGY AND TRAITS OF...
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Transactional Leadership THE TRANSACTIONAL TRANSFORMATIONAL
LEADERSHIP TYPOLOGY AND TRAITS OF TRANSACTIONAL LEADERS
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History of the Theory Max Weber first described
Transactional-type leadership, calling it Legal-Rational authority
This is one of three sources of authority: 1.Charismatic
2.Traditional 3.Legal-Rational (Transactional) For Weber,
Legal-Rational authority is the most stable, and therefore the most
mature form
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History of the Theory James MacGregor Burns, and later Bernard
Bass, developed the Transactional vs Transformational leadership
typology MacGregor Burns defines leadership as: Leaders inducing
followers to act for certain goals that represent the values and
the motivationthe wants and needs, the aspirations and expectations
of both followers and leaders (Leadership, 1978) The
Transactional-Transformational typology focuses on the leaders
actions and the leader-follower interaction, rather than the
internal processes of the leader
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Transactional vs Transformational The two types of leadership
differ based on the nature of the interaction between leaders and
followers Transactional: Initiative taken for purpose of exchanging
valued things Transformational: Leaders and followers engage to
raise one another to higher levels of motivation and morality
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Transactional Leadership Leader and followers pursue joint
purpose Leader takes initiative to make contact, with the purpose
of mutually beneficial exchange Examples: Political: Logrolling
votes in Congress; Politician exchanges promises for votes
Economic: Exchanging commodity for money; labor for a wage Social:
Teacher gives grade for coursework However, there is no enduring
purpose that binds the leader and follower together
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Maslows Hierarchy of Needs Transactional Leadership focuses on
process rather than innovation Focus is on reward and punishment
Transactional Leadership focuses on process rather than innovation
Transactional leaders focus on lower order needs to create
motivation Basic necessities and security to motivate behavior,
rather than higher purpose
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Traits of Transactional Leaders Work within existing system (or
organizational culture) Focus on marginal improvements to follower
performance Use reward and punishment to incentivize follower
behavior Appeal to followers self-interest More management than
leadership Process and task focused Management by Exception: Punish
deviation, reward task completion
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Benefits of Transactional Leadership Responsive (rather than
proactive) Effective in crises, well-defined hierarchies, and
simple/defined problems Transactional leadership is good for
maintaining status quo
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Transactional vs Transformational Transactional: Responsive
Within system/culture Impersonal Appeal to lower-order needs
Transformational: Proactive Transcendent/Innovative Appeal to
higher purposes
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Relation to Other Leadership Theories Focused on behaviors and
actions of leaders, rather than traits Transactional leadership
employs the known responses to reward and punishment, as documented
by B.F. Skinner and others Transactional leadership is closest to
task-oriented leadership and telling (Fielder 1967; Hersey and
Blanchard (1976) While Burns and Bass see Transformational
leadership as superior, the relative merits depend on the situation
(Contingency)
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Sources Bass, Bernard. From Transactional to Transformational:
Learning to Share the Vision. Organizational Dynamics 18:3 (Winter
1990): Pages 19-31 Bass, Bernard, and Ralph Melvin Stogdill. Bass
& Stogdill's Handbook of Leadership: Theory, Research, and
Managerial Applications. New York: The Free Press, 1990. Kuhnert,
Karl W., and Philip Lewis. "Transactional and Transformational
Leadership: A Constructive/Developmental Analysis." Academy of
Management Review 12.4 (1987): 648-657. MacGregor Burns, James.
Transactional and Transforming Leadership. from Leadership.
HarperCollins Publishers, Inc., 1978. Odumeru, James A. and Ifeanyi
George Ogbonna Transformational vs. Transactional Leadership
Theories: Evidence in Literature," International Review of
Management and Business Research 2:2 (2013).