Blake and Mouton Managerial Grid is a style leadership model that identified five manager styles based on two dimensions viz concern for people and the concern for production. Managerial Grid uses concern for production style which is largely based on McGregor's Theory X.
Do you know whether you are task oriented or person oriented? What is your leadership style in a given situation? Learn about the task v/s people orientation and understand “The Blake Mouton Managerial Grid” in this article and explore how you can apply these principles in your day to day leadership journey.
Later work on leadership theory by R. R. Blake and J. S. Mouton used task versus people orientation to chart a person’s leadership “style.” The result is what researchers call the Managerial or Leadership Grid. (See figure for managerial grid). Blake and Mouton, in their managerial grid model, proposed five leadership styles based on two axes – concern for the task versus concern for people. They suggested that the ideal is the "team style", which balances concern for the task with concern for people. Different patterns of behavior were grouped together and labeled as styles. This became a very popular activity within management training, various schemes appeared, designed to diagnose and develop people’s style of working.
We as a person are either very task oriented or very person oriented and same is true for leaders. Some leaders are very task-oriented and their immediate focus is to simply get the things done and on the other hand some leaders are very people-oriented and they strive to make people happy. Some could be combination of the two. If as a leader you prefer to lead by setting and enforcing task level timelines and keeping a close follow-up on remaining tasks, you tend to be more production/task-oriented whereas on the other hand if you make people your priority and generally try to accommodate employee needs before tasks, then you’re more people-oriented. There is nothing right or wrong in being on the either side of this preference. Leaders can be oriented towards both tasks and persons. This is one of the tools that is very helpful for you to understand your natural leadership tendencies.
This theory by Blake and Mouton (1978) has a popular application of both task and person orientation. According to this theory leaders are most effective when they achieve a high and balanced concern for people and for tasks.
The Managerial Grid is based on two behavioral dimensions:
1. Concern for People: This is the degree to which a leader considers the needs of team members, their interests, and areas of personal development when deciding how best to accomplish a task. In this style, leaders look upon their followers as people - their needs, interests, problems, development and so on. They are not simply units of production or means to an end.
2. Concern for Production: This is the degree to which a leader emphasizes organizational efficiency and high productivity when deciding how best to accomplish a task. Here leaders emphasize the achievement of concrete objectives. They look for high levels of productivity, and ways to organize people and activities in order to meet those objectives.
The grid shown below depicts two dimensions of leader behavior, concern for people on y-axis and concern for production on x-axis, with each dimension ranging from low (1) to high (9), thus creating 81 different positions in which the leader’s style may fall. This framework plots the degree of task-centeredness versus person-centeredness. Each leader can be rated somewhere along each of the axes from 1 to 9 depending on his orientation and the axis is used to plot leadership ‘concerns for production’ versus ‘concerns for people’. Although there can be 81 possible combinations you should try to understand the 5 types that identifies distinct leadership styles (Marked in the figure). These will give you a basic understanding of the theory, on which you can base your other combinations.
1,9 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
9,9 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5,5 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
9,1 |
Blake and Mouton defined the following five leadership styles:
The (1, 9) leader is primarily concerned for people and only incidentally concerned with production. The leader's major responsibility is to establish harmonious relationships among subordinates and to provide a secure and pleasant work atmosphere. He is called as Country Club Management leader. In this management style we have high people satisfaction and low production levels. This style of leader is most concerned about the needs and feelings of members of the team operating under the assumption that as long as subordinates are happy and feel good, they will work hard. These managers exhibit a high concern for people and building a friendly environment. They have a lower concern with the task and with getting things done. The outcome of such a management style is a very relaxed and open environment but the delivery or production suffers due to lack of direction and control.
The (9, 1) leader is primarily concerned about the task or production. Managers in this category believe that employees are simply a means to an end and employee needs are secondary to the need for efficient and productive workplaces. He is concerned with his responsibility to see that the work is completed. He is also called a Task-Management leader or the style is also referred to as “Authority - Compliance Management Style”. These managers have a high concern for task and emphasize productivity and efficiency at all times. These managers are also known as authoritarian or Compliance Leaders, This approach results in high production but low people satisfaction levels. This type of leader is very autocratic, has strict work rules, and always insists on policies, and procedures, and use punishment as the most effective means to motivate employees.
The (1,1) leader is concerned with neither production nor people. He tries to stay out of the way and not become involved in the conflict between the necessity for production and the attainment of good working relationship. He is called as Impoverish Management leader. This management style generally results in low Production and low people satisfaction levels. These managers take a lazy approach to leadership and hence the manager is mostly ineffective, as he has neither a high regard for getting job done, nor for creating a satisfying work environment. They have little regard for people or task and are very poor managers and hence the result is a place of failures, disorganization, dissatisfaction and disharmony.
The (5,5) leader reflects a middle ground position and is called as Middle of the Road Management leader. He seeks to compromise between high production and employee satisfaction. The result is generally medium production and medium people satisfaction. This style seems to be a balance of the two competing concerns or we can assume that these leaders have minimal focus on people and task. It may at first appear to be an ideal compromise but what it results is in preserving the status quo. Leaders who use this style settle for average performance, generally do what must be done, but do not set high standards or raise the bar for performance.
The (9,9) leader is extremely concerned about the task and also the people. He is concerned to see that the work accomplishment is from committed people; interdependence through a common stake in the organization; purpose leads to relationship of trust and respect. He is called a Team Management leader. This style leads to higher production levels as well as higher people satisfaction levels. This is the pinnacle of managerial style as these leaders accomplish production needs and stress the needs of the people equally highly. These leaders are the most effective managers. They are highly focused both on people and task and they maintain high performance standards. The leader feels that empowerment, commitment, trust, and respect are the key elements in creating a team atmosphere which will automatically result in high employee satisfaction and production. This style brings employees commitment and bridges the gap between organizational needs and employee perceived needs. This builds a team environment based on trust and respect, which leads to high satisfaction and motivation and, as a result, high production.
The Managerial or Leadership Grid is used to help managers analyze their own leadership styles through a technique known as grid training. This is done by administering a questionnaire that helps managers identify how they stand with respect to their concern for production and people. The training is aimed at basically helping leaders reach to the ideal state of 9, 9. It is important to understand how you currently operate, so that you can then identify ways of becoming competent in both realms.
You can use the following approach to practically use this tool in your day to day life:
Step One: Identify your leadership style
Step Two: Identify the leadership style of your subordinates and stakeholder
Step Three: Identify areas of improvement and develop your leadership skills
Step Four: Analyze your current leadership method and critically analyze its effectiveness.
Step Five: Learn to flex your style to shift from one management style to other based on situation or the person involved
Step Six: Test the effectiveness of the style flexing and find the most effective approach for distinct situations and stakeholders.
This theory of leadership styles led to research on leaders’ use of power versus influence to accomplish tasks and obtain results. This and similar models give you several lenses through which to view leadership. While there does not exist a universal approach or set of traits that defines a good leader, you can adopt a specific approach or management style to influence or direct your subordinates, depending on the situation you face.
Scouller (2011) argued that this ideal approach may not suit all circumstances; for example, emergencies or turnarounds. This model ignores the importance of internal and external limits, matter and scenario. Also, there are some more aspects of leadership that can be covered but are not. The grid does not entirely address the complexity of “Which leadership style is best?”
In this study of power, Raven identified five bases of power as coercive, reward, legitimate, referent, and expert. The 5 Types of Power can help you decide when it is appropriate to use a particular type of power in important situations. Leadership involves authority and it is very important for leaders to understand what type of power they're using.
Rensis Likert studied the patterns and styles of managers and developed four management systems known as Likert's management systems. These styles developed by him are known as Likert management systems. System 1 - Exploitative Authoritative; System 2 - Benevolent Authoritative; System 3 - Consultative and System 4 - Participative.
Leadership Participation Inventory (LPI)
Kouzes and Posner introduced the Leadership Participation Inventory model of Transformational leadership. This model is also known as Kouzes and Posner's Leadership Challenge Model. They identified five practices of exemplary leadership - Model the Way, Inspire a Shared Vision, Challenge the Process, Enabling Others to Act, and Encourage the Heart.
Leader-Participation Model provides a set of rules to determine the form and amount of participative decision making. It helps identifies different ways a decision can be made based on the degree of follower participation. It proposes a method for leaders to involve all members of the organization work together to make decisions.
Hawthorne Studies - Leadership
The Hawthorne studies were conducted on workers at the Hawthorne plant of the Western Electric Company by Elton Mayo and Fritz Roethlisberger in the 1920s. This study established the behavioral change that happened due to an awareness of being observed, resulting in active compliance with the supposed wishes of researchers, because of special attention received, or positive response to the stimulus being introduced.
Action Centered Leadership is a model developed by John Adair and focuses on the three responsibilities of a leader which are achieving the task, managing the team, and managing individuals. All these action elements are mutually dependent and important for any leader.
Attribution Theory of Leadership
The attribution theory of leadership deals with the formation of individual opinions about the reasons for particular events or observations. People will always try to understand why people do what they do. The leader will make a judgment about his employees based on his attribution of the causes of the employees' performance. Individuals will also make inferences about the leader and react to poor performance by the leader.
Socio-technical theory of leadership focus on the presence of two subsystems in every organization, the interrelatedness of social and technical aspects of an organization. Theory pertains to the social aspects of people and technical aspects of an organization, which means structure and processes within the organization.
The Vroom-Yetton model is designed to optimize for the current situation the leadership style for best decision-making. Its a decision model formulated with contribution from Arthur Jago on how to make group decisions. The leader must gather information from the team prior to making the decision and involves more people in the decision process.
The social identity theory of leadership views leadership as a group process. Social identity is a person's sense of who they are based on their group membership. Social identity theory sets agendas and goals generated by social categorization, defines who we are based on processes associated with social identity, and motivates to conduct ourselves based on what followers think of the leader.
© 2023 TechnoFunc, All Rights Reserved