1 Leadership Principles

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Leadership Leadership PrinciplesPrinciples

Outline the role of a commissioned officer in the Air Force– Describe the principles of

leadership– Describe the relationship between

leadership, management and command

– Describe the OTS leadership model

Reference

Army Manual of Land Warfare Vol 1–10 ‘The art of Eliciting Extraordinary

Performance from Ordinary People’ - LTCOL M.C. Parsons

‘Effective Leadership’ – John Adair

References

‘Training for Leaders’, John Adair ‘Leadership and the One Minute Manager –

Blanchard ‘Leadership that gets results’, Goleman, D. (2000),

Harvard Business Review, Mar – Apr ‘Working with Emotional Intelligence’, Goleman,

D. (1999), Bloomsbury Publishing, London.

‘A leader is the man who has the ability to get other people to do what they don’t

want to do and enjoy it’ Harry. S. Truman, quoted in The People’s Almanac (1975)

“Leadership is the lifting of a man’s vision to higher sights, the raising of a

man’s performance to a higher standard, the building of a man’s personality beyond normal limitations. Wishing

won’t make it so; doing will” Peter. F. Drucker,

The Practise of Management (1955)

‘I have to follow them, I am their leader’French lawyer, politician and

revolutionary leader Alexandre Auguste Ledru-

Rollin (1984)

‘The art of leadership..consists of consolidating the attention of the people against a single adversary and taking that

nothing will split up that attention’

Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf (1925-26)

LEADERSHIP

The art of consistently influencing and directing subordinates in ways as to obtain their willing obedience, confidence, respect and loyal cooperation in the manner desired by the leader.

MANAGEMENT

The process of planning, organising, coordinating, controlling and evaluating the use of people, money, materials and facilities to accomplish missions and tasks.

COMMAND

The lawful authority which an individual in the Services exerts over subordinates by the virtue of his/her rank and posting. Command is supported by a code of military law.

LEADERSHIP

AuthorityResponsibility

Ethics

PeopleMotivation

Effectiveness

ResourcesApplicationEfficiency

COMMAND MANAGEMENT

MISSION

Early Leadership Theories

Cave paintings as Training Aids Chinese writings of Confucius, Mo-

tzu, Lao-tzu, Sun-tzu Early Eurpopean writers such as

Homer,Plutarch, Caesar, Machiavelli, Clausewitz

A leader is bestWhen people barely know he exists,

Not so good when people obey and acclaim him,

Worse when they despise him.But of a good leader, who talks little,

When his work is done, his aim fulfilled,They will say:

We did it ourselves

Lao-Tzu, 6th century Chinese philosopher

Modern Thought on Leadership The end of WW1 brought the demise of

hereditary leadership First theories on personal qualities or

traits After WW2, shift to observable

behaviours 1960’s - Situational leadership Recently - transactional to

transformational leadership

Planning

InitiateEvaluate

Inform

Support

Control

The PICSIE Crystal

High SupportiveandLow DirectiveBehaviour

Low Supportiveand

Low DirectiveBehaviour

High D irectiveand

High SupportiveBehaviour

High D irectiveandLow SupportiveBehaviour

S3 S2S4 S1

SU

PP

OR

TIV

E B

EH

AV

IOU

R

D IRE CTIVE BEH AV IO U R(Low)

(H igh)

(H igh)

Hershey-Blanchard Situational Leadership Model

Self Awareness

Social Awareness

Social Skills

SocialManagement

Personal Social

Awareness

Management

The Emotional Competency Model

Covey’s 7 Habits

Habit One – Be proactive Habit Two - Begin with the End in Mind Habit Three - Put First Things First Habit Four - Think Win-Win Habit Five - Seek First to Under- stand,

Then to be Understood Habit Six - Synergise Habit Seven - Sharpen the Saw

The mastery of a model is not a substitute for leadership.

In short, given the right context, every leadership theory or model

is the correct one.

Task

TeamIndividual

The John Adair Leadership Model

SSKKIILLLLSS

LEADERSHIPLEADERSHIP LEADERSHIPLEADERSHIPQQUUAALLIITTIIEESS

AACCTTIIOONNSS

SELECTION TRAININGPRACTISE

QUALITIES

Personal style and professional qualities of a leader.

QUALITIES

SKILLS Professional Skills Self-Improvement Skills Interpersonal Skills Communication Skills Ethics

Personal style and professional qualities of a leader.

QUALITIES

SKILLS Professional Skills Self-Improvement Skills Interpersonal Skills Communication Skills Ethics

ACTIONS Providing Vision Managing the Task Building the Team Supporting Individuals Adapting leadership style

Personal style and professional qualities of a leader.

VISIOVISIONNBuildBuild

the the TeamTeam

Support Support the the

PeoplePeople

Manage Manage the the tasktask

STYLESTYLE

INTRODUCTION Leadership Principles Leadership Development

ACTIONS Vision Manage the Task Build the Team Support the

Individual Leadership Style

SKILLSProfessional Skills- other lessons at OTS (ie CBRN)- goal settingSelf Improvement- (WEIP, MBTI)- Stress ManagementInterpersonal Skills-CounsellingCommunication SkillsEthics

LEADERSHIP TRAINING AT OTS

LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT PICSIE, Adair’s model, Hershey-

Blanchard, Emotional Intelligence (Goleman), Covey’s Seven habits

LEADERSHIP CONSOLIDATION

QUALITIES Recruitment and

selection QUAL 6

(Principles and Standards)

Chaplain Lessons

Outline the role of a commissioned officer in the Air Force– Describe the principles of

leadership– Describe the relationship between

leadership, management and command

– Describe the OTS leadership model

VISIOVISIONNBuildBuild

the the TeamTeam

Support Support the the

PeoplePeople

Manage Manage the the tasktask

STYLESTYLE