Title of article :
A qualitative study of high-reputation plant managers: Political skill and successful outcomes
Author/Authors :
Smith، نويسنده , , Anne D. and Plowman، نويسنده , , Donde Ashmos and Duchon، نويسنده , , Dennis W. Quinn، نويسنده , , Amber M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
16
From page :
428
To page :
443
Abstract :
There has been little systematic study of what plant managers actually do on a day-to-day basis that accounts for their success in achieving organizational outcomes. In our field interviews and observations of high-reputation plant managers from 11 manufacturing plants, we found that effective political skill enabled them to influence subordinates in ways that contributed positively to organizational outcomes. Political skill is an interpersonal style that combines social astuteness with the ability to relate well, and otherwise demonstrate situationally appropriate behavior in an engaging way that inspires confidence, trust, and genuiness [Ferris, G.R., Perrewé, P.L., Anthony, W.P., Gilmore, D.C., 2000. Political skill at work. Organizational Dynamics 28 (4), 25–37]. We observed that effective plant managers possessed a configuration of dispositional traits (self-motivation, sense of humility, and affability), systematically employed interpersonal behaviors (creating accountability, leading by example, and developing trust), and focused on managerial processes (stretch goals, influencing and learning from below, and empowering direct reports). By juxtaposing the political skill and power literatures, we propose a theory of plant manager effectiveness as a combination of political skill and the use of unobtrusive and systemic power to achieve both affective and substantive outcomes.
Keywords :
Political skill , Plant managers , Qualitative research
Journal title :
Journal of Operations Management
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Journal of Operations Management
Record number :
2130099
Link To Document :
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