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The relationship between negotiations success and leadership style

D.Phil. / Both leadership and negotiations constitute key success factors for organisations. Previous studies on leadership suggest that leadership effectiveness differentiates successful organisations from others. Equally, negotiations success constitutes a key distinguishing factor separating developed countries from the developing and the under-developed ones. A perusal of available literature and previous research on leadership and negotiations reveals a historical tendency by writers and theoreticians to deal with these topics separately. Thus, while the two topics have each been researched extensively, the number of studies dealing with leadership and negotiations as concomitant variables in the same study is limited. The current study investigates the relationship between negotiations success and leadership style. The study postulates that there is a positive relationship between negotiations success, which is defined as negotiator satisfaction levels with negotiated outcomes, and leadership style. Specifically, the study postulates that the use of the Blake and Mouton team leader style would account for counterparty satisfaction levels with the negotiated outcomes. The study involves the application of two questionnaires to 156 negotiators with a history of involvement in annual wage and other negotiations. The first questionnaire tests the respondents’ leadership style in terms of the Blake and Mouton Leadership Grid. The second questionnaire is the Subjective Value Inventory (SVI) questionnaire developed by Curhan and colleagues. The SVI is also a self-report questionnaire and measures negotiator satisfaction levels with negotiation outcomes. The multiple regression results from the analysis of variance (ANOVA and MANOVA), and other multivariate tests indicate leadership style as a strong predictor of negotiations success. This research is one of a small number of studies that have investigated and revealed statistically significant relationships between negotiations success and leadership style.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:uj/uj:7223
Date03 October 2011
CreatorsSenoamadi, Phatelang William
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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