ASIA unversity:Item 310904400/10053
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    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://asiair.asia.edu.tw/ir/handle/310904400/10053


    Title: A study of the relationship between manager’s leadership style and organizational commitment in Taiwan’s international tourist hotels
    Authors: Wu, T. F.;Tsai, M. H.;Wu, Robert T. Y.;Fey, Y. H.
    Contributors: 亞洲大學經營管理學系
    Keywords: international tourist hotel;leadership style;organizational commitment;situational leadership
    Date: 2006
    Issue Date: 2010-06-10 03:53:20 (UTC+0)
    Publisher: Asia University
    Abstract: This study was aimed at analyzing the cognition and the relationship between managers’ leadership styles and employees’ organizational commitment in the operation unit of international
    tourist hotels. In order to meet the features of this industry, both the theories, “situational leadership” by Hersey & Blanchard and “organizational commitment” by Porter, Steers, Mowday & Boulian serve as the basis of this study. From the former theory, how subordinate managers prepare for the task becomes a situational factor. Task and relationship develop as structural sides of situational leadership. In this way, managers’ leadership styles can be sorted into the following four types: selling (persuasion),
    telling (command), participating and delegating (empowerment). In the latter theory, “value,” “effort,” and “retention” make up the main parts to be studied. The international tourist hotels involved in this study consisted of 58 state-qualified hotels which
    were evaluated and granted qualification by the government in 2004. Three hundred and thirty-one employees filled out the questionnaire. The survey instrument included: (a) leadership style inventory, (b) organizational commitment inventory, and (c) personal background data. By analyzing all the data collected, the results of this study indicate:
    1.A ‘delegating’leadership style has the highest frequency of occurrences. It is followed by ‘selling’ and ‘participating’ styles.‘Telling’leadership has the lowest frequency of occurrences.
    2.Employees of different ages, lengths of services, major subjects, top-level leadership styles, and the locations of the hotels will show significantly different organizational commitments.
    3.The more that managers belong to the selling, participating, and delegating leadership styles, the more organizational commitment the employees have. In general, the ‘participating’ leadership
    attracts the most employee commitment, while the ‘telling’leadership obtains the least.
    Relation: Asian Journal of Management and Humanity Sciences 1(3) : 434-452
    Appears in Collections:[Department of Business Administration] Journal Article

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