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Unit 9: Delegation, Authority and Power




          6.   Expert Power: Expert power comes from your knowledge in a specific area through which  Notes
               you influence others. You have expert power because your subordinates regard you as an
               expert in your rating. Subordinates may also have this type of power. When you combine
               expert power with other types of power, you will find it an effective tool in influencing
               others. However, when you use it by itself, you will find it ineffective.

          9.4 Distinction between Authority and Power

          According to Jackson and Carter, "power is about getting someone to do something irrespective
          of their desire to do it  or the  extent of their resistance  to doing  it, while  authority rest  on
          assumptions that the person is willing to obey, and accepts the right of the person doing the
          ordering to expect compliance."

          Thus power is the ability to affect change while authority is the right to make any given decision.
          It's easy to see how these are different: the person actually doing the work has all the power
          while the person who signed off has the authority. Sometimes these things are embodied in the
          same person.

          Power is the ability to get things done by others. The principle of power is to punish and reward.
          Power can exist with or without authority whereas authority is the power to enforce law and
          take command, and to expect obedience from those without authority.


                 Example: An armed robber has power but no authority.
          Authority can exist with or without power,


                 Example: A teacher has authority over the pupils but no real power.




              Task       Analyse the  concepts of  authority  and  power and  list the  similarities
                         between them.





             Caselet     Bringing Kids into the Family Business

                  ringing offspring into the family business can be a source of pride for parents who
                  are business owners; it can also be a sore spot, a source of destructive politics for
             Beveryone  involved.  Employees  may  automatically  question  a  young  family
             member's talent or commitment to the business. Senior managers may worry about the
             security of their jobs as the person rises in rank at the company. "They may feel their own
             chances for advancement are now limited, or they may be worried about being caught in
             the middle  of family  conflicts, such  as, getting  one  set of directions  from the  older
             generation and another set from the younger one," explains Jeff Wolfson, an attorney who
             specializes in family business at the Boston law firm of Goulston and Storrs.
             Should parents who own businesses avoid hiring their children, or hide their children's
             identity once they are hired? Of course not. But Wolfson says they can prevent or end
             destructive politics in a number of ways.

                                                                                 Contd...




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