Title: Management 8e. Robbins and Coulter
1(No Transcript)
2Learning Objectives
- You should learn to
- Define control
- Describe the three approaches to control
- Explain why control is important
- Describe the control process
- Distinguish among the three types of control
- Describe the qualities of an effective control
system
3Learning Objectives (cont.)
- You should learn to
- Discuss the contingency factors that influence
the design of an organizations control system - Identify how controls need to be adjusted for
cultural differences - Explain how three contemporary issues - workplace
privacy, employee theft, and workplace violence -
affect control
4??What Is Control?
- Control
- the process of monitoring activities to ensure
that they are being accomplished?? as planned and
of correcting significant deviations - control systems are judged in terms of how well
they facilitate goal achievement - market control - emphasizes the use of external
market mechanisms to establish standards of
performance?? - useful where products and services are distinct
- useful where marketplace competition is
considerable - divisions turned into profit centers and judged
by the percentage of total corporate profits each
contributes
5What Is Control? (cont.)
- Control
- bureaucratic control ????- emphasizes
organizational authority - relies on administrative rules, procedures, and
policies - depends on standardization of activities,
well-defined job descriptions, and other
administrative mechanisms - clan control - behavior regulated by shared
values, traditions, and other aspects of
organizational culture - dependent on individual and group to identify
expected behaviors and performance measures - found where teams are common and technology
changes often
6Why Is Control Important?
- Control is the Final Link in the Management
Process - provides the critical link back to planning
- only way managers know whether organizational
goals are being met - Permits Delegation?? of Authority
- fear that employees will do something wrong for
which the manager will be held responsible - provides information and feedback on employee
performance
7The Planning-Controlling Link
8The Control Process
9??The Control Process
- Background
- controlling is a three-step process
- assumes that performance standards already exist
- specific goals are created in the planning
process - Measuring
- How We Measure
- personal observation - permits intensive coverage
- Management By Walking Around (MBWA)
- drawbacks - subject to personal biases
- consumes a great deal of time
- suffers from obtrusiveness
10The Control Process (cont.)
- Measuring (cont.)
- How We Measure (cont.)
- statistical reports - numerical data are easy to
visualize and effective for showing relationships - drawbacks - not all operations can be measured
- important subjective factors may be ignored
- oral reports - includes meetings, telephone calls
- may be best way to control work in a virtual
environment - technology permits creation of written record
from oral report - drawbacks - filtering of information
11The Control Process (cont.)
- How We Measure (cont.)
- written reports - often more comprehensive and
concise than oral reports - usually easy to file and retrieve
- comprehensive control efforts should use all four
approaches
12The Control Process (cont.)
- What We Measure
- what we measure more critical than how we measure
- control criteria applicable to any management
situation - employee satisfaction, absenteeism, and turnover
- keeping costs within budgets
- control system needs to recognize the diversity
of activities - some activities difficult to measure in
quantifiable terms - most activities can be grouped into some
objective segments that can be measured - when objective measures are not available, should
rely on subjective measures
13The Control Process (cont.)
- Comparing
- determines the degree of variation between actual
performance and standard - acceptable range of variation - deviations that
exceed this range become significant
14The Acceptable Range Of Variation
15The Control Process (cont.)
- Taking Managerial Action
- Correct Actual Performance - action taken when
the performance variation is unsatisfactory - immediate corrective action - corrects problems
at once to get performance back on track - basic corrective action - identifies reason for
performance variation - corrects the source of variation
- Revise the Standard - variance results from an
unrealistic standard - standard, not performance, needs correction
- troublesome to revise the standard downward
16Managerial Decisions in the Control Process
17Controlling for Organizational Performance
- What Is Performance?
- The end result of an activity
- What Is Organizational Performance?
- The accumulated end results of all of the
organizations work processes and activities. - Designing strategies, work processes, and work
activities. - Coordinating the work of employees
18Organizational Performance Measures
- Organizational Productivity
- Productivity the overall output of goods and/or
services divided by the inputs needed to generate
that output. - Output sales revenues
- Inputs costs of resources (materials, labor
expense, and facilities) - Ultimately, a measure of how efficiently
employees do their work.
19Organizational Performance Measures
- Organizational Effectiveness
- Measuring how appropriate organizational goals
are and how well the organization is achieving
its goals. - Systems resource model
- The ability of the organization to exploit its
environment in acquiring scarce and valued
resources - The process model
- The efficiency of an organizations
transformation process in converting inputs to
outputs - The multiple constituencies??,? model
- The effectiveness of the organization in meeting
each constituencies needs
20??Types Of Control
- Feedforward?? Control
- prevents anticipated problems
- most desirable type of control
- requires timely and accurate information that
often is difficult to get - Concurrent?? Control
- takes place while activity is in progress
- corrects problem before it becomes too costly
- best-known form is direct supervision
21??Types of Control (cont.)
- Feedback?? Control
- takes place after the activity is done
- problems may already have caused damage or waste
- the most popular type of control
- feedback may be only viable form of control
available - feedback has two advantages
- provides meaningful information on the
effectiveness of planning - can enhance employee motivation
22Qualities Of An Effective Control System
EFFECTIVE CONTROL SYSTEM
23Contingency Factors in the Design of Ctrl Systems
24??Tools for Controlling Organizational
Performance Financial Controls (contd)
- Economic Value Added (EVA,????? )
- ????????????????????????? (?????????)How much
value is created by what a company does with its
assets, less any capital investments in those
assets the rate of return earned over and above
the cost of capital. - The choice is to use less capital or invest in
high-return projects.
25Tools for Controlling Organizational Performance
Financial Controls (contd)
- Market Value Added (MVA,????? )
- The value that the stock market places on a
firms past and expected capital investment
projects - ?????????(?????)??????????????
- If the firms market value (its stock and debt)
exceeds the value of its invest capital (its
equity and retained earnings), then managers have
created wealth.
26Controlling Organizational Performance
- Balanced Scorecard?????
- A measurement tool that uses goals set by
managers in four areas to measure a companys
performance - Financial, customer, internal processes(????),
and people/innovation/growth assets(?-??-??) - ??????????,??????????????????,????????????????????
,??????????????????????????????,?????????????????
,?????????????,?????(Outcome)???????(Performance
Driver)???,?????????????,?????????????????????????
??,?????????????????,?????????????????????????????
?????????,???????????????
27 Balanced Scoreboard
- ???????Robert Kaplan????????(Nolan Norton
Institute)?DavidNorton?90???????????????????,???
?????????????????????????????????????????????
,??????????????????,??????????????????????????????
????????????????????(Financial)???(Customer)?????
??(Internal Processes)??????(innovation and
Growth)?
28Information Controls
- Management Information Systems (MIS)
- A system used to provide management with needed
information on a regular basis. - Data an unorganized collection of raw,
unanalyzed facts (e.g., unsorted list of customer
names) - Information data that has been analyzed and
organized such that it has value and relevance to
managers - Famous MIS SAP, ??ERP
29Benchmarking of Best Practices
- Benchmarking????
- The search for the best practices among
competitors or noncompetitors that lead to their
superior performance. - Benchmark the standard of excellence against
which to measure and compare. - A control tool for identifying and measuring
specific performance gaps and areas for
improvement. - Case Study Haier Zhang Ruimin
30??Contemporary Issues in Control
- Cross-Cultural Issues??????
- The use of technology to increase direct
corporate control of local operations - Legal constraints on corrective?? actions in
foreign countries - Difficulty with the comparability of data
collected from operations in different countries
31Contemporary Issues in Control (contd)
- Workplace Concerns??????
- Workplace privacy versus workplace monitoring
- E-mail, telephone, computer, and Internet usage
- Productivity, harassment, security,
confidentiality, intellectual property protection - Employee theft
- The unauthorized taking of company property by
employees for their personal use. - Workplace violence??
- Anger??, rage??, and violence in the workplace is
affecting employee productivity.
32Contemporary Issues in Control (contd)
- Customer Interactions
- Service profit chain
- The service sequence from employees to customers
to profit service capability affects service
value which impacts on customer satisfaction
that, in turn, leads to customer loyalty in the
form of repeat business (profit). - Corporate Governance
- The system used to govern a corporation so that
the interests of the corporate owners are
protected. - Changes in the role of boards of directors
- Increased scrutiny of financial reporting
33Summary
- What Is Control and Its Importance
- the three approaches to designing control
systems. - the reasons why control is important.
- The Control Process
- the three steps in the control process.
- the reasons why what is measured is more critical
than how its measured. - the three courses of action managers can take in
controlling.
34Summary
- Controlling Organizational Performance
- organizational performance.
- the most frequently used measures of
organizational performance - Tools for Organizational Performance
- Contrasted feedforward, concurrent, and feedback
controls. - the types of financial and information controls
managers can use. - Described how balanced scorecards and
benchmarking are used in controlling.
35Summary
- Contemporary Issues in Control
- about how managers may have to adjust controls
for cross-cultural differences. - the types of workplace concerns managers face and
how they can address those concerns. - control is important to customer interactions.
- discussed what corporate governance is and how
its changing.