Chapter 14 - Basic Elements of Control - Principles of Management
Centralized system
- Each organizational unit is responsible for reporting results of performance to headquarters - Frequent visits to foreign branches
Purposes of budgets
- Help coordinate resources and projects - Help define the established standards for control - Provide guidelines about resources and expectations • Evaluate the performance of managers and organizational units
Decentralized system
- Reports are less often and in less detail - May submit quarterly summaries and full statement just once per year - Helps to foster innovation
Objectivity
A control system must be free from bias and distortion
Timeliness
A control system should provide information as often as necessary
Bureaucratic control
A form of organizational control characterized by formal and mechanistic structural arrangements
Budgets
A plan expressed in numerical terms - Budgets may be established at any organizational level - Budgets are typically for one year or less - Budgets may be expressed in financial terms, units of output, or other quantifiable factors
Controller
A position in organizations that helps line managers with their control activities
Financial statement
A profile of some aspect of an organization's financial circumstances
Income statement
A summary of financial performance over a period of time, usually one year
Decentralized control
An approach to organizational control characterized by informal and organic structural arrangements
Audit
An independent appraisal of an organization's accounting, financial, and operational systems
Preliminary control
Attempts to monitor the quality or quantity of financial, physical, human, and information resources before they actually become part of the system
Structural control
Concerned with how the elements of the organization's structure are serving their intended purpose
Financial control
Concerned with the organization's financial resources
Strategic control
Control aimed at ensuring that the organization is maintaining an effective alignment with its environment and moving toward achieving its strategic goals. EX.(Focuses on structure, leadership, technology, human resources, and informational and operational systems. Also focuses on the extent to which an implemented strategy achieves the organization's goals)
Too much accountability
Efficient controls are resisted by poorly performing employees.
Control of financial resources
Ex.(revenues, shareholder investment) as they: - Flow into the organization - Are held by the organization as working capital and retained earnings - Flow out of the organization as payment of expenses
Strategic control
Focuses on how effectively the organization's strategies are succeeding in helping the organization meet its goals
Operations control
Focuses on the processes that the organization uses to transform resources into products or services
Operations control
Focuses on the processes the organization uses to transform resources into products or services
Accuracy
Inaccurate information results in bad decision making and inappropriate managerial actions
Non-monetary budget
Includes units of outputs, hours of direct labor, machine hours. Most commonly used at lower levels of the organization
Financial budget
Indicates where organization will get cash and how to use it
Physical resources Control
Inventory management, quality control, and equipment control
Balance sheet
List of assets and liabilities of an organization at a specific point in time
Financial resources
Managing capital funds and cash flow, collection and payment of debts
Postaction control
Monitors the outputs or results of the organization after the transformation process is complete
Operating budget
Outlines what quantities of products or services organization intends to create and what resources will be used to create them
The purposes of control
Provide organizations with indications of how well they are performing in relation to their goals
Screening control
Relies heavily on feedback processes during the transformation process. Ex.(Effective way to promote employee participation and catch problems early in the transformation process)
Rewards for inefficiency
Rewarding operational inefficiency can lead employees to behave in ways that are not in the best interests of the organization
Information resources
Sales and marketing forecasts, environmental analysis, public relations, production scheduling, and economic forecasting
Human resources control
Selection and placement, training and development, performance appraisal, and compensation
Ratio analysis
The calculation of one or more financial ratios to assess some aspect of the organization's financial health
Inappropriate focus
The control system may be too narrow, or it may focus too much on quantifiable variables and leave no room for analysis or interpretation
Flexibility
The control system must be flexible enough to accommodate change
Integration with planning
The more control is linked to planning, the more effective the control system.
Control
The regulation of organizational activities in such away as to facilitate goal attainment
Overcontrol
Trying to control too many details affects employee behavior when employees perceive control attempts as unreasonable
Internal audits
appraisals conducted by employees of the organization
External audits
financial appraisals conducted by experts who are not employees of the organization
Operating employees
help maintain effective control• Resolve quality issues, assembly line processes
Debt ratios
reflect the firm's ability to meet long-term financial obligations
Liquidity ratios
show how readily the firm's assets can be converted to cash