Management & Organization: Ch. 14 Basic Elements of Control
purpose 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 org units
Purposes of Control
1. a properly designed control system can help managers anticipate, monitor, and respond to a changing environment 2. over time, small mistakes may accumulate and become serious; an adequate control system will help limit this 3. as organizations expand and create a variety of products, control helps them to cope with organizational complexity 4. control can help to minimize costs, reduce waste and improve productivity
strengths and weaknesses of budgeting
STRENGTHS: -budgets facilitate effective operational controls -budgets facilitate coordination and communication between departments -budgets establish records of organizational performance which can enhance planning WEAKNESSES -budgets can hamper operations if applied too rigidly -budgets can be time consuming to develop -budgets can limit innovations and change
controller
a person in organizations that helps line managers with their control activities
financial statements
a physical statement is a profile of some aspect of an org's financial circumstances -balance sheet -income statement
strategic control
aims to maintain effective alignment with the environment and achieving strategic goals; focuses on structure, leadership, tech, HR, and informational operating systems; focuses on extent to which an implemented strategy achieves the orgs goals
decentralized control
an approach to org control characterized by informal and organic structural arrangements
preliminary control
attempts to monitor the quality of financial, physical, human and information resources before they actually become part of the system; thus preliminary control concentrates on inputs to the system early in the overall process
operating budgets
concerned with planned operations within the organization ex: sales budgets and expense budgets
levels of control
control can also be classified by level, such as operations, financial, structural or strategic control
Areas of control
control is concerned with efficiently and effectively combining an organization's physical, human, information and financial resources into appropriate outputs
financial control
control of financial resources as they -flow into org -are held by org as working capital and retained earnings -flow out of the org as payment expenses
step 1 in the control process: establishing standards
control standard is a target against which subsequent performance will be compared -should be expressed in measurable terms -should be consistent with org goals -should be identifiable indicators of performance
step 3: comparing performance against standards
define what is permissible deviation from the performance standard; utilize the appropriate timetable for measurement
too much accountability
efficient controls are resisted by poorly performing employees
nonmonetary budgets
expressed in nonfinancial terms, such as units of output or hours of direct labor ex: production budgets and space budgets
operations control
focuses on the processes used to transform resources into products or services. most firms use multiple control systems
international strategic control
focuses on whether to manage the global org from a centralized or decentralized perspective -centralization creates more control and coordination whereas decentralization fosters adaptability and innovation
bureaucratic control
form of org control characterized by formal and mechanistic structural arrangements
financial budgets
indicate where the org expects to get its cash for the coming time period and how it plans to use it ex: balance sheet budgets and cash budgets
financial audit
is an independent appraisal of an org's accounting, financial and operational systems -external audits--financial appraisals conducted by experts who are not employees of the org -internal audits--appraisals conducted by employees of org
balance sheet
lists the assets and liabilities of an org at a specific point in time listing of assets, liabilities, stockholder's equity at a specific point in time that summarizes condition of the org
step 4: considering corrective action
maintain the status quo (do nothing); correct the deviation to bring operations into compliance with standard; change the standard if it was too high or low
responsibilities for control
managers are accountable for and involved in activities for which control is their responsibility
types of budgets
most organizations use three types of budgets 1. financial budgets 2. operating budgets 3. nonmonetary budgets
step 2: measuring performance
performance measurement is an ongoing process; must be valid indicators of performance (sales, costs, units produced)
budgetary control
plan expressed in numerical terms; budgets may be established at any org level; are typically for one year or less; may be expressed in financial terms,, units of output or other quantifiable factors
rewards for inefficiency
rewarding operational inefficiency can lead employees to behave in ways that are not in best interest of org
income statement
summarizes financial performance over a period of time summary of financial performance--revenues less expenses as net income--over a period of time, usually one year
inappropriate focus
the control system may be too narrow or it may focus too much on quantifiable variables and leave no room for analysis and interpretation
over control
trying to control too many details affects employee behavior when they see control as unreasonable