Management & Organization Behavior class Three different Discussions

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Managerial Control

Chapter Sixteen

Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.

Learning Objectives

LO 1 Explain why companies develop control systems for employees.

LO 2 Summarize how to design a basic bureaucratic control system.

LO 3 Describe the purposes for using budgets as a control device.

LO 4 Define basic types of financial statements and financial ratios used as controls.

LO 5 List procedures for implementing effective control systems.

LO 6 Identify ways in which organizations use market control mechanisms.

LO 7 Discuss the use of clan control in an empowered organization.

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Managerial Control

Control

Any process that directs the activities of individuals toward the achievement of organizational goals

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Symptoms of an Out-of-Control Company

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Table 16.1

Managerial Control

Bureaucratic control

The use of rules, regulations, and authority to guide performance

Market control

Control based on the use of pricing mechanisms and economic information to regulate activities within organizations

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Bureaucratic Control Systems

Clan control

Control based on the norms, values, shared goals, and trust among group members.

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Characteristics of Control

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Table 16.2

The Control Cycle

Setting performance standards.

Measuring performance.

Comparing performance against the standards and determining deviations.

Taking action to correct problems and reinforce successes.

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The Control Process

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Figure 16.1

Setting Performance Standards

Standard

Expected performance for a given goal: a target that establishes a desired performance level, motivates performance, and serves as a benchmark against which actual performance is assessed.

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Measuring Performance

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Written reports

Oral reports

Personal observation

Comparing Performance with the Standard

Principle of exception

A managerial principle stating that control is enhanced by concentrating on the exceptions to or significant deviations from the expected result or standard.

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After-action review

After-action review

A frank and open-minded discussion of four basic questions aimed at continuous improvement.

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Approaches to Bureaucratic Control

Feedforward control

The control process used before operations begin, including policies, procedures, and rules designed to ensure that planned activities are carried out properly.

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Approaches to Bureaucratic Control

Concurrent control

The control process used while plans are being carried out, including directing, monitoring, and fine-tuning activities as they are performed.

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Approaches to Bureaucratic Control

Feedback control

Control that focuses on the use of information about previous results to correct deviations from the acceptable standard.

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The Role of Six Sigma

At a six-sigma level, a process is producing fewer than 3.4 defects per million, which means it is operating at a 99.99966 percent level of accuracy

Six Sigma companies have not only close to zero product or service defects but also substantially lower production costs and cycle times and much higher levels of customer satisfaction

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Question

___________ is an evaluation of the effectiveness and efficiency of various systems within an organization.

External audit

Internal audit

Management audit

HR Audit

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The correct answer is c – management audit. See next slide.

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Management Audits

Management audit

An evaluation of the effectiveness and efficiency of various systems within an organization

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Management Audits

External audit

An evaluation conducted by one organization, such as a CPA firm, on another.

Internal audit

A periodic assessment of a company’s own planning, organizing, leading, and controlling processes.

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External Audit

Investigates other organizations for possible merger or acquisition

Determines the soundness of a company that will be used as a major supplier

Discovers the strengths and weaknesses of a competitor to maintain or better exploit the competitive advantage of the investigating organization

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Internal Audit

Assesses what the company has done for itself

What it has done for its customers or other recipients of its goods or services.

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Budgetary Controls

Budgeting

The process of investigating what is being done and comparing the results with the corresponding budget data to verify accomplishments or remedy differences

also called budgetary controlling.

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A Sales-Expense Budget

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Table 16.4

Types of Budgets

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Sales

Production

Cost

Cash

Capital

Master

Types of Budgets

Accounting audits

Procedures used to verify accounting reports and statements.

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Activity-Based Costing

Activity-based costing (ABC)

A method of cost accounting designed to identify streams of activity and then to allocate costs across particular business processes according to the amount of time employees devote to particular activities

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Activity-Based Costing Example: ABC Medical Clinic

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Figure 16.3

Financial Controls

Balance sheet

A report that shows the financial picture of a company at a given time and itemizes assets, liabilities, and stockholders’ equity.

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Financial Controls

Assets

The values of the various items the corporation owns.

Liabilities

The amounts a corporation owes to various creditors

Stockholders’ equity

The amount accruing to the corporation’s owners.

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Assets = Liabilities + Stockholders’ equity

The Profit and Loss Statement

Profit and loss statement

An itemized financial statement of the income and expenses of a company’s operations

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Table 16.6

Financial Ratios

Current ratio

A liquidity ratio that indicates the extent to which short term assets can decline and still be adequate to pay short-term liabilities

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Financial Ratios

Debt-equity ratio

A leverage ratio that indicates the company’s ability to meet its long-term financial obligations

Return on investment (ROI)

A ratio of profit to capital used, or a rate of return from capital

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Question

___________ is focusing on short-term earnings and profits at the expense of longer-term strategic obligations.

Management amblyopia

Personnel myopia

Management myopia

Short-sighted angst

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The correct answer is c – management myopia. See next slide.

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Using Financial Ratios

Management myopia

Focusing on short-term earnings and profits at the expense of longer-term strategic obligations.

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The Downside of Bureaucratic Control

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Rigid bureaucratic behavior

Tactical behavior

Resistance to control

Designing Effective Control Systems

Establish valid performance standards.

Provide adequate information to employees.

Ensure acceptability to employees.

Maintain open communication.

Use multiple approaches.

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Balanced Scorecard

Balanced scorecard

Control system combining four sets of performance measures: financial, customer, business process, and learning and growth

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Examples of Market Control

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Figure 16.4

Management Control in an Empowered Setting

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Table 16.7

Video: Goodwill

How does Goodwill use controls to make informed decisions about its resources?

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