Page 271 - DCOM506_DMGT502_STRATEGIC_MANAGEMENT
P. 271

Unit 14: Strategic Evaluation and Control




                                                                                                Notes
             necessary to arrive at those goals. The measures are designed to pull people toward the
             overall vision. Senior managers may know what the end result should be, but they cannot
             tell employees exactly how to achieve that result, because the conditions in which employees
             operate are constantly changing.

             This new approach to performance measurement is consistent with the initiatives under
             way in many organisations: cross-functional integration, customer supplier partnerships,
             global scale, continuous improvement, and team rather than individual  accountability.
             By combining the financial, customer, internal process and innovation, and organizational
             learning perspectives, the balanced scorecard helps managers understand, at least implicitly,
             many interrelationships.  This understanding  can help managers transcend traditional
             notions about  functional barriers  and ultimately  lead to  improved decision  making,
             problem solving and enhanced performance. The balanced scorecard keeps organisations
             moving forward.
          4.   Key factor rating: It is a method that takes into account the key factors in several areas and
               then sets out to evaluate performance on the basis of these. This is quite a comprehensive
               method as it takes a holistic view of the performance areas in an organisation.
          5.   Responsibility Centres: Control systems can be established to monitor specific functions,
               projects or divisions.  Responsibility centers are used to isolate a unit so that it can  be
               evaluated  separately from  the rest of the  corporation.  There  are five  major types  of
               responsibility centers: Cost centres, Revenue centres, Expense centres, Profit centres and
               Investment centres. Each responsibility centre has its own budget and is evaluated on the
               basis of its performance.

          6.   Network techniques: Network techniques such as Programme Evaluation and Review
               Technique (PERT), Critical Path Method (CPM), and their variants, are used extensively
               for the operational controls of scheduling and resource allocation in projects. When network
               techniques are modified for use as a cost accounting system, they become highly effective
               operational controls for project costs and performance.

          7.   Management by Objectives (MBO): It is a system proposed by Drucker, which is based on
               a regular evaluation of performance against objectives which are decided upon mutually
               by the superior and the subordinate. By the process of consultation, objective-setting leads
               to the establishment of a control system that operates on the basis of commitment and
               self-control. Thus, the scope of MBO to be used as an operational control is quite extensive.

          8.   Memorandum of Understanding: This is an agreement between a PSU and the administrative
               ministry  of the  government in which both specify their  respective commitments  and
               responsibilities. The system works as an effective control on the performance of the PSU.




              Task   Find out more about various strategic control techniques.




















                                            LOVELY PROFESSIONAL UNIVERSITY                                  265
   266   267   268   269   270   271   272   273   274   275   276