Page 259 - DCOM506_DMGT502_STRATEGIC_MANAGEMENT
P. 259

Unit 14: Strategic Evaluation and Control




                                                                                                Notes
                 Example: Sales quotas, specific cost reduction or profit targets, milestones or deadlines
          for completion of projects are examples of output controls.

          Behaviour Control

          Behaviour controls specify how something is to be done. This control is done through policies,
          rules, standard operating practices  and orders from superiors.  These controls  are the  most
          appropriate when performance results are hard to measure. Rules standardise the behaviour
          and make outcomes predictable. If employees  follow rules,  then actions  are performed  and
          decisions handled the same way time and again. The result is predictability and accuracy, which
          is the aim of all control systems. The main mechanisms of behaviour control are:
          1.   Operating budgets

          2.   Standard operating practices
          3.   Rules and procedures


                 Example: One example of an  increasingly popular behaviour control  is the  ISO 9000
          Standards Series on quality management and assurance developed by the International Standards
          Association of Geneva, Switzerland. The ISO 9000 series is a way of documenting a company’s
          quality operations, and strictly complying with it. Many corporations worldwide view ISO 9000
          certification as assurance that the firm sells quality products.

          Input Control

          Input controls specify the amount of resources, such as knowledge, skills, abilities, of employees
          to be  used in  performance. These controls are most appropriate when output is difficult to
          measures.

          14.1.2 Basic Characteristics of Effective Evaluation and Control System

          Effective strategy evaluation systems must meet several basic requirements. They must be:
          1.   Simple: Strategy evaluation must be simple, not too comprehensive and not too restrictive.
               Complex systems often confuse  people and accomplish little.  The test  of an  effective
               evaluation system is its simplicity not its complexity.
          2.   Economical: Strategy evaluation activities must be economical. Too many controls can do
               more harm than good.
          3.   Meaningful: Strategy evaluation activities should be meaningful. They should specifically
               relate to a firm’s objectives. They should provide managers with useful information about
               tasks over which they have control and influence.
          4.   Timely: Strategy evaluation activities should provide timely information. For example,
               when a firm has diversified into a new business by acquiring another firm, evaluative
               information may be needed at frequent intervals. Time dimension of control must coincide
               with the time span of the event being measured.

          5.   Truthful:  Strategy evaluation should be designed to provide a true picture  of what is
               happening. Information should facilitate action and should be directed to those individuals
               who need to take action based on it.
          6.   Selective: The control systems should focus on selective criteria like key important factors
               which are critical to performance. Insignificant deviations need not be focused.



                                            LOVELY PROFESSIONAL UNIVERSITY                                  253
   254   255   256   257   258   259   260   261   262   263   264