3. controlling · controlling. 3.1 feedback and control 3.2 more on feedback 3.3 financial and non-...
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3. Controlling
3.1 Feedback and Control
3.2 More on Feedback
3.3 Financial and Non- Financial Controls
3.4 Control and Planning
3.1 Feedback and Control
Control - how we manage the execution of our plans and make sure we stay on target
Control needs a target (Goal) and a feedback loop
The Cars Stay In Their Lane Through Visual Feedback
• Blindfold means no visual feedback
• Other children must give you verbal feedback - negative and positive
Plans provide the goals that are your target.
Feedback gets you to them.
Budgets Control spendingSchedules Control timingPersonnel Reviews Control performanceQuality Control Controls quality of processesGPS Controls route to geographic
destination
Lots of Different Control Tools
Budgets help control expenditure of resources - usually money. They tell you what you planned to spend.
Without control, you are not managing anything and goals are just dreams.
3.2 More on Feedback
Feedback can be complex. How much and what type can affect how we control outcomes
Positive feedback = Going in the right direction. Keep it up
Negative feedback = Going in the wrong direction. Change course
A key choice in feedback is closeness of coupling - how much deviation before you react
Very close coupling can leave employees feeling distrusted and micromanaged
Very loose coupling can let things get out of control and lead to disaster
Chernobyl - a failure of control
A 360 degree performance review collects feedback from supervisors, employees, and subordinates
Budgetary Review
The budget describes how much money you expect to spend each month. Are you over or under?
Feedback is important in every aspect of management. Without it, you are not managing anything
3.3 Financial and Non-Financial Controls
Businesses control financial activities but all organizations control non-financial activities
Financial Controls
Control/manage a firm’s costs and expenses
Key Financial Control Tools
Budgets Control spendingCash Flow Statements Monitor money in and outBalance sheets Provide a snapshot for current
conditionsBreak-even analysis When have you paid off the initial
investment and started making profits?
Productivity Analysis How much of the inputs become useful outputs?
Break-Even Analysis
When total revenue (Money in) = total costs (Money out), you have broken even on a decision
Break-Even Analysis
When total revenue (Money in) = total costs (Money out), you have broken even on a decision
Productivity = Ratio of output to input. A basic measure of efficiency in any organization
Productivity is a key goal for any organization
Key Non-Financial Control Tools
Quality Control Are you building the product in the right way?
Performance reviews Are employees performing in the right ways?
Customer Satisfaction Are you serving customers in the right way?
Schedule Are you doing things at the right time?
Waste Management Are you wasting resources that you could be using?
Quality control means adhering to a standard for output. Are you building things the way you should be?
We use ratios to correct for the differences in absolute size. They help compare big things to little things.
3.4 Control and Planning
All the functions of management are related, but planning and control are the closest in the relationship
Planning sets the goals and control manages how we reach them.
Strategic Controls
Broad strategic plans need controls that track broad outcomes, like market share or productivity
Tactical Controls
Short-term plans need flexible controls that track very specific things during short periods of time
Productivity = Ratio of output to input. A basic measure of efficiency in any organization
Productivity is a key goal for any organization
If planning and control are not closely connected, planning is useless and control is not efficient
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