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CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE) PRIMAN KATE MARANON KAT NG KRISTA TAMAYO

CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

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CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE). PRIMAN KATE MARANON KAT NG KRISTA TAMAYO. WHAT IS CONTROL?. The systematic process of regulating organizational performance towards the attainment of goals. WHAT IS CONTROL?. ESTABLISHING STANDARDS at the time of planning - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

PRIMAN

KATE MARANON

KAT NG

KRISTA TAMAYO

Page 2: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

WHAT IS CONTROL?The systematic process of regulating

organizational performance towards the attainment of goals.

Page 3: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

WHAT IS CONTROL?

ESTABLISHING STANDARDS at the time of planning

MEASURING PERFORMANCE and comparing it to the set

standards

TAKING CORRECTIVE ACTION when any deviation is found

“The essence of control is action which adjusts operations to predetermined standards, and its basis is information in the hands of managers.” by Douglas S. Sherwin

Page 4: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

CONTROLLING IS GOAL-ORIENTED!

It ensures that the resources of the

organization are being used effectively and

efficiently for the achievement of

predetermined goals.

Page 5: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

STEPS IN THE CONTROL PROCESS

1. MEASURING ACTUAL PERFORMANCE

• Personal observation, statistical

reports, oral reports, and written reports

• Management by walking around

(MBWA)

2. COMPARING ACTUALPERFORMANCE

AGAINST A STANDARD

• Comparison to objective measures:

budgets, standards, goals

Page 6: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

STEPS IN THE CONTROL PROCESS

3. TAKING MANAGERIAL ACTION TO CORRECT DEVIATIONS OR INADEQUATE STANDARDS

• Immediate corrective action• Correcting a problem at once to get performance back

on track• Basic corrective action

• Determining how and why performance has deviated and then correcting the source of deviation

• Revising the standard• Adjusting the performance standard to reflect current

and predicted future performance capabilities

Page 7: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

THE CONTROL PROCESS

Page 8: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

QUALITIES OF AN EFFECTIVE CONTROL SYSTEM

AccurateEconomicalUnderstandableStrategically placedInvolves multiple criteriaProvides a reasonable criteriaTimelyFlexibleEmphasizes the exceptionInvolves a corrective action

Page 9: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

EXAMPLES OF CONTROL STANDARDS

Page 10: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

CHOOSING STANDARDS AND MEASURES

• Organization focus on measuring and controlling financial performance, such as sales, revenue and profit.

• Managers recognize the need to also measure intangible aspects of performance to manage the value-creating activities of contemporary organizations.

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• It is a comprehensive management control system that balances traditional financial measures with operational measures relating to a company’s critical success factors.

• Contains four major perspectives:a. Financial performanceb. Customer servicec. Business Processd. Potential for learning and growth

BALANCED SCORECARD

Page 12: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

BALANCED SCORECARD

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All well-designed control systems involve the use of feedback to determine whether performance meets established standards.

We will examine the steps in the feedback control model and how it applies to organizational budgeting.

FEEDBACK CONTROL MODEL

Establish Strategic

Goals

Feedback

Adjust Standards Adjust Performance

If

Inadequate

If Adequate

Feedback

1. Establish standards of performance

2. Measure actual

performance

3. Compare performance to standards

4. Do nothing or

provide reinforcemen

t

4. Take corrective

action.

Page 14: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

BUDGETING- Reports that list planned and actual expenditures - They highlight the variance between budgeted and actual amounts - They are created for all departments and divisions in an organization

Responsibility Center – any organizational department or unit under the supervision of a single person who is responsible for its activity.• Types of Budget

• Expense Budget• Revenue Budget• Cash Budget

Page 15: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

BUDGETING• Capital Budget

–Top-Down Budgeting – budgets for the coming year are imposed on middle and lower level managers

–Bottom-Up Budgeting – involves lower-level managers anticipating their department’s budget needs and passing them up to top management for approval

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- Review performance and highlight potential problems- Managers need to be able to evaluate financial reports

- Comparisons allow managers to see improvement and focus on competition

FINANCIAL CONTROL

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- Most common financial statements

a. Balance Sheet

b. Income Statement or Profit & Loss - Ratios and statistics highlight relationships between performance indicators such as asset, sales and inventory

- Ratios are stated fractions or proportions

- Most common financial ratios

a. Liquidity Ratio

b. Activity Ratio

c. Profitability Ratio

FINANCIAL CONTROL

Page 18: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

• Hierarchical Control

Involves monitoring and influencing employee behaviour through extensive use of rules, policies, hierarchy of authority, written documentation, reward systems and other formal mechanisms

• Decentralized Control

The organization fosters compliance with organizational goals through the use of organizational culture, group norms, and a focus on goals rather than rules and procedures.

• Open-book management

Allows employee to see for themselves the financial condition of the organization and encourages them to think and act like business owners.

Page 19: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT (TQM)

• Total Quality Management (TQM) is a

decentralized control philosophy• Infuse quality into every activity

in a company through continuous improvement• Toyota is a good example of the

results of TQM• TQM became attractive in the

1980s because of its success in Japan

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TQM TECHNIQUES• Quality Circles• Benchmarking• Six Sigma• Reduced Cycle Time• Continuous Improvement

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TRENDS IN QUALITY AND FINANCIAL CONTROL

• International Quality Standards• New Financial Control Systems• Economic Value-Added (EVA)• Market Value-Added (MVA)• Activity-Based Costing (ABC)• Corporate Governance

Page 22: CONTROLLING (MANAGING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE)

CONTROLS AND CULTURAL DIFFERENCES

• Methods of controlling employee behavior and operations can be quite different in different countries

• Distance creates a tendency for formalized controls in the form of extensive, formal reports

• In less technologically advanced countries, direct supervision and highly centralized decision making are the basic means of control

• Local laws may constrain the corrective actions that managers can take in foreign countries

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THE DYSFUNCTIONAL SIDE OF CONTROL

• Unfocused controls• Failure to achieve desired or intended results occur

when control measures lack specificity

• Incomplete control measures• Individuals or organizational units attempt to look good

exclusively on control measures

• Inflexible or unreasonable control standards• Controls and organizational goals will be ignored or

manipulated

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