Chapter 2: Result controls
MANAGEMENT CONTROL
SYSTEMS
Performance Measurement,
Evaluation and Incentives
Kenneth A. Merchant & Win a. Van
der Stede
Second edition, 2007
.
Submitted to:
Dr.Basharat Naeem
Presented by Group:
Members Name: Registration Number:
1. Abdul Farhan CIIT/FA16-BAF-026/LHR
2. Areeba Aslam CIIT/FA16-BAF-003/LHR
Learning Objectives
After reading this reader will able to understand the
concept of:
Organizational Control
Result control
How to judge performance of employee?
Elements of result control
Condition determining the effectiveness of result control
Organization control
The organization need a proper Management control
in order to stay in market for long time. Control
might be three main types
1. Cultural control
2. Action control
3. Result control
Cultural control
Cultural control:
Refer to controlling behavior
Providing stability within the organization
A sense of belonging. Individuals who disrupt
normal behavioral patterns.
Cultural control
Specific patterns of behavior and rules within a
professional environment.
Mission and visions
Rules and regulations
Elements of Cultural control
There are two main elements of cultural control.
1. Individual self control
2. Social control
Individual self control
A force by an individual that push most of the
people to perform the best way
Example: Order of executives or manger.
Social control
A pressure exerted by workgroups on those who
deviate from group norms and value
Definition by Ogburn and Nimkoff: The patterns
of pressure which a society excerpts to maintain
order and established rule
Types of Social Control
Formal Control:
Law, legislation, administrative support in an organization
Informal Control:
Customs, work norm, morality in an organization is a form of
informal control
Action control
Ensuring that employees perform
certain actions known to be beneficial to the
organization
Involve observing the actions of individuals as they
go about their work.
Forms of Action control
Action control are in four main components:
1. Behavioral constraints
2. Pre-action review
3. Action-accountability
4. Redundancy
Forms of Action control (cont)..
Behavioral constraints:
Provide a preventive form of action control by
making difficult some undesirable behaviors.
Example:
Locks
Personnel identification
Passwords, etc.
Forms of Action control (cont)..
Pre-action review:
Involves observing the work of others before the task
is complete and making corrections if needed
Example:
Planning reviews
Approvals on capital expenditure proposals, etc.
Forms of Action control (cont)..
Action-accountability:
Controls: similar to results accountability controls.
Example:
Defining the limits of acceptable behaviors
Tracking the behaviors
Punishing deviations
Forms of Action control (cont)..
Redundancy:
The opposite factor in controlling
Involves assigning more employees (or machines) to
a task than the necessary
Should be avoided
Result control
Result Control:
Refers to motivate employees by giving them
rewards on the basis of the basis of their
performance
It is necessary element of employee empowerment
Result control
It creates meritocracies
Meritocracies: rewards are given to the most
talented and hardest working employees, rather than
those with the longest tenure or the right social
connections
Case of US West Communications Group
In 1995, US West Communications Group
implemented a pay-for-performance system that
promised sales reps compensation increases of 20%
or more if they met performance goals. In the
following three years, revenues per employee had
increased by 47%.
All work tasks was a 22% gain in performance.
Result control
How to judge performance of employee?
different business authors suggest three method to
judge the performance of employee
1. Decentralization
2. Management by objective
3. Franchising
Decentralization
CEO of DuPont suggest the method to determined
the performance of employee
Decentralization means to replace the centralized
management hierarchy into SBUs
SBUs stands for small business units
Each SBUs is answerable to their task
Saying on decentralization
One of the SBU manger of Dupont said:
“21 years ago when I joined DuPont, only the
concept is if you kept your nose clean and worked
hard, you could work as long as you wanted. But
today job security depends on results.”10 The
change was perceived as being successful”
Saying on decentralization
Merrill’s CFO said about decentralization:
“Once accountability of the fully integrated profit and
loss was in place, people started to make tradeoffs.”
Managers pay more attention to their work that will
lead progress to business
Saying on decentralization
Richard H. Chandler, CEO of Sunrise Medical said:
People want to be rewarded based on their own
efforts. [Without divisional accountability] you end
up with a system like the US Post Office. There’s no
incentive [for workers to excel]
Saying on decentralization
The manager of Johnsons and Johnsons said
about decentralization
‘I think that where decentralization helps in
innovation is that it allows different people with
different skills, different thoughts, to bring
together different products and technologies to
satisfy the unmet needs of patients or customers’
Advantages of decentralization
Greater Autonomy Empowers Employees
Reduces the burden on top executives
Facilitates diversification
Quick Decision Making
Ease of Expansion
It promotes motivation
limitations of decentralization
Emergency Decision not Possible
Lack of Qualified Managers
Co-Ordination Difficulty
Waste of Resources
Management by objective
The concept was described by Peter Druker in 1954.
Peter Druker (a dean of Science of management of
USA)
A clearly defining objectives that are agreed to by
both management and employees
The process of encourages the self control and self
confidence of worker
Management by objective
J.Odiorine said about MBO:
‘A procedure where all hierarchical stages of an
organization, pointing the common purposes,
defines the area of responsibility of each person’
Example: Commission based job
Credit card sellers
Management by objective
Example: Proshe enters the name of the worker
who installs each major engine component in the
engine’s log so if a fault appears later, it can be
traced back to the person responsible
Components of MBO
1. Task setting
2. Performance reviewing
3. Rewards giving on basis of performance
Components of MBO (cont)..
Task setting: All individuals are assigned a special
set of objectives
They try to reach during a normal operating period
Example:
Employee X assigned to sell 50 credit cards in 1 month
Employee Y assigned to manufacture 20 tyres in one week
Components of MBO (cont)..
Performance reviewing:
Performance reviews are conducted periodically to
check productivity
Usually consist of interrogative sentence
Example:
Is employee X sells upto 25 cards in 15 days to cover its target?
is employee Y manufactured 10 tyres in 3 days to cover his
target?
Components of MBO (cont)..
Rewards giving: Rewards are given to individuals
on the basis of how close they come to reaching their
goals.
Task setting
Performance
review
Assign
rewards
Steps in MBO
Setting of organizational purpose and objectives
Key result area
Setting subordinates objectives
Matching resources with objectives
Appraisal
Advantages of MBO
Improved Performance
Greater Sense of Identification
Maximum Utilization of Human Resources
Improved Communication
Improved Organizational Structure
Device for Organizational Control
Limitation of MBO
Lack of Support of Top Management
Careless Attitude of Subordinates
Difficulties in Quantifying the Goals and Objectives
Costly and Time Consuming Process
Emphasis on Short Term Goals
Lack of Adequate Skills and Training
Poor Integration
Franchising
A contract between two party (Franchisee and
Franchiser)
Franchisee use the claims of franchiser against some
predetermined loyalty fees
Long term agreement
Franchising (cont)..
Franchiser: Who give its franchise
Franchisee: Who take a franchisee
Claims: Logo, plans, expertise in general, training
method and production techniques
Franchising (cont)..
Example in Pakistan:
McDonald
Pizza Hut
Singer Plus
Subway
Burger king
Air Asia
Advantages of Franchising
Motivated Management
Speed of Growth
Ease of Supervision
Increased Profitability
Improved Valuations
Penetration of Secondary and Tertiary Markets
Limitation of franchising
High initial investment.
Limited creativity.
Lack of privacy.
Shared information.
Less control.
Damaged reputation.
The control problems
Result control totally basis in assumption
May be employee cant perform in better way
May be manager not able to motivate employee
Elements of result control
Measuring of Result control consists of four
steps:
1. Defining the dimensions
2. Measuring performance on these dimensions
3. Setting performance targets for employees
4. Providing rewards to encourage the behaviors that will
lead to the desired result
Defining the dimensions
First step of a company is to setting a goals which
includes Missions and visions of a company that base
on the following:
1. Profitability
2. Customers satisfactions
3. Products defects
Defining the dimensions
Example:
Motive of Askari bank is customer satisfaction
Motive to Emporium Mall is to provide
entertainment to general public not only for Allied
class
Measuring performance
After defining the performance second step is to
measure the performance of:
Managers as a team member
Developing employee affectivity
Measuring performance (cont..)
Managers as a team member:
Judging the performance of a manager according to
his leadership skills. For example how manager
motivate their employee in sense of productivity and
what outcome occurs against this act.
Measuring performance (cont..)
Developing employee affectivity
The effectiveness of the employee can be measured by
observing:
1. Level of executions
2. Quality of work
3. Level of creativity
4. Amount of consistent improvement
5. Customer and peer feedback
Measuring performance (cont..)
Precisely these measures are divided into two
elements:
1. Financial measures
2. Non financial measures
Financial Measures
These measure is related to the finances of a firm
and occurs in high level organizations such as:
Net income
Earning per share
Return on assets
Non financial measures
Those measures which doesn't directly related to the
financials of a company i.e:
Market shares
Growth
Goodwill
Customer satisfactions
Performance measuring scale
Many scales are used to classify the perforamce but
most commonly used is ordinary scale which starts
from 1 (unsatisfactory) to 5 (very satisfied).
Setting performance target
Performance targets affect behavior in two basic
ways
1. By stimulate action of employee
2. By employees to interpret their own performance
Setting performance target (cont)..
By stimulate action of employee
One step to set the performance target is to motivate
the employee by giving them specific task to perform
and allow them to do according to their own desire.
Setting performance target (cont)..
Allow employees to interpret their own
performance
Second factor to set the target performance is to give
the ownership to employee to their task and give
punishment and reward to him in final stage. This
will help employee to work independently and that
will lead to better performance of employee as well as
company
Providing rewards
Rewards or incentives are the final important element
of a results control system. it can be in the form of
Salary hike
Bonuses
Promotions
Job security
Job assignment
Providing rewards (cont)..
Training opportunity
Freedom
Reorganization
Powers
Providing rewards (cont)..
A business writer quote about the meaning of reward
Reward is benefits provided by the employers,
usually money, promotion or benefits and
satisfaction derived from the job itself such as
pride in one’s work, a feeling of accomplishment
or being part of a team
[DECENZO AND ROBBINS]
Providing rewards (cont)..
Types of rewards:
Some business author add a line about rewards. They
categorized reward into two forms
1. Extrinsic rewards
2. Intrinsic rewards
Providing rewards (cont)..
Extrinsic reward:
a tangible and visible reward given to an individual
or an employee for achieving something. They are
ually have monetary value like bonus, reward etc.
Providing rewards (cont)..
Intrinsic rewards:
Intrinsic rewards are the non-physical rewards. They
cannot be seen or touched but are emotionally
connected with the employees such as work
recognition, freedom, job security etc.
Providing rewards (cont)..
Expectancy theory
Theory said that an individuals’ motivational force,
or effort, is a function of
1. Expectancies
2. Valences
Providing rewards (cont)..
Expectancies:
Employee belief that certain outcomes will result
from their behavior (e.g. a bonus for increased effort)
Valences:
The strength of the employee preference for those
outcomes.
Providing rewards (cont)..
Punishment is an opposite factor of reward that
will be given to employee with worst performance. it
includes:
Demotions
Supervisor disapproval
Threat of dismissal
Firing
Conditions effective of result control
Following are the condition that determine the
effectiveness of result control:
1. Knowledge of desired result
2. Ability to influence desired results
3. Ability to measure controllable result affectivity
Result desirability
Result desirability means that more of the quality
represented by the result measure is preferred less,
everything else being equal
For a result control organization must:
knowwhat results are desired
communicate those desires effectively to the employees
Result desirability (cont)..
At general level Organization desires:
Customer satisfaction
Maximize Shareholder value
Quality production
Low cost products
Result desirability (cont)..
Example:
A company short of cash may want to minimize the
amount of inventory on hand
A company with a cost leadership strategy may want to
emphasize the cost considerations
A company with products with a quality image may
emphasize meeting or exceeding the specifications of
the materials being purchased
Result desirability (cont)..
If the wrong result areas are chosen:
Results measures is not congruent with the
organization’s true objectives
Actually motivate employees to take the wrong
actions
Ability to influence desired results
Second condition of effective result control:
The condition of the result control to be effective on the
employees whose behaviour are being controlled have
significant influence on the results
Accountable to their task
Ability to influence desired results (cont)..
Perennial principle:
Almost a self-evident proposition
In appraising the performance of divisional
management
No account should be taken of matters outside the
division’s control
Ability to influence desired results (cont)..
Perennial principle (cont)..
A manager is not normally held accountable for:
Unfavorable outcomes
Credited with favorable ones if they are clearly due to
causes not under his control
Ability to influence desired results (cont)..
Results can be occur in three forms:
Controllable
Favorable for organization
Partial controllable
Difficult to infer from the results measures
Uncontrollable
Unfavorable for organization
Ability to influence desired results (cont)..
Result measure are useful only to the extent that
they provide information about the desirability of the
action
There are some uncontrollable factor existed which
affect the measures used to evaluate performance.
Ability to influence desired results (cont)..
It become difficult to determine whether:
The result achieved are due to the action taken
Or uncontrollable factor
Ability to measure controllable result
The final constraint limiting the feasibility of result
control
Term as organization has a ability to measure the
controllable result effectively
More ability mean more effectiveness in outcomes
Ability to measure controllable result (cont)..
Measurement itself is rarely the problem
Result can’t measure effectively which include:
organization truly desires
employee involved
Ability to measure controllable result (cont)..
How to measure result?
If a measure evokes the right behaviors in a given
situation, then it is a good control measure.
If it does not evokes the right behaviors in a given
situation, it is a bad one
Ability to measure controllable result (cont)..
There are some measurement qualities without
being achieved them, result control will not be
effective.
1. Precision
2. Objective
3. Timeliness
4. understand ability
Precision
Measurement Precision refers to the amount of
randomness in the measurement.
For precision to be high, the dispersion among the
values placed must be small
Without it the measure loses much of its information
value, it measures the risk of misevaluating performance
Employees also react negative when the know that
equally good performance are rated differently.
Precision (cont)..
For example:
If 10 independent measurements show that the
quantity being measured is exactly 120.3, then the
measure is precise. If one can conclude only that
quantity is between 100 and 130, the measure is less
precise.
Objectivity
Objectivity, which means freedom from bias
Another desirable measurement quality
If objectivity is low then the possibility of biases is
high
Objectivity (cont)..
Example:
Where performance is self-reported or where
evaluates are allowed considerable discretion in the
choice of measurement methods, such as is true to
some extent with the measurement of accounting
income
Objectivity (cont)..
Two main alternative to increase the measurement
objectivity:
Measuring done by the people independent of the
process.
Such as by personnel in the controller’s department
Measurement verified by independent parties
Such as auditors
Timeliness
Lag between the employee’s performance and the
measurement of the result
Timeliness also has important measurement
qualities for two reason:
1. Motivation
2. Increase in intervention of result
Performance Result
Timeliness (cont)..
Motivation:
Employees need consistent short term performance
pressure to perform at their best
Short term pressure can also make creativity in
employees to search for new and better way of
improving result
Timeliness (cont)..
Increase in intervention of result:
If the problem is exist but performance measures are
not timely then it might not be possible to intervene
the problem before they cause sever harm
Understandability
Understandability is the concept that information
should be presented so that a employee can easily
comprehend it
Assumes a reasonable knowledge of business by the
reader
Does not require advanced business knowledge to
gain a high level of comprehension.
Understandability (cont)..
Two aspects of understand ability are important
within the organization:
1. Controlled behaviour of employee
2. Measurement of result by employee
Understandability (cont)..
Controlled behaviour of employee
The employees whose behaviours are being
controlled must understand what they are being held
accountable for which requirs
Communication
Training
Motivation
Understandability (cont)..
Example:
Employees are to be held accountable for achieving
goals
Understandability (cont)..
Measurement of result by employee
Employees must understand what they must do to
influence the measure
Each employee aware about their task
Performance will lead to result
Understandability (cont)..
Example:
Purchasing managers are held accountable for
lowering the costs of purchased materials
Improving negotiations with vendors
Increasing competition among vendors
Working with engineering personnel to redesign
certain parts
Understandability (cont)..
Understandability is not a limiting factor
Measures cannot be classified as either clearly
effective or clearly ineffective
When employees understand what a measure
represents, they will figure out the result
Conclusion
Result control is main element of management
control
Necessary element of employee empowerment
Higher the result control mean more profit in
organization