13.strategic Control
13.strategic Control
Learning Objectives:
After studying this Lecture, you should be able to: Discuss the purposes and contributions of strategic controls. Discuss the different components of the companys control system. Discuss the qualities of an effective control system. Discuss design factors that lead to the failure of the strategic control system. Discuss managerial factors that lead to the failure of the strategic control system. Discuss managerial misconceptions about the strategic control system.
Strategic controls are essential for the successful execution of the company's strategy. They promote consistency in action, increase commitment to organizational goals, and identify areas that need managerial attention or intervention.
The results of strategic controls can help in establishing goals, allocating resources, streamlining operations, and creating an environment that encourages learning and continuous improvements.
01.Determine the accuracy of the assumptions on which the strategy has been formulated. 02.Ensure that the company is performing according to plans and expectations.
03.It helps executives and members of the board of directors appraise the company's ability to achieve its strategic, financial, and social goals.
04.Generate data for evaluating executive performance and making compensation decisions.
Strategic controls allow managers to examine their responses to these issues and distill important lessons for future actions. This can help to improve future strategy formulation and implementation processes and achieve greater realism in these efforts.
A strategic control system provides feedback about the company's operations, strategies, and goal achievement. A strategic control system usually ha; four major components.
01.Strategic Surveillance: This component aims to quickly detect environmental changes or shifts that are likely to impact the company's strategy.
Identifying the firm's environmental sectors that should be monitored. Collecting and analyzing the data, and interpreting the results. Feeding the data into the control process and, later, identifying threats to the company's successful execution of the strategy.
This component serves as an early swarming signal of potential crises, which may affect the company or the implementation of the strategy.
This component helps to validate the assumptions on which the strategy is developed.
(1) Is this premise still valid? (2) What corrective (preventive) measures should the company undertake to make sure that the premise still holds? And (3) What should the company do if the worst occurs?
This component requires monitoring the actions undertaken by management to implement the strategy and determine the effect of these actions. Managers also monitor progress in the company's goal achievements by collecting data. Finally, executives need to evaluate the results with stated milestones or goals.
To some, strategic controls are considered a necessary evil. In truth, however, strategic control systems are often misunderstood and misused. Successful companies and executives recognize that strategic controls are an integral component of the strategic process.
To ensure the effectiveness of strategic controls, executives should ensure that they have the following criteria:
01.They are future-oriented. 02.They are closely linked to strategy evaluation. In turn, attention is given to four areas: consistency, consonance, advantage, and feasibility.
1. 2. 3.
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03.They emphasize both the content and process issues. 04.They balance short-term and longterm demands on the company and its executives. 05.They are designed with a clear focus on the requirements for long-term success.
Despite careful planning, strategic control systems sometimes fail to achieve their goals. these failures may stem from poor system design, ineffective management, and misconceptions about the control process.
System Design Factors 1. Poorly stated (or vague) goals. 2. Obsession with procedures and systems. 3. Insufficient or faulty information processing capabilities. 4. Mismatch between the capabilities of the system and managers' cognitive abilities.
Management-Related Factors
Misconceptions about the Strategic Controls 1. Strategic controls are post-hoc activities. 2. Strategic controls are an exercise in "data crunching." 3. The assumption that "one system fits all."
Model Questions
1.Define the following: Strategic surveillance. Special alert control. Premise control. Implementation control. Strategy evaluation-feedback controls. 2.Define competitive benchmarking. 3.What is management by negative exception? 4.How does the breakdown in authority-accountability influence strategic controls? 5.What are three common misconceptions about strategic control systems? 6.Why do control systems fail?