Explain The Characteristics of Annual Objectives: John A Pearce II & Richard B. Robinson, JR
Explain The Characteristics of Annual Objectives: John A Pearce II & Richard B. Robinson, JR
“The result of an organization seeks to achieve within a one-year period are annual objectives.
Annual objectives translate long-range aspiration into this year’s budget. If annual objectives
are well developed, they provide clarity, which is a powerful, motivating facilitator of effective
strategy implementation” John A Pearce II & Richard B. Robinson, JR
Establishing annual objectives is a decentralized activity that directly involves all managers in
an organization. Active participation in establishing annual objectives can lead to acceptance
and commitment.
- Annual objectives serve as guidelines for action, directing and channeling efforts and
activities of organization members.
- They provide a source of legitimacy in an enterprise by justifying activities to
stakeholders.
- They serve as standards of performance.
- They serve as an important source of employee motivation and identification.
- They give incentives for managers and employees to perform.
- They provide a basis for organizational
Clearly stated and communicated objectives are critical to success in all types and sizes of
firms. Annual objectives, stated in terms of profitability, growth, and market share by business
segment, geographic area, customer groups, and product, are common in organizations.
Annual objectives are short-term milestones that organizations must achieve to reach long term
objectives. Like long-term objectives, annual objectives should be measurable, quantitative,
challenging, realistic, consistent, and prioritized. They should be established at the corporate,
divisional, and functional levels in a large organization.
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Annual objectives should be stated in terms of management, marketing, finance/accounting,
production/operations, research and development, and management information systems (MIS)
accomplishments. A set of annual objectives is needed for each long-term objective.
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dilemma in organizations, and a source of inter- departmental conflict, is setting sales
and production objectives. Marketing departments typically insist on wider variety of
products to cater to a variety of market segments while production departments
generally prefer to have greater product uniformity in order to have economic of scale.
Obviously, trade-offs are required to be made so that different objectives correlate with
each other, are mutually supportive and result in synergistic advantages. This is
especially true for organizations which are organized on profit- center basis.
7. Objective should be set within constraints
There are many constraints- internal as well as external- which has to be considered in
objectives-setting. For example, resource availability is an internal constraint which
affects objective –setting. Different objectives compete for scarce resources and trade –
offs are necessary for optimum resource utilization. Organizations face many external
constraints like legal requirements, consumer activism and environmental protection. All
these limits the organization’s ability to set and achieve objective
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