Chapter 18 - Foundations of Control
Chapter 18 - Foundations of Control
Chapter 18
Foundations of Control
What is control?
There needs to be assurance that activities are going as planned and that
goals are being attained
It is the final link in the management functions
Without control you would have no idea whether the organisation as on
track to complete goals and what future actions should be
Also, it assists with employee empowerment, allowing eployees to take on
responsibilities (that managers may be tempted to do themselves) and
monitor them at the same time
o This is the importance of a control system as it provides feedback
and information on employee performance
Protects the organisation and its assets from threats such as natural
disasters, financial scandals, workplace violence, supply-chain
disruptions, security breaches and even terrorist attacks.
o Plans in place to protect employees, infrastructure, facilities and
data.
Control Process
3 step process
Assets are only valuable is they are managed in a way that captures that
value
High performance companies manage assets in a way that exploit their
value
Managers at all organisational levels are concerned with asset
management
Organisational productivity
Organisational Efectiveness
Control concepts:
o Feedforward control = a type of control that takes place before a
work activity is done
Anticipates problems
Allow managers to prevent problems
Require timely and accurate information that is often
difficult to obtain
o Concurrent control = a type of control that takes place while a
work activity is in progress
Corrects problems as they happen
Correct before they become too costly
Best form of concurrent control is direct supervision –
management by walking around
Management by walking around = a term used to
describe when a manager is out in the work area
interacting directly with employees
Technical equipment (computers) can be programmed to
include concurrent controls
o Feedback control
Corrects problems after they occur
Drawback = leads to waste or damage
Provides managers with meaningful information on how
effective their planning efforts were
People want information on how well they have performed
Financial Controls
Information controls
2 ways to view information controls:
o a tool to help managers control other organisational activities
o an organisational area that managers need to control
Controlling Information