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CHAPTER 11 Evaluation & Control. STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT & BUSINESS POLICY 11 TH EDITION. THOMAS L. WHEELEN J. DAVID HUNGER. Evaluation and Control. Evaluation and Control. Evaluation and Control Information – Performance data Activity reports. Evaluation and Control.
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CHAPTER 11 Evaluation & Control STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT & BUSINESS POLICY11TH EDITION THOMAS L. WHEELEN J. DAVID HUNGER
Evaluation and Control • Evaluation and Control Information – • Performance data • Activity reports
Evaluation and Control • Measuring performance – • The end result of activity
Evaluation and Control • Types of Controls – • Behavior controls • Some examples of behavior controls are company procedures, quotas of sales calls to potential customers, and rules regarding attendance and tardiness. • Behavior controls are very appropriate when results are hard to measure and a clear cause-effect exists between activities (behaviors) and results.
Evaluation and Control • Types of Controls – • Output controls • What is to be accomplished; focus on end result through performance targets. • Some examples of output controls are sales quotas, cost reduction or profit objectives, and surveys of customer satisfaction.
Evaluation and Control • Types of Controls – • Input controls • Resources – skills, abilities, values, motives. • Input controls are the least useful and are most appropriate when output is difficult to measure and there is no clear cause-effect relationship between behavior and performance (such as in college teaching).
Evaluation and Control • Types of Controls – • Behavior controls • ISO 9000 Standards Series • ISO 14000 Standards Series
Evaluation and Control • Types of Controls – • Activity Based Costing (ABC) • Allocation of indirect and fixed costs to individual products or product lines • Based on value-added activities • More accurate charge of costs
Evaluation and Control • Types of Controls – • Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) • Identify risks • Rank risks • Measure risks
Evaluation and Control • Primary Measures of Performance – • Traditional Financial Measures • Return on investment (ROI) • Earnings per share (EPS) • Return on equity (ROE) • Operating cash flow • Free cash flow
Evaluation and Control • Primary Measures of Performance – • Shareholder • Shareholder value • Economic value added (EVA) • Market value added (MVA)
Is EVA really an improvement over ROI, ROE, or EPS? • Economic value added (EVA) is being increasingly recommended as an improvement over traditional measures because of EVA's strong relationship to a company's stock price. It uses stock price to measure the difference between the pre-strategy and post-strategy value of a corporation. However, EVA is often difficult to calculate. It is for this reason that more simpler measures like ROI, ROE, and EPS continue to have widespread usage. • Another limitation of EVA is this its concern with only one aspect of the task environment - the stockholder. The conclusion seems clear. There is no one best measure or group of measures.
Is the evaluation and control process appropriate for a corporation that emphasizes creativity? • Control is not ignored. Data is just not collected on intermediate activities such as time in the office or manner of dress. • The emphasis tends to be on the end-result of activities rather than upon the activities themselves. To be successful, they need both talent and discipline.
Market value added (MVA) • The difference between market value of corporation and the capital contributed by shareholders and lenders.
Evaluation and Control • Primary Measures of Performance – • Balanced Scorecard Approach • Financial • Customer • Internal business perspective • Innovation and learning
Evaluation and Control • Evaluating Top Management & Board – • Chairman-CEO Feedback Instrument • Management Audit • Strategic Audit
Evaluation and Control • Divisional & Functional Performance – • Responsibility Centers • Standard cost centers. Based on historical data • Revenue centers. • Expense centers profit centers • Investment centers. Difference between revenues and cost.
Evaluation and Control • Using Benchmarking – • Continual process of measuring products, service, and practices against the toughest competitors or those companies recognized as industry leaders
Evaluation and Control • International Measurement Issues – • International transfer pricing • Repatriation of profit • Piracy: copying top products and sell abroad
Strategy Review The firm’s internal and external environments are dynamic. Therefore, the best conceived and implemented strategies become obsolete!
Strategy Review Strategy Evaluation—the 3 Basics • Examining the underlying basis of the firm’s strategy • Comparing actual to expected results • Taking corrective action to address performance gaps
Strategy Review Effective Strategy Evaluation • Adequate and timely feedback • The cornerstone of effective evaluation
Strategy Review Strategy Evaluation • Must have both • Short- & long-term focus
Strategy Review Four Criteria (Richard Rumelt): • Consistency الاتساق • Consonance=fit or harmony التكيف • Feasibility يمكن التحقق • Advantage
Consistency=uniformity A strategy should not present inconsistent goals and policies • If managerial problems continue despite changes in personnel and are issue based, then strategies may be inconsistent. • If success for one department means failure for another department, then strategies may be inconsistent. • If policy problems/issues continue to be brought to the top for resolution, then strategies may be inconsistent.
Consonance= adapt, fit Strategists need to examine sets of trends as well as individual trends in evaluating strategies. • Strategy must represent an adaptive response to the external environment and critical changes occurring within it. • Most trends are the result of interactions among other trends. • Difficult in matching key internal and external factors in formulation of strategy.
Feasibility Strategy must neither overtax available resources nor create unsolvable subproblems. • Can the strategy be attempted within the physical, human and financial resources of the enterprise? • Limitation on strategic choice imposed by individual and organizational capabilities must be considered. • Important to examine whether in the past the organization has demonstrated the capabilities, abilities, competencies, skills, and talents to carry out strategy.
Increase in environment’s complexity • Difficulty in predicting the future with accuracy • Increasing number of variables Strategy Review Contemporary Strategy Evaluation Difficulties
Rate of obsolescence of even the best plans • Increase in domestic and world events • Decreasing time span for which planning can be done with any certainty Strategy Review Contemporary Strategy Evaluation Difficulties
Strategy Review Process of Evaluating Strategies: • Should initiate managerial questioning of expectations and assumptions • Should trigger a review of objectives and values • Should stimulate creativity in generating alternatives and criteria of evaluation
I. Review Bases of Strategy • Develop a Revised Evaluation Framework Matrix: • How have competitors reacted to our strategies? • How have competitors’ strategies changed? • Have major competitors’ strengths and weaknesses changed?
I. Review Bases of Strategy • Why are competitors making certain strategic changes? • Why are some competitors’ strategies more successful than others? • How satisfied are our competitors with their present market positions and profitability?
I. Review Bases of Strategy • How far can our major competitors be pushed before retaliating? • How could we more effectively cooperate with our competitors?
I. Review Bases of Strategy Key Questions in Evaluating Strategy: • Are our internal strengths still strengths? • Have we added other internal strengths? • Are our internal weaknesses still weaknesses?
I. Review Bases of Strategy • Do we now have other internal weaknesses? • Are our external opportunities still opportunities? • Are there now external opportunities?
I. Review Bases of Strategy • Are our external threats still threats? • Are there now other external threats? • Are we vulnerable to a hostile takeover?