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9 Strategic Control and Corporate Governance McGraw-Hill/Irwin Strategic Management: Text and Cases, 4e Copyright © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 9- 3 Learning Objectives • After reading this chapter, you should have a good understanding of: - The value of effective strategic control systems in strategy implementation. The key difference between “traditional” and “contemporary” control systems. The imperative for “contemporary” control systems in today’s complex and rapidly changing competitive and general environments. The benefits of having the proper balance among the three levers of behavioral control: culture, rewards and incentives, and boundaries. The three key participants in corporate governance: shareholders, management (led by the CEO), and the board of directors. The role of corporate governance mechanisms in ensuring that the interests of managers are aligned with those of shareholders from both the United States and international perspectives. 9- 4 Ensuring Informational Control • Traditional control system - Based largely on the feedback approach - Little or no action taken to revise strategies, goals and objectives until the end of the time period • Contemporary control system - Continually monitoring the environments (internal and external) - Identifying trends and events that signal the need to revise strategies, goals and objectives 9- 5 Traditional Approach to Strategic Control • Traditional approach is sequential - Strategies are formulated and top management sets goals - Strategies are implemented - Performance is measured against the predetermined goal set - Control is based on a feedback loop from performance measurement to strategy formulation Adapted from Exhibit 9.1 Traditional Approach to Strategic Control 9- 6 Traditional Approach to Strategic Control • Process typically involves lengthy time lags, often tied to the annual planning cycle • This “single-loop” learning control system simply compares actual performance to a predetermined goal • Most appropriate when - Environment is stable and relatively simple - Goals and objectives can be measured with certainty - Little need for complex measures of performance 9- 7 Contemporary Approach to Strategic Control • Relationships between strategy formulation, implementation and control are highly interactive • Two different types of control - Informational control - Behavioral control Adapted from Exhibit 9.2 Contemporary Approach to Strategic Control 9- 8 Informational Control • Traditional approach - Understanding of the assumption base is an initial step in the process of strategy formulation • Contemporary approach - Information control is part of an ongoing process of organizational learning that updates and challenges the assumptions underlying the firm’s strategy 9- 9 Informational Control The Firm’s Update and Challenge the assumptions Assumptions Premises Contemporary Control System Continuously • Monitor • Test • Review Goals Strategies 9- 10 Behavioral Control • Behavioral control is focused on implementation— doing things right • Three key control “levers” - Culture - Rewards - Boundaries 9- 11 Behavioral Control: Balancing Culture, Rewards, and Boundaries •Traditional approach -Emphasizes comparing outcomes to predetermined strategies and fixed rules Adapted from Exhibit 9.3 Essential Elements of Strategic Control •Contemporary approach - A balance between •Culture •Rewards •Boundaries 9- 12 Building a Strong and Effective Culture • Effective culture must be - Cultivated - Encouraged - Fertilized • Maintaining an effective culture - Storytelling - Rallies or pep talks by top executives 9- 13 Motivating with Rewards and Incentives • Rewards and incentive systems - Powerful means of influencing an organization’s culture Focuses efforts on high-priority tasks Motivates individual and collective task performance Can be an effective motivator and control mechanism 9- 14 Setting Boundaries and Constraints • Focus efforts on strategic priorities • Short-term objectives - Specific and measurable Specific time horizon for attainment Achievable, but challenging Provide proper direction, but be flexible when faced with need to change 9- 15 Role of Corporate Governance • Corporate governance - Relationship among • The shareholders • The management (led by the Chief Executive Officer) • The board of directors • Issue is - How corporations can succeed (or fail) in aligning managerial motives with • The interests of the shareholders • The interests of the board of directors 9- 16 Agency Theory • Deals with the relationship between - Principals – who are owners of the firm (stockholders), and the - Agents – who are the people paid by principals to perform a job on their behalf (management) 9- 17 External Governance Control Mechanisms • Market for corporate control • Auditors • Banks and analysts • Regulatory bodies (Sarbanes-Oxley Act in 2002) • Media and public activists