Posts Tagged ‘Objective’

Business Management Principles

April 17th, 2010



In order for a business to be successful it is essential that it must have a management system capable of ensuring the business can achieve its goals and objectives. The ISO 9000 series of standards relate to Quality Management Systems however as businesses will tend to have one system, formalizing the system to focus solely on quality will have no real benefits to your business. Therefore, it will be necessary to move away from a system focusing wholly on quality, to a system that focuses on all the characteristics of your business.

The main reason your business is in existence is to highlight the requirements and expectations of your customers and other persons concerned (employees, suppliers etc) to accomplish an advantage over you competitors. In addition to this, another objective must be to gain, sustain and develop your businesses performance and resources.

As a means to achieve improvements within your business you should ensure that your business employs the key principles that are fundamental to ISO 9001:2000, these are:

- Customer Focus;

- Involvement of People;

- Leadership;

- Process Approach;

- Factual Approach;

- System Approach;

- Continual Improvements;

- Mutually Beneficial Supplier Relationships.

Following the principles highlighted above ensures that your business focuses on what your customer actually requires and not what they think they require. In order for your business to move forward successfully it is essential that you run it in a methodical and well thought out manner that is highly perceptible. To achieve success from your business you must ensure that your business adopts a business management system which will ensure that continual improvement is constantly being driven by the management system. If your business is to develop and have a business management system that will allow growth and sustainability, you will have to ensure that you build a management system that is focused on your customers. To achieve this objective your business management system must contain systems and processes that are easily understood by the individuals within your business. It is also crucial that these systems can be managed easily and improvements made if they are necessary without any detrimental affect on the day to day operation of your business. The processes within your management system must be capable of being measured to ensure they are performing as required. It does also mean that when setting these key performance indicators, intelligent thought is given to the areas that you are measuring. It is worth remembering that individuals are likely to improve in areas in which they are being measured. Therefore it is critical that any process measuring is carried out in areas that will benefit the system and your business as a whole.

By: Mark Inglis

Management Decision Making and Managerial Hedging

April 12th, 2010



Every organization has some degree of sales and managerial hedging. It is the mental process, knowingly or otherwise, of holding back vital information or funds in reserve for increased probability of producing a successful objective.

What causes hedging within a management team? The obvious answer is expectations, usually very high expectations. Who is responsible for the expectations? Are the expectations part of an overall plan established by the management team that demands obtainment of goals and objectives, or are these expectations placed on the individual by the individual himself? It could be one or the other or a combination of both that causes the hedging to occur.

The setting of yearly goals and objectives is generally standard operating procedure in most companies. The goals and objectives are tied to compensation models that demand if the individual is to make money, the specific objectives that are assigned to him or his department have to be accomplished. Lack of accomplishment means bonus money at the end of the quarter or year won’t be available resulting in less financial growth for the individual. Does the average manager think about this? He wouldn’t be human if he didn’t. So why not reserve or hold back just enough to make sure the objective will get accomplished during the time period allotted? If the objective is accomplished with time to spare, then the opportunity to have a little more in the back pocket will be a good thing for the next bonus period, right? The corporate culture will either support the hedge or it will refuse to allow it. There are several different aspects that should be discussed before deciding if your company’s culture is suspect.

Providing the expectations that are set forth are reasonable and achievable, they can be viewed by a manager as either motivating or non-motivating. Competition from both within the organization and from outside can demand that the expectations be high as well as achievable. No matter the extent of the force that is driving the expectation, it demands a respect and is usually heeded by the manager. Ignoring it doesn’t make it go away, but increases the degree of self-expectation to get results. This may occur at the corporate, departmental, supervisory, or individual level. The largest impact is always at the individual level.

Performance drivers gage the ability of the individual to succeed in a position. Certain areas are more susceptible to hedging. For example, the areas of workload or teamwork require more input from the manager than the individual. The measure of employee throughput can be easily defined. Individual evaluation is created by having specific, quantifiable, realistic and time sensitive objectives in place for the employee. Without these types of objectives in place, not only is hedging available, but monitoring performance as a whole is jeopardized. It is at this level that companies lose huge amounts of productivity.

Setting and attaining goals should be part of every company’s culture. It is the mechanism by which standards are set and the forward progress is measured. Strategic goal setting is the beginning of the internal corporate hedge. No matter what the goal or long-term objective, the measure of success is getting there within a specified time successfully. Is the company any less successful if it arrives at the accomplished goal prior to the specified time? It would seem so because the opportunity to achieve more in the same amount of time is primary to drive both short-term and long-term achievement. It produces excellence within the organization.

By having a set of strategic goals, the ability to get only these objectives accomplished limits the view of the company producing multiple levels of opportunity to hedge the results to assure success. No company can move forward without a firm set of strategic goals at the forefront. Can the aspect of hedging be minimized by strong strategic goals? My opinion is no because strategic goals create a set of cascading objectives throughout the organization.

Objectives are created at the top with the strategic goal accomplishment as a primary success point. These objectives are passed downward from level to level creating a cascading effect on the objectives. Levels of specific accomplishment are needed to provide overall objective success. The responsibility is spread throughout the organization by department. Who then becomes the guarantor of the objective? And to what degree should some “fluff” be interjected to assure complete success? Hedging then becomes a norm and not an exception.

The answer to a solution for hedging lies in multiple areas. If hedging does exist within an organization, it has to be brought to light with a complete knowledge that hedging does occur and the protracted consequences that can come to bear. This responsibility lies with the top executive management team. Corporate awareness is the beginning of dealing with a hedging problem.

Most companies spend little time developing or seeking help to develop a workable compensation model based on their market and culture. By providing a model that allows for strong performance tied to legitimate performance drivers, the compensation model can be used to minimize the hedge as opposed to sponsoring it.

Least used and most effective is the use planning instruments that can link planning, strategic direction, performance, and accountability to the organization. When these are linked correctly, the ability to create a personal or departmental hedge is limited. When a plan is installed that provides responsibility with defined accountability, every part of the organization wins from the CEO to the individual employees.
The expectation of company owners shouldn’t necessarily change to accommodate a management team that incorporates a hedge into the company’s strategy and design. Awareness is critical to monitor the company’s performance at all levels. Managers have the opportunity and responsibility to make businesses profitable and stable. By employing reasonable tools, managers can drive a business at full throttle with a certain amount of comfort that individual and departmental achievements are being accomplished without a created or perceived performance hedge.

The ramifications of hedging are substantial, if not huge. In production, capacity issues are affected. In accounting, the cash flow is affected. In sales, the top line revenue is affected. There is virtually no department within an organization that can’t be dramatically impacted even if the smallest amount of hedging takes place.

If the hedge exists with your company, the impact of viable compensation modeling coupled with a strong planning diagnostic tool will limit the ability of your employees to apply hedging as part of their standard planning process and daily activities. Responsibility demands accountability when performance drivers are part of the process and daily routine. Without these tools in place, you can be assured that the hedge is alive and well within your organization. To what extent may vary, but the inevitable results are the same with all companies. A critical evaluation of your company’s culture and management style is your first step to understanding this intrinsic phenomenon. Your gain, as well as your company’s gain, will be recognized and rewarded.

By: Larry Bauman

Total Quality Management

March 25th, 2010



Introduction

Competition is getting harder and becoming global. Companies now have to be more responsive, offer a better product and keep improving. Total quality management (TQM) increases customer satisfaction by boosting quality. It does this by motivating the workforce and improving the way the company operates. In an increasingly competitive market, firms with a continuous improvement culture and external focus are more likely to survive and prosper. TQM is considered an important catalyst in this context.

What is TQM?

TQM is an approach to improving the effectiveness and flexibilities of business as a whole. It is essentially a way of organising and involving the whole organisation, every department, every activity and every single person at every level. TQM ensures that the management adopts a strategic overview of the quality and focuses on prevention rather than inspection.

Objectives of TQM

o Meeting the customer’s requirements is the primary objective and the key to organisational survival and growth.

o The second objective of TQM is continuous improvement of quality. The management should stimulate the employees in becoming increasingly competent and creative.

o Third, TQM aims at developing the relationship of openness and trust among the employees at all levels in the organisation.

Significance of TQM

The importance of TQM lies in the fact that it encourages innovation, makes the organisation adaptable to change, motivates people for better quality, and integrates the business arising out of a common purpose and all these provide the organisation with a valuable and distinctive competitive edge.

Elements of TQM

The various elements of TQM are

o Be customer focused

It requires the company to check customers’ attitudes regularly and includes the idea of internal customers as well as external ones.

o Do it right the first time

This means avoiding rework, i.e., cutting the amount of defective work.

o Constantly improve

Continuous improvement allows the company gradually to get better.

o Quality is an attitude

Every one has to be committed to quality. That means changing the attitude of the entire workforce, and altering the way the company operates.

o Telling staff what is going on

This involves improved communication. Typically, it includes team briefing.

o Educate and train people

An unskilled workforce makes mistakes. Giving more skills to workers means they can do a wider range of jobs, and do them better. It also means educating staff in the principles of TQM, which is a whole new style of working.

o Measure the work.

Measurement allows the company to make decisions based on facts, not opinion. It helps to maintain standards and keep processes within the agreed tolerances.

o Top management must be involved

If senior management is not involved, the programme will fail.

o Make it a good place to work

Many companies are full of fear. Staffs are afraid of the sack, their boss and making mistakes. There is no point in running a TQM programme unless the company drives out fear.

o Introduce team work

Team work boosts employees’ morale. It reduces conflict and solves problem by hitting them with a wider range of skills. It pushes authority and responsibility downwards and provides better, more balanced solutions.

o Organise by process, not by function

This element of TQM seeks to reduce the barriers that exist between different departments, and concentrates on getting the product to the customer.

Reasons for failure

TQM fails because:

o Top management sees no reason for change.

o Top management is not concerned for its staff.

o Top management is not committed to the TQM programme.

o The company loses interest in the programme after six months.

o The workforce and the management do not agree on what needs to happen.

o Urgent problems intervene.

o TQM is imposed on the workforce, which does not inwardly accept it.

o No performance measure or targets are set, so progress cannot be measured.

o Processes are not analysed, systems are weak and procedures are not written down.

Conclusion

In today’s globally competitive market, the situation is to buy whichever is of good quality and low cost. The organisations have started with a rigour to have an edge over the global competition and in the process some have become successful. The quality movement, which drives every organisation towards the global market, seems to increase its competitive advantage for better market acceptance.

By: Dr. Gomathi Viswanathan