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Essentials of Planning
What Is Planning?
• Planning
– involves defining the organization’s goals,
establishing an overall strategy, and developing a
comprehensive set of plans to integrate and
coordinate organizational work
– informal planning - nothing is written down
• little or no sharing of goals
• general and lacking in continuity
– formal planning - written
• defines specific goals
• specific action programs exist to achieve goals© Prentice Hall, 2002
Reduce the
Impact of
Change
Reduce the
Impact of
Change
Provide
Direction
Provide
Direction
Minimize
Waste /
Redundancy
Minimize
Waste /
Redundancy
Set Control
Standards
Set Control
Standards
Reasons
for Planning
Reasons
for Planning
Growing
complexities
Growing
complexities
Growth of
trade union
Growth of
trade union
Rapid socio-
Economic
changes
Rapid socio-
Economic
changes
Need for
R&D activity
Need for
R&D activity
What Planning
Accomplishes /Benefits of
Planning
• Allows decisions to be made ahead of time.
• Permits anticipation of consequences.
• Provides direction and a sense of purpose.
• Provides a unifying framework; avoiding piecemeal decision
making.
• Improves competitive strength
• Achieves better coordination
• Helps identify threats and opportunities and reduces risks.
• Facilitates managerial control through the setting of standards for
monitoring and measuring performance.
• Encourages innovation & creativity
ArgumentsArguments
AgainstAgainst
StrategicStrategic
PlanningPlanning
Rigid AssumptionsRigid Assumptions
of Stabilityof Stability
IntuitionIntuition
and Creativityand Creativity
EnvironmentalEnvironmental
TurbulenceTurbulence
Focus on Today’sFocus on Today’s
CompetitionCompetition
Preoccupation withPreoccupation with
Current SuccessCurrent Success
Does Planning Improve Performance?
• Financial results
• Environmental concerns
• Quality and implementation
Why Do Managers Plan?
/ Importance of planning
• Purposes of Planning
– Planning is the primary management function that
establishes the basis for all other management functions
– Planning establishes coordinated effort
– Planning reduces uncertainty
– Planning reduces overlapping and wasteful activities
– Manage complexities & competition
– Planning establishes goals and
standards used in controlling
– To increase org effectiveness
Why Do Managers Plan?
(cont.)
• Planning and Performance
– Generally speaking, formal planning is associated with:
• Higher return on assets
• Higher profits
– Quality of the planning process and the appropriate
implementation of the plans probably contribute more to
high performance than does the extent of planning
– External environment may undermine the effects of
formal planning
– Planning/performance relationship is influenced by the
planning time frame
Definition of Planning
• Weihrich & Koontz “Planning involves selecting missions and
objectives and the actions to achieve them; it requires decision
making, that is, choosing from among alternative future courses
of action”.
• McFarland “Planning may be broadly defined as a concept of
executive action that embodies the skills of anticipating,
influencing & controlling the nature &direction of change”.
• Terry “Planning is the selection & relating of fact & making &
using of assumption regarding the future in the visualisation &
formation of proposed activities believed necessary to achieve
desired result.”
Features/ nature of planning
• Planning is an intellectual process
• Planning determines the future course of action
• Primarily concerned with looking into future
• Involves selection of suitable course of action, means there are
several alternatives for achieving objectives
• All levels are concerned with the determination of future course of
action.
• Planning is the most basic to all mgmt functions
• Planning is pervasive function of mgmt
• Planning is flexible because future is always dynamic
• Planning is a pervasive & continuous managerial function involving
complex processes of perception, analysis, conceptual thought,
communication, decision,& action
Benefits of planning
• Reduces uncertainty
• Encourage innovation & creativity
• Improves motivation
• Achieve better coordination
• Facilitates control
• Planning leads to success
• Focuses attention
Mission
or Purposes,
(2) Objectives or goals,
(3) Strategies,
(4) Policies,
(5) Procedures,
(6) Rules,
(7) Programs, and
(8) Budgets
(1)
Hierarchy Of Plans
Hierarchy of Plans (cont..)
Plans can be classified as
(1) mission or purposes,
(2) objectives or goals,
(3) strategies,
(4) policies,
(5) procedures,
(6) rules,
(7) programs, and
(8) budgets
Hierarchy of Plans
(cont..)
• The mission, or purpose, identifies the basic purpose or
function or tasks of an enterprise or agency or any part of it
• Objectives, or goals, are the ends toward which activity is aimed
• Strategy is the determination of the basic long term objectives of‑
an enterprise and the adoption of courses of action and allocation
of resources necessary to achieve these goals
• Policies are general statements or understandings that guide or
channel thinking in decision making
• Procedures are plans that establish a required method of
handling future activities
Hierarchy of Plans –
cont.
• Rules spell out specific required actions or
non actions, allowing no discretion
• Programs are a complex of goals, policies, procedures, rules, task
assignments, steps to be taken, resources to be employed, and other
elements necessary to carry out a given course of action
• A budget is a statement of expected results expressed in numerical
terms
Steps in Planning
1. Being Aware of Opportunities
2. Establishing Objectives or Goals
3. Developing Premises
4: Identify / Determining Alternative Courses
5. Evaluating Alternative Courses
6. Selecting a Course
7. Formulating Derivative Plans
8. Quantifying Plans by Budgeting
STEPS IN PLANNING
• Being aware of opportunity :In light of Market, Competition Customer
desire, Our strengths Our weaknesses
• Setting objectives or goals: Where we want to be& what we want to
accomplish & when
• Considering planning premises: In what environment will our plans
operate
• Identifying alternatives: What are the most promising alternatives to
accomplishing our objectives
• Comparing alternatives in light of goals sought Which alternative meets
our goals at lowest cost &at highest profit
• Choosing an alternative Selecting the course of action
• Formulating derivative plans such plans as to :- Buy equipment Buy
materials, Hire& train workers,
• Budgets: Develop such budgets as Volume & price of sales, operating
expenses necessary for plans, Capital expenditure
Types Of Plans
Breadth
Strategic
Operational
Specificity
Directional
Specific
Frequency
of Use
Single use
Standing
Time Frame
Long term
Short term
© Prentice Hall, 2002
Types Of Plans
– Types of Plans based on Breadth
• strategic plans - apply to the entire organization
– establish organization’s overall goals
– seek to position the organization in terms of its environment
• operational plans - specify the details of how the overall
goals are to be achieved
– tend to cover short time periods
© Prentice Hall, 2002
Types Of Plans
– Types of Plans based on Time
• long-term plans - time frame beyond three years
– definition of long term has changed with increasingly uncertain
organizational environments
• short-term plans - cover one year or less
– Types of Plans based on specification
• specific plans - clearly defined with little room for
interpretation
– required clarity and predictability often do not exist
• directional plans - flexible plans that set out general
guidelines
– provide focus without limiting courses of action
© Prentice Hall, 2002
Specific Versus Directional Plans
© Prentice Hall, 2002
Types Of Plans
– Types of Plans based on frequency of use
• single-use plans - one-time plans specifically designed to meet
the needs of a unique situation
• standing plans - ongoing plans that provide guidance for
activities performed repeatedly
– include policies, procedures, and rules
© Prentice Hall, 2002 7-7-2222
Planning In The Hierarchy Of
Organizations
Strategic
Planning
Operational
Planning
Top
Executives
Middle-Level
Managers
First-Level
Managers
© Prentice Hall, 2002
Developing Plans (cont.)
– Approaches to Planning
• traditional, top-down approach
– planning done by top managers
– formal planning department - specialists whose sole responsibility is to
help to write organizational plans
– plans flowed down to lower levels
» tailored to particular needs at each lower level
– most effective if plan is a workable document used by organizational
members for direction and guidance
© Prentice Hall, 2002
Developing Plans (cont.)
– Approaches to Planning (cont.)
• inclusive approach
– employees at each level develop
plans suited to their needs
– employees acquire greater sense of
the importance of planning when they
participate in the process
– plans more likely to be used in
directing and coordinating work
© Prentice Hall, 2002
Principles of planning based on
Purpose
and Nature Of Planning
. Principle of contribution to objectives: Purpose of every plan
& all supporting plans is to promote accomplishment of enterprise
objectives
. Principle of objectives: If objectives have to be meaningful to
people, they must be clear, attainable, & verifiable
. Principle of primacy of planning.:... Planning logically
precedes all other managerial functions
. Principle of efficiency of plans: Efficiency of a plan is
measured by the amount it contributes to purpose & objectives as
Principles--the Structure Of Plans
. Principle of planning Premises: The more thoroughly
the individuals who are charged with planning, understand
and agree to utilize consistent planning premises, the more
coordinated enterprise planning will be
. Principle of the strategy and policy frame work: The
more strategies and policies are clearly understood and
implemented in practice, the more consistent and effective
will be the frame work of enterprise plans
Principles--the Process Of Planning
. Principle of limiting factor: In choosing among
alternatives, the more accurately individuals can recognize and
solve for those factors which are limiting or. critical to attainment of
desired goals, the more easily and accurately they can select the
most favorable alternative
. The commitment principle: Logical planning should cover a
period of time in the future necessary to foresee as well as possible,
through a series of actions, the fulfillment of commitments involved
in a decision made today
Principles--the Process Of Planning
(Cont..)
. Principle of flexibility...:. Building flexibility into plans will
lessen danger of losses incurred through unexpected events, but
cost of flexibility should be weighed against its advantages
. Principle of navigational change: The more that planning
decisions commit individuals to a future path, the more
important it is to check on events and expectations periodically
and redraw plans as necessary to maintain a course toward a
desired goal
Developing Plans
– Contingency Factors in Planning
• level in the organization
– operational planning dominates managers’ planning
efforts at lower levels
– strategic planning more characteristic of planning at
higher levels
© Prentice Hall, 2002
Developing Plans (cont.)
– Contingency Factors in Planning (cont.)
• degree of environmental uncertainty
– when uncertainty is high, plans should be specific, but flexible
• length of future commitments
– commitment concept - plans should extend far enough to meet those
commitments made when the plans were developed
» the more that current plans affect future commitments, the
longer the time frame for which managers should plan
© Prentice Hall, 2002
Contemporary Issues In Planning
• Criticisms of Planning
– 1. Planning may create rigidity
• unwise to force a course of action when the environment is fluid
– 2. Plans can’t be developed for a dynamic environment
• flexibility required in a dynamic environment
• can’t be tied to a formal plan
– 3. Formal plans can’t replace intuition and creativity
• mechanical analysis reduces the vision to some type of programmed
routine
© Prentice Hall, 2002
Contemporary Issues In
Planning (cont.)
• Criticisms of Planning (cont.)
– 4. Planning focuses managers’ attention on today’s
competition, not on tomorrow’s survival
• plans concentrate on capitalizing on existing business opportunities
• hinders managers who consider creating or reinventing an industry
– 5. Formal planning reinforces success, which may lead to
failure
• success may breed failure in an uncertain environment
© Prentice Hall, 2002
Contemporary Issues In Planning
(cont.)
• Effective Planning in Dynamic Environments
– develop plans that are specific, but flexible
– recognize that planning is an ongoing process
– change directions if environmental conditions
warrant
– stay alert to environmental changes
© Prentice Hall, 2002
Barriers to effective planning
• Difficulty of accurate premising
• Problems of rapid change
• Internal inflexibilities
policy & procedural inflexibility
capital investment
• External inflexibility
political climate
trade unions
technology changes
• Time & cost factors
• Failure of people in planning
How Do Managers Plan?
• The Role of Goals and Plans in Planning
– goals - desired outcomes
• provide direction for all management decisions
• represent the criteria against which actual work accomplishments can
be measured
– plans - outline how goals are going to be met
– Types of Goals
• all organizations have multiple objectives
• no single measure can evaluate whether an organization is successful
• financial goals - relate to financial performance
• strategic goals - relate to other areas of performance 7-7-3636
Stated Objectives From Large US
Companies
© Prentice Hall, 2002 7-7-3737
How Do Managers Plan? (cont.)
• The Role of Goals and Plans in Planning (cont.)
– Types of Goals (cont.)
• stated goals - official statements of the
organization’s goals
• real goals - those goals that an organization
actually pursues
© Prentice Hall, 2002
Establishing Goals
– Approaches to Establishing Goals
• traditional goal setting - overall goals established at the top of the
organization
– overall goals broken down into sub-goals for each level of the
organization
» higher-level goals must be made more specific at lower levels
» network of goals creates a means-ends chain
– Sub-goals constrain subordinates’ behavior
» assumes that top managers know what is best for the organization
© Prentice Hall, 2002
How Do Managers Plan? (cont.)
• Establishing Goals (cont.)
– Approaches to Establishing Goals (cont.)
• management by objectives (MBO) - specific performance goals are
jointly determined by employees and their managers
– progress toward accomplishing these goals is periodically reviewed
– rewards are allocated on the basis of this progress
– MBO consists of four elements
» goal specificity
» participative decision making
» explicit time period
» performance feedback
© Prentice Hall, 2002 7-7-4040
Traditional Objective Setting
Individual
Employee’s
Objective
Top
Management’s
Objective
Department
Manager’s
Objective
Division
Manager’s
Objective
“Increase profits, regardless
of the means”
“I want to see a
significant improvement
in this division’s profits”
“We need to improve
the company’s performance”
“Don’t worry about
quality: just work fast”
Steps in a Typical MBO Program
© Prentice Hall, 2002 7-7-4242
Establishing Goals (cont.)
– Approaches to Establishing Goals (cont.)
• management by objectives (cont.)
– increases employee performance and organizational
productivity
» depends on support of top managers for MBO
» problems with MBO
- can be useless in times of dynamic change
-overemphasis on personal rather than
organizational goals
-may be viewed simply as an annual exercise
in paperwork
© Prentice Hall, 2002
Establishing Goals (cont.)
– Characteristics of Well-Designed Goals
• should be written in terms of outcomes
• should be measurable and quantifiable
• should be clear as to a time frame
• should be challenging but attainable
• should be written down
• should be communicated to all organization members who
need to know the goals
© Prentice Hall, 2002
Establishing Goals (cont.)
– Steps in Goal Setting
• 1 - Review the organization’s mission
• 2 - Evaluate available resources
• 3 - Determine the goals individually or with input from
others
– should be congruent with the organizational mission and goals
in other organizational areas
• 4 - Write down the goals and communicate them to all
who need to know them
• 5 - Review results and whether goals are being met© Prentice Hall, 2002
Hierarchy of Goals
FIGURE 4–1
Principles of Goal-Setting
 Set SMART goals—make them specific,
measurable, attainable, relevant, and timely.
Choose areas (sales revenue, costs, and so forth)
that are relevant and complete.
 Assign specific goals.
 Assign measurable goals.
 Assign doable but challenging goals.
 Encourage participation.
 Use executive assignment action plans, or
management by objectives.

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  • 2. What Is Planning? • Planning – involves defining the organization’s goals, establishing an overall strategy, and developing a comprehensive set of plans to integrate and coordinate organizational work – informal planning - nothing is written down • little or no sharing of goals • general and lacking in continuity – formal planning - written • defines specific goals • specific action programs exist to achieve goals© Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 3. Reduce the Impact of Change Reduce the Impact of Change Provide Direction Provide Direction Minimize Waste / Redundancy Minimize Waste / Redundancy Set Control Standards Set Control Standards Reasons for Planning Reasons for Planning Growing complexities Growing complexities Growth of trade union Growth of trade union Rapid socio- Economic changes Rapid socio- Economic changes Need for R&D activity Need for R&D activity
  • 4. What Planning Accomplishes /Benefits of Planning • Allows decisions to be made ahead of time. • Permits anticipation of consequences. • Provides direction and a sense of purpose. • Provides a unifying framework; avoiding piecemeal decision making. • Improves competitive strength • Achieves better coordination • Helps identify threats and opportunities and reduces risks. • Facilitates managerial control through the setting of standards for monitoring and measuring performance. • Encourages innovation & creativity
  • 5. ArgumentsArguments AgainstAgainst StrategicStrategic PlanningPlanning Rigid AssumptionsRigid Assumptions of Stabilityof Stability IntuitionIntuition and Creativityand Creativity EnvironmentalEnvironmental TurbulenceTurbulence Focus on Today’sFocus on Today’s CompetitionCompetition Preoccupation withPreoccupation with Current SuccessCurrent Success
  • 6. Does Planning Improve Performance? • Financial results • Environmental concerns • Quality and implementation
  • 7. Why Do Managers Plan? / Importance of planning • Purposes of Planning – Planning is the primary management function that establishes the basis for all other management functions – Planning establishes coordinated effort – Planning reduces uncertainty – Planning reduces overlapping and wasteful activities – Manage complexities & competition – Planning establishes goals and standards used in controlling – To increase org effectiveness
  • 8. Why Do Managers Plan? (cont.) • Planning and Performance – Generally speaking, formal planning is associated with: • Higher return on assets • Higher profits – Quality of the planning process and the appropriate implementation of the plans probably contribute more to high performance than does the extent of planning – External environment may undermine the effects of formal planning – Planning/performance relationship is influenced by the planning time frame
  • 9. Definition of Planning • Weihrich & Koontz “Planning involves selecting missions and objectives and the actions to achieve them; it requires decision making, that is, choosing from among alternative future courses of action”. • McFarland “Planning may be broadly defined as a concept of executive action that embodies the skills of anticipating, influencing & controlling the nature &direction of change”. • Terry “Planning is the selection & relating of fact & making & using of assumption regarding the future in the visualisation & formation of proposed activities believed necessary to achieve desired result.”
  • 10. Features/ nature of planning • Planning is an intellectual process • Planning determines the future course of action • Primarily concerned with looking into future • Involves selection of suitable course of action, means there are several alternatives for achieving objectives • All levels are concerned with the determination of future course of action. • Planning is the most basic to all mgmt functions • Planning is pervasive function of mgmt • Planning is flexible because future is always dynamic • Planning is a pervasive & continuous managerial function involving complex processes of perception, analysis, conceptual thought, communication, decision,& action
  • 11. Benefits of planning • Reduces uncertainty • Encourage innovation & creativity • Improves motivation • Achieve better coordination • Facilitates control • Planning leads to success • Focuses attention
  • 12. Mission or Purposes, (2) Objectives or goals, (3) Strategies, (4) Policies, (5) Procedures, (6) Rules, (7) Programs, and (8) Budgets (1) Hierarchy Of Plans
  • 13. Hierarchy of Plans (cont..) Plans can be classified as (1) mission or purposes, (2) objectives or goals, (3) strategies, (4) policies, (5) procedures, (6) rules, (7) programs, and (8) budgets
  • 14. Hierarchy of Plans (cont..) • The mission, or purpose, identifies the basic purpose or function or tasks of an enterprise or agency or any part of it • Objectives, or goals, are the ends toward which activity is aimed • Strategy is the determination of the basic long term objectives of‑ an enterprise and the adoption of courses of action and allocation of resources necessary to achieve these goals • Policies are general statements or understandings that guide or channel thinking in decision making • Procedures are plans that establish a required method of handling future activities
  • 15. Hierarchy of Plans – cont. • Rules spell out specific required actions or non actions, allowing no discretion • Programs are a complex of goals, policies, procedures, rules, task assignments, steps to be taken, resources to be employed, and other elements necessary to carry out a given course of action • A budget is a statement of expected results expressed in numerical terms
  • 16. Steps in Planning 1. Being Aware of Opportunities 2. Establishing Objectives or Goals 3. Developing Premises 4: Identify / Determining Alternative Courses 5. Evaluating Alternative Courses 6. Selecting a Course 7. Formulating Derivative Plans 8. Quantifying Plans by Budgeting
  • 17. STEPS IN PLANNING • Being aware of opportunity :In light of Market, Competition Customer desire, Our strengths Our weaknesses • Setting objectives or goals: Where we want to be& what we want to accomplish & when • Considering planning premises: In what environment will our plans operate • Identifying alternatives: What are the most promising alternatives to accomplishing our objectives • Comparing alternatives in light of goals sought Which alternative meets our goals at lowest cost &at highest profit • Choosing an alternative Selecting the course of action • Formulating derivative plans such plans as to :- Buy equipment Buy materials, Hire& train workers, • Budgets: Develop such budgets as Volume & price of sales, operating expenses necessary for plans, Capital expenditure
  • 18. Types Of Plans Breadth Strategic Operational Specificity Directional Specific Frequency of Use Single use Standing Time Frame Long term Short term © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 19. Types Of Plans – Types of Plans based on Breadth • strategic plans - apply to the entire organization – establish organization’s overall goals – seek to position the organization in terms of its environment • operational plans - specify the details of how the overall goals are to be achieved – tend to cover short time periods © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 20. Types Of Plans – Types of Plans based on Time • long-term plans - time frame beyond three years – definition of long term has changed with increasingly uncertain organizational environments • short-term plans - cover one year or less – Types of Plans based on specification • specific plans - clearly defined with little room for interpretation – required clarity and predictability often do not exist • directional plans - flexible plans that set out general guidelines – provide focus without limiting courses of action © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 21. Specific Versus Directional Plans © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 22. Types Of Plans – Types of Plans based on frequency of use • single-use plans - one-time plans specifically designed to meet the needs of a unique situation • standing plans - ongoing plans that provide guidance for activities performed repeatedly – include policies, procedures, and rules © Prentice Hall, 2002 7-7-2222
  • 23. Planning In The Hierarchy Of Organizations Strategic Planning Operational Planning Top Executives Middle-Level Managers First-Level Managers © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 24. Developing Plans (cont.) – Approaches to Planning • traditional, top-down approach – planning done by top managers – formal planning department - specialists whose sole responsibility is to help to write organizational plans – plans flowed down to lower levels » tailored to particular needs at each lower level – most effective if plan is a workable document used by organizational members for direction and guidance © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 25. Developing Plans (cont.) – Approaches to Planning (cont.) • inclusive approach – employees at each level develop plans suited to their needs – employees acquire greater sense of the importance of planning when they participate in the process – plans more likely to be used in directing and coordinating work © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 26. Principles of planning based on Purpose and Nature Of Planning . Principle of contribution to objectives: Purpose of every plan & all supporting plans is to promote accomplishment of enterprise objectives . Principle of objectives: If objectives have to be meaningful to people, they must be clear, attainable, & verifiable . Principle of primacy of planning.:... Planning logically precedes all other managerial functions . Principle of efficiency of plans: Efficiency of a plan is measured by the amount it contributes to purpose & objectives as
  • 27. Principles--the Structure Of Plans . Principle of planning Premises: The more thoroughly the individuals who are charged with planning, understand and agree to utilize consistent planning premises, the more coordinated enterprise planning will be . Principle of the strategy and policy frame work: The more strategies and policies are clearly understood and implemented in practice, the more consistent and effective will be the frame work of enterprise plans
  • 28. Principles--the Process Of Planning . Principle of limiting factor: In choosing among alternatives, the more accurately individuals can recognize and solve for those factors which are limiting or. critical to attainment of desired goals, the more easily and accurately they can select the most favorable alternative . The commitment principle: Logical planning should cover a period of time in the future necessary to foresee as well as possible, through a series of actions, the fulfillment of commitments involved in a decision made today
  • 29. Principles--the Process Of Planning (Cont..) . Principle of flexibility...:. Building flexibility into plans will lessen danger of losses incurred through unexpected events, but cost of flexibility should be weighed against its advantages . Principle of navigational change: The more that planning decisions commit individuals to a future path, the more important it is to check on events and expectations periodically and redraw plans as necessary to maintain a course toward a desired goal
  • 30. Developing Plans – Contingency Factors in Planning • level in the organization – operational planning dominates managers’ planning efforts at lower levels – strategic planning more characteristic of planning at higher levels © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 31. Developing Plans (cont.) – Contingency Factors in Planning (cont.) • degree of environmental uncertainty – when uncertainty is high, plans should be specific, but flexible • length of future commitments – commitment concept - plans should extend far enough to meet those commitments made when the plans were developed » the more that current plans affect future commitments, the longer the time frame for which managers should plan © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 32. Contemporary Issues In Planning • Criticisms of Planning – 1. Planning may create rigidity • unwise to force a course of action when the environment is fluid – 2. Plans can’t be developed for a dynamic environment • flexibility required in a dynamic environment • can’t be tied to a formal plan – 3. Formal plans can’t replace intuition and creativity • mechanical analysis reduces the vision to some type of programmed routine © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 33. Contemporary Issues In Planning (cont.) • Criticisms of Planning (cont.) – 4. Planning focuses managers’ attention on today’s competition, not on tomorrow’s survival • plans concentrate on capitalizing on existing business opportunities • hinders managers who consider creating or reinventing an industry – 5. Formal planning reinforces success, which may lead to failure • success may breed failure in an uncertain environment © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 34. Contemporary Issues In Planning (cont.) • Effective Planning in Dynamic Environments – develop plans that are specific, but flexible – recognize that planning is an ongoing process – change directions if environmental conditions warrant – stay alert to environmental changes © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 35. Barriers to effective planning • Difficulty of accurate premising • Problems of rapid change • Internal inflexibilities policy & procedural inflexibility capital investment • External inflexibility political climate trade unions technology changes • Time & cost factors • Failure of people in planning
  • 36. How Do Managers Plan? • The Role of Goals and Plans in Planning – goals - desired outcomes • provide direction for all management decisions • represent the criteria against which actual work accomplishments can be measured – plans - outline how goals are going to be met – Types of Goals • all organizations have multiple objectives • no single measure can evaluate whether an organization is successful • financial goals - relate to financial performance • strategic goals - relate to other areas of performance 7-7-3636
  • 37. Stated Objectives From Large US Companies © Prentice Hall, 2002 7-7-3737
  • 38. How Do Managers Plan? (cont.) • The Role of Goals and Plans in Planning (cont.) – Types of Goals (cont.) • stated goals - official statements of the organization’s goals • real goals - those goals that an organization actually pursues © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 39. Establishing Goals – Approaches to Establishing Goals • traditional goal setting - overall goals established at the top of the organization – overall goals broken down into sub-goals for each level of the organization » higher-level goals must be made more specific at lower levels » network of goals creates a means-ends chain – Sub-goals constrain subordinates’ behavior » assumes that top managers know what is best for the organization © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 40. How Do Managers Plan? (cont.) • Establishing Goals (cont.) – Approaches to Establishing Goals (cont.) • management by objectives (MBO) - specific performance goals are jointly determined by employees and their managers – progress toward accomplishing these goals is periodically reviewed – rewards are allocated on the basis of this progress – MBO consists of four elements » goal specificity » participative decision making » explicit time period » performance feedback © Prentice Hall, 2002 7-7-4040
  • 41. Traditional Objective Setting Individual Employee’s Objective Top Management’s Objective Department Manager’s Objective Division Manager’s Objective “Increase profits, regardless of the means” “I want to see a significant improvement in this division’s profits” “We need to improve the company’s performance” “Don’t worry about quality: just work fast”
  • 42. Steps in a Typical MBO Program © Prentice Hall, 2002 7-7-4242
  • 43. Establishing Goals (cont.) – Approaches to Establishing Goals (cont.) • management by objectives (cont.) – increases employee performance and organizational productivity » depends on support of top managers for MBO » problems with MBO - can be useless in times of dynamic change -overemphasis on personal rather than organizational goals -may be viewed simply as an annual exercise in paperwork © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 44. Establishing Goals (cont.) – Characteristics of Well-Designed Goals • should be written in terms of outcomes • should be measurable and quantifiable • should be clear as to a time frame • should be challenging but attainable • should be written down • should be communicated to all organization members who need to know the goals © Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 45. Establishing Goals (cont.) – Steps in Goal Setting • 1 - Review the organization’s mission • 2 - Evaluate available resources • 3 - Determine the goals individually or with input from others – should be congruent with the organizational mission and goals in other organizational areas • 4 - Write down the goals and communicate them to all who need to know them • 5 - Review results and whether goals are being met© Prentice Hall, 2002
  • 47. Principles of Goal-Setting  Set SMART goals—make them specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, and timely. Choose areas (sales revenue, costs, and so forth) that are relevant and complete.  Assign specific goals.  Assign measurable goals.  Assign doable but challenging goals.  Encourage participation.  Use executive assignment action plans, or management by objectives.

Notas del editor

  1. Planning is defining organizational goals, establishing a strategy for reaching those goals, and developing a comprehensive hierarchy of plans to integrate and coordinate activities. It can be either formal or informal, depending on the time frame and amount of documentation. Managers should plan for four reasons. First, planning coordinates effort by giving direction to managers and non-managers. Second, planning reduces uncertainty by forcing managers to look ahead, anticipate change, and develop appropriate responses. Third, planning reduces redundancy. Fourth, planning sets standards or objectives that facilitate control over the process of achieving goals.
  2. Formal planning has been popular in business since the 1960s, but critics have observed the following: •Planning may create rigidity. Assuming that conditions will remain relatively stable, formal plans lock organizational units into specific goals and time frames. •Plans can’t be developed for a dynamic environment. Managing chaos and turning disasters into opportunities requires flexibility, not rigid, formal plans. •Formal plans can’t replace intuition and creativity. Developing strategy depends as much on intuition and creativity as it does on formal analysis. Because most successful strategies are visions, not plans, merely following a systematic framework will not yield incisive thinking. •Planning focuses a manager’s attention on today’s competition, not on tomorrow’s survival. Formal planning stresses capitalizing on existing opportunities, not reinventing or creating an industry. •Formal planning reinforces success, which may lead to failure. Success can breed failure. Since change is motivated by problems, success may not motivate managers to challenge the status quo.
  3. The evidence is mostly positive and suggests several conclusions. 1. Formal planning in an organization is frequently associated with positive financial results. 2.In those organizations in which formal planning did not lead to higher performance, the environment was typically the culprit. 3.The quality of the planning process and the implementation of the plans affect performance more than does the extent of the plans.