The Importance Of Organizational Culture

March 29th, 2011 by admin No comments »

The Importance Of Organizational Culture PhotoAn entity’s culture also plays an important role in setting up a cost management system. Organizational culture refers to the underlying set of assumptions about the entity and the goals, processes, practices, and values that are shared by its members. To illustrate the effect of organizational culture on the cost management system, consider AT&T prior to its divestiture. It was an organization characterized by “bureaucracy, centralized control, nepotism, a welfare mentality in which workers were ‘taken care of,’ strong socialization processes, [and] little concern for efficiency. . . .”

In such a culture, the requirements of a cost management system would have been limited because few individuals needed information, decisions were made at the top of the organization, and cost control was not a consideration because costs were passed on to customers through the rate structure. After divestiture, the company’s culture changed to embrace decentralized decision making, cost efficiency, and individual responsibility and accountability. Supporting such a changed culture requires different types, quantities, and distributions of cost management information. The values-based aspects of organizational culture are also extremely important in assessing the cost management system. For example, one part of Birmingham Steel Corporation’s mission statement is “to be the lowest-cost, highest-quality manufacturer of steel products in the markets served.” Without a well designed cost management system, Birmingham Steel could not evaluate how well it is progressing toward the accomplishment of that mission. Thus, the cost management system is instrumental in providing a foundation for companies with an organizational culture that emphasizes total quality management.

Contingency Planning: How to Prepare for the Unexpected

March 27th, 2011 by admin No comments »

Contingency Planning: How to Prepare for the Unexpected PhotoContingency planning is one of types of business plans. The contingency component triggers when alternatives to the basic plan are needed. While it is very important, it is also one of the most neglected elements of a business plan. Because so much energy is put into the basic strategic and operational plans, planning teams seldom give attention to a portion of the total plan that could put a company out of business. In here, it is presented two types of contingency planning. The first is long-term, true contingency planning that is designed to counter deviations from your business plans when your assumptions fail. The second is more common and comes quickly to mind. This is disaster planning or crisis management planning, both of which are in vogue with current business and social trends.

From that case, we have to know that there are a number of terms to be used when writing about activities that cause deviation from the plan. Some of them and their definitions are:

  • Contingency planning

The overall activity that looks at the complete situation and plans accordingly.

  • Contingency plan

The documentation of contingency planning, it is the hard copy of your thinking and intentions.

  • Crisis management

Actions you take to manage the total environment when facing a disruptive situation.

  • Crisis intervention

Actions taken to correct a developing situation. As the name implies, there must be an entry into the process of the situation.

  • Disaster plan

A step-by-step plan of action available for immediate implementation in times of crisis or disaster.