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Strategic Control and Corporate Governance

Strategic Control and Corporate Governance. chapter 9. Strategic Control. Strategic control involves monitoring performance toward strategic goals and taking corrective action when needed via effective systems: Informational control systems Behavioral control systems Corporate governance.

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Strategic Control and Corporate Governance

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  1. Strategic Control and Corporate Governance chapter 9

  2. Strategic Control • Strategic controlinvolves monitoring performance toward strategic goals and taking corrective action when needed via effective systems: • Informational control systems • Behavioral control systems • Corporate governance

  3. Strategic Control: Traditional Approach • The traditional approach to strategic controlis sequential • Strategies are formulated, goals are set • Strategies are implemented • Performance is measured against goals Exhibit 9.1 Traditional Approach to Strategic Control

  4. Strategic Control: Contemporary Approach • Relationships between strategy formulation, implementation, & control are highly interactive, utilizing • Informational control • Behavioral control Exhibit 9.2 Contemporary Approach to Strategic Control

  5. Informational Control • Informational control deals with both the internal & external environment • Do the organization’s goals and strategies still “fit” within the context of the current strategic environment? • Two key issues: • Scan & monitor the external environment • Continuously monitor the internal environment 9-5

  6. Behavioral Control • Behavioral control = focused on implementation – “doing things right” • Influences the actions of employees via: • Culture • Rewards • Boundaries Exhibit 9.3 Essential Elements of Behavioral Control

  7. Behavioral Control: Culture • Organizational culture is a system of • Shared values (what is important) • Beliefs (how things work) • Organizational culture shapes a firm’s • People • Organizational structures • Control systems • Organizational culture produces • Behavioral norms (the way we do things around here)

  8. Behavioral Control: Rewards • Reward systems & incentive programs: • Powerful means of influencing an organization’s culture • Focus efforts on high-priority tasks • Motivate individual & collective task performance • Can be an effective motivator & control mechanism

  9. Behavioral Control: Boundaries • Boundaries and constraints can be useful • Focusing individual efforts on strategic priorities • Providing short-term objectives and action plans to channel efforts • Specific, measurable, including a specific time horizon for attainment • Achievable, yet challenging enough to motivate • Individual managers held accountable for implementation

  10. Corporate Governance • Corporate governance controls focus on relationships between • The shareholders • The management (led by the Chief Executive Officer - CEO) • The Board of Directors • How can corporations succeed (or fail) in aligning managerial motives with • The interests of the shareholders • The interests of the board of directors

  11. Corporate Governance • The separation of owners (shareholders) & management in a modern corporation • Shareholders (investors) have limited liability & can participate in the profits without taking direct responsibility for operations • Management can run the company without personally providing any funds • The Board of Directors are elected by shareholders & have a fiduciary obligation to protect shareholder interests

  12. Corporate Governance: Agency Theory • Agency theory deals with the relationship between principals & agents • What to do when the goals of the principals and agents conflict? • What to do when it is difficult or expensive for the principal to verify what the agent is actually doing? • What happens when the principal and the agent have different attitudes and preferences toward risk?

  13. Corporate Governance Mechanisms • Corporate governance mechanisms: aligning the interests of owners and managers through • A committed and involved Board of Directors • Shareholder activism • Managerial rewards and incentives • Contract-based outcomes • CEO duality – should the CEO also be chairman of the board of directors?

  14. Corporate Governance Mechanisms • External governance control mechanisms • The market for corporate control • The takeover constraint • Auditors • Enron, WorldCom? • Banks and analysts • Lehman Brothers, Countrywide? • Regulatory bodies • Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) • The Sarbanes-Oxley Act • Media and public activists • Bloomberg Businessweek, Ralph Nader

  15. International Corporate Governance • Principal – principal conflicts (vs principal – agent conflicts) involve • Concentrated ownership, or family ownership • Motivation to engage in expropriation of minority shareholders for personal gain • Business groups who can take coordinated action • Japanese keiretsus, Korean chaebols • Few external regulatory constraints

  16. International Corporate Governance Exhibit 9.9 Principal-Agent Conflicts and Principal-Principal Conflicts: A Diagram Source: Young, M.N., Peng, M.W., Ahlstrom, D., Bruton, G.D., & Jiang, 2008. Principal-Principal Conflicts in Corporate Governance. Journal of Management Studies 45(1):196-220; and Peng, M.V. 2006. Global Strategy. Cincinnati: Thomson South-Western. We are very appreciative of the helpful comments of Mike Young of Hong Kong Baptist University and Mike Peng of the University of Texas at Dallas.

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