Management Control Systems as a Catalyst of Strategic Agility and Organizational Performance
The continual evolution of Management Control Systems as a Package (MCSP) today encompasses accounting, finance, human resources, market-based data, management control and information systems, and the entire culture of an organization, yet defies a precise typology (Merchant, Van der Stede, 2006) (Malmi, Brown, 2008) or a consistent global definition (Cruz, Scapens, Major, 2011). The intent of this analysis is to evaluate the concept of how management control systems (MCS) have over time evolved into MCSPs, and what advantages can be used for relying on them to increase organizational performance. The issues and difficulties that arise from using MCSPs, their distinctive uses, and the typologies of MCSPs are discussed, along with examples of how they can be used to increase organizational performance.
The Foundational Elements of MCSPs .
The MCSP taxonomies compared in this analysis include the one created by Malmi, Brown (2008)and Merchant, Van der Stede (2006). Both share the common attributes or elements of a fully integrated MCSP including subsystems for the functional areas of accounting, auditing, finance, reporting and governance, in addition to support for analytics. Within the last decade both have also begun to adopt Balanced Scorecards (BSC) in an effort to illustrate how analytics are being used to successfully manage businesses (Lawson, Stratton, Hatch, 2006). Both MCSPs are also specifically developed to with the goal of bringing greater agility and performance to organizations through completely different operating philosophies and approaches (Otley, 1999). Studies of MCSPs show that the greater the level of agility and ambidextrous nature of these systems, the greater the ability to withstand market turbulence and continually deliver profitable performance (Merchant, Van der Stede, 2006). This agility and ambidexterity of any given MCSP platform and typology also is an indicator of how well-integrated the components are to each other and the external subsystems fo the enterprise (Cruz, Scapens, Major, 2011).
While there are major differences in the typologies of MCSPs, there are several factors which make them similar to each other. First, both share a common definition of budgets, financial and accounting control systems, the use of compliance and governance systems, and the use of contract management and strategic planning as control and planning platforms. Both are also specifically designed to provide organizations with greater agility, market focus and ability to respond quickly to threats and opportunities. Both also have control systems, subsystems and mechanisms in place. Of the two, the philosophical approach taken by Merchant, Van der Stede (2006) prioritize and value highly control practices, specifically focusing on results controls, action controls, personnel controls and cultural controls. This philosophical approach to defining, managing and continually improving and MCSP is comparable to leadership theory and practice in that it concentrates more on compliance, less on vision, to drive results. Allegorically speaking the Merchant, Van der Stede (2006) typology is more transactionally-driven from a leadership standpoint while the Malmi & Brown (2008) approach is more comparable to transformational leadership, leading by defining socially-based controls predicated on values and culture.
Analysis of MCSP Typology Differences
In analyzing the differences between the Merchant & Van der Stede (2007) and Malmi & Brown (2008) typologies, the former is more likely to be used in organizations that highly value transactional forms of management, and therefore most likely have business models and processes that are highly repetitive in nature.
The series of controls in the Merchant, Van der Stede (2006) MCSP typology are well-suited for large-scale production and service operations with highly repetitive processes, systems and tasks where conformity is critical for profitability and growth of the business. Another underlying assumption of the Merchant & Van der Stede (2007) typology is that employees are inherently in need of control due to their own lack of direction, motivation to consistently performance and the personal limitations organizational structures place on people (Merchant, Van der Stede, 2006). As a result this typology is actually a framework comprised of...
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