Thursday, October 10, 2019
Analysis of Beyond Budgeting by Jeremy Hope
In the book ââ¬Å"Beyond Budgeting,â⬠author Jeremy Hope gave an altogether different conceptualization of the significance of budgeting on effective management. In it, he emphasized the need for better and well-thought out budgeting plans in order not to sacrifice the management decisions and ultimately, the efficient performance of a company or organization. The author aimed to create a strong argument illustrating this objective-that is, the relationship of budgeting with management-and successfully achieved this by centering his attention to the rudimentary, yet essential, details of budgeting in a more comprehensible manner. The book, in effect, was organized into three parts: firstly, an analysis of budgeting; secondly, on management; and finally, the role that budgeting plays on effective management. One of the revolutionary ways in which budgeting was transformed in the book was by assigning the term ââ¬Å"performance management process,â⬠which connotes a more interactive and holistic approach to budgeting. Thus, by changing the terminology commonly known as ââ¬Å"budgetingâ⬠for ââ¬Å"performance management process,â⬠budgeting has ceased being a financial process and concept. Another objective that the change in terminology achieved was that it was able to weaken, if not altogether eliminate, the negative associations given to budgeting, such as its being ââ¬Å"too cumbersome and expensive,â⬠ââ¬Ënot meeting the needs of either executives or operating managers,' and the propensity for budgeting to become unrealistic and ââ¬Å"unacceptableâ⬠for the organization's or company's actual operations. The field of management is strongly affected by budgeting, according to Hope. He cites instances wherein budgets become ââ¬Å"fixed performance contracts,â⬠which need to be accomplished without much thought about its eventual effects on the company's performance. Indeed, the author elucidated his point clearly when he stated that ââ¬Å"â⬠¦ budgets have since been hijacked by a generation of financial engineers that have used them as remote control devices to ââ¬Ëmanage by the numbers'. â⬠In this statement, Hope expresses his disapproval on the seemingly simplistic and generalized manner in which budgeting is accomplished nowadays. Evidently, budgeting has become computerized, losing the ââ¬Å"human elementâ⬠that makes it more logical and in touch with the organization/company's operations and performance. A reinstatement of the active involvement of managers and executives in budgeting is need, the author asserted, in order to eliminate problems such as ââ¬Ëfailing to address current competitive imperatives' and incompatibility of the budget with the organization's daily operations. It was through the ââ¬Å"beyond budgetingâ⬠technique that Hope proposed the merging of budgeting and management into ââ¬Å"performance management process. â⬠This process will then become the new method where financial planning would become more ââ¬Å"adaptiveâ⬠and ââ¬Å"decentralizedâ⬠-that is, planning will come not only from the managers and executives, but also from the members of the organization themselves, who experience the daily problems of the company/organization. This ââ¬Å"adaptive processâ⬠involves targets, rewards, plans, resources, coordination, and controls as its key elements towards creating a more efficient, realistic, and feasible financial planning. Moreover, ââ¬Å"beyond budgetingâ⬠budgeting actually means a conscientious effort to put into the plan a holistic account of the company/organization's needs, based from its technology and members/employees.
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