This MCQ module is based on: Controlling — Meaning, Importance & Planning Link
Controlling — Meaning, Importance & Planning Link
This assessment will be based on: Controlling — Meaning, Importance & Planning Link
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8.1 Opening Case — The Departure Control System (DCS) at the Airport
Few experiences capture the essence of controlling? as vividly as walking into a modern airport. Within seconds of scanning a barcode, an unseen system has already verified the booking, allotted a seat, printed a boarding pass, weighed and tagged the baggage, deducted the load from the aircraft's permitted weight envelope, checked the passenger against an immigration watch-list, and updated thousands of records. That orchestrating engine is the Departure Control System? (DCS).
✈ NCERT Opening Case — How DCS Demonstrates Real-Time Controlling
A Departure Control System automates the entire airport-side processing of an airline's operations. It manages the information required for check-in, prints boarding passes, accepts and tracks baggage, performs boarding load control and runs aircraft checks. Today almost 98% of all DCS interactions are tied to e-tickets, accessed through interfaces such as check-in kiosks, online check-in, mobile boarding passes and baggage handling terminals.
- PNR identification — DCS captures every updated reservation from the airline's central computer reservation system for a passenger, called the Passenger Name Record? (PNR).
- Real-time status update — The same PNR is then progressively flagged as checked-in, boarded, flown, or any other status in real time, providing managers with continuous performance data.
- Inter-system handshake — Many DCS modules also interface with immigration control for visa, immigration and "no-fly" watch-list checks — an external standard that is monitored continuously.
- Multiple touchpoints, single dashboard — Kiosks, agents, baggage belts, gates and load-controllers all feed into one integrated DCS view, cutting human error and travel time.
- Corrective action triggered automatically — If checked-in baggage exceeds the load envelope, the DCS instantly raises an exception and the load-controller is alerted to redistribute or off-load weight.
- The management lesson — All managers must monitor situations intelligently and take corrective action before damage is done. The controlling function of management does precisely this: it keeps a track of progress and ensures activities conform to standards set in advance, so that organisational goals are achieved.
Adapted from the NCERT Class 12 Business Studies (Part I) chapter-opening case on airline Departure Control Systems.
The DCS case sets up the entire chapter: controlling is not the end of management — it is the loop that closes management. Plans are blueprints; controlling is what actually ensures that the building gets built to specification. As NCERT states, the controlling function comes to the rescue of managers exactly when something starts to drift from plan.
8.2 Concept of Controlling — Meaning & Nature
In ordinary language, "controlling" can sound restrictive — like a brake on freedom. In management, it means something far more constructive: ensuring that activities in an organisation are performed as per the plans. To seek planned results from subordinates, a manager must exercise effective control over their activities. Controlling also ensures that the organisation's resources are being used effectively and efficiently for the achievement of predetermined goals. Controlling is, therefore, a goal-oriented function?.
Nature of Controlling — Key Characteristics
① Goal-Oriented Function
Controlling exists only to ensure that predetermined goals are achieved. Without goals, there is nothing to control against.
② Pervasive Function
Performed at every level — top, middle and lower — and in every kind of organisation: educational institution, military, hospital, club, business, government.
③ Primary Function of Every Manager
It is not the job of a separate "controlling department". Every manager performs it for activities under his charge.
④ Both "Doing" & "Checking"
NCERT notes that controlling means not only doing things but also checking that they are done as per the plan — execution and verification fused into one continuous activity.
⑤ Brings the Cycle Back to Planning
It is wrong to view controlling as the last function. Its outputs (deviations, causes, corrective actions) feed forward into better planning for the next cycle.
⑥ Forward + Backward Looking
It examines past performance (backward) but takes corrective action that influences future performance (forward).
List five situations from your daily life where some form of controlling is being exercised — at school, at home, in your neighbourhood, in your hostel mess, or at the gym. For each, identify (a) what the standard is, (b) who measures actual performance, and (c) what corrective action is typically taken when there is a deviation.
- School attendance: Standard = 75% mandatory; teacher measures via roll-call register; corrective action = parent meeting, retest, or detention.
- Hostel mess budget: Standard = ₹2500/student/month; mess secretary tracks weekly bills; corrective action = menu adjustment.
- Gym workout plan: Standard = 5 km in 30 min; smartwatch records actuals; corrective action = revise plan or push harder.
- Driving school: Standard = zero traffic violations; instructor observes during practice drives; corrective action = retraining session.
- Pocket-money budget: Standard = ₹500/week; you track in a notebook or app; corrective action = cut discretionary spending next week.
The pattern is identical to managerial control — only the scale differs.
8.3 Importance of Controlling — Six NCERT Benefits
Control is an indispensable function of management. Without control, even the best of plans can go awry. NCERT lists six specific benefits that a sound control system delivers — each of which corresponds to a real-world business risk that controlling helps to manage.
(i) Accomplishing Organisational Goals
The controlling function continuously measures progress toward organisational goals. By bringing deviations to light and indicating corrective action, it guides the organisation and keeps it on the right track. The DCS, for instance, ensures that goal — "depart on time, no missing baggage, full passenger boarding" — is constantly tracked.
(ii) Judging Accuracy of Standards
A good control system also tells management whether the standards themselves are accurate and objective. As the internal and external environment changes, an efficient control system surfaces those changes and triggers a review and revision of standards in light of them. The standard "passenger to clear security in 15 minutes", for example, may need revision after a tightened immigration regime.
(iii) Making Efficient Use of Resources
By ensuring each activity is performed in accordance with predetermined standards and norms, controlling reduces wastage and spoilage of resources. Materials, time, energy, equipment and people are all used in the most effective and efficient manner. The DCS' load-controller module, for example, prevents the wastage of fuel that would arise from carrying unbalanced loads.
(iv) Improving Employee Motivation
A good control system ensures that employees know well in advance what they are expected to do and what the standards of performance are on the basis of which they will be appraised. This clarity itself becomes a motivator — employees can plan their effort, anticipate their reward, and self-correct without needing constant supervision.
(v) Ensuring Order and Discipline
Controlling creates an atmosphere of order and discipline by keeping a close check on employees' activities. It minimises dishonest behaviour. NCERT cites the example of an import-export company that used computer-monitoring software? to detect two employees who had been deleting orders, pocketing revenues and building a side-business — an embezzlement of $3 million over two and a half years that came to light only because of the keystroke-logging control system.
🕵 NCERT Box — Control Through Computer Monitoring (CDS Case)
Managers at a New York City import-export company suspected two employees of fraud. Corporate Defense Strategies (CDS), Maywood, New Jersey, advised the firm to install software that secretly logged every keystroke and mailed encrypted reports to CDS. The investigation revealed the employees were deleting orders after processing, pocketing the revenue and building their own firm from within. The programme also intercepted their plan to return at night and steal a large electronics shipment. Police hid in the warehouse rafters and arrested them on entry. The two were charged with embezzling $3 million over two and a half years — a sizeable amount of revenue for a $25 million-a-year firm.
Source: Hellriegel Don, Susan E. Jackson and John W. Slocum Jr., Management: A Competency-based Approach (cited in NCERT).
(vi) Facilitating Coordination in Action
Controlling provides direction to all activities and efforts toward organisational goals. Each department and employee is governed by predetermined standards which are well coordinated with one another. This ensures that overall organisational objectives are accomplished — and is precisely why FedEx, Amazon and airlines rely on integrated control dashboards rather than departmental silos.
Re-read the DCS opening case. Identify which of the six benefits of controlling listed above is illustrated by each of the following DCS features: (a) instant flagging of overweight baggage; (b) PNR-based status tracking from check-in to flown; (c) refusal to issue boarding pass for "no-fly" passenger; (d) auto-printing of boarding pass at kiosk; (e) revising the standard turnaround time of an aircraft after a fleet upgrade; (f) cross-system handshake between airline and immigration.
- (a) Overweight baggage flagged → (iii) Efficient use of resources + (i) Accomplishing goals.
- (b) PNR status tracking → (i) Accomplishing organisational goals.
- (c) "No-fly" check → (v) Order and discipline.
- (d) Kiosk auto-print → (iv) Employee motivation (clarity for staff) + (iii) Resource efficiency.
- (e) Standard revision after fleet upgrade → (ii) Judging accuracy of standards.
- (f) Airline–immigration handshake → (vi) Coordination in action.
8.4 Limitations of Controlling — When Does Control Fall Short?
Although controlling is indispensable, NCERT honestly lists four limitations that every manager must be alert to. A control system that ignores these limits can become bureaucratic, costly or counterproductive.
When Quantitative Standards Cannot Be Set
NCERT specifically flags morale, job satisfaction and human behaviour as zones where control loses traction. A workshop-supervisor can measure "units produced per shift" easily, but cannot easily measure "team trust" or "creativity" — and any attempt to do so with proxy metrics often distorts behaviour.
External-Factor Limitation in Action
Consider how the COVID-19 pandemic, a sudden GST-rate change, or a Reserve Bank of India interest-rate hike affects every business in India. No internal control system can fully neutralise these external shocks; controlling can only adapt the firm's internal response.
For each of the following, identify which NCERT limitation of controlling is at play and propose one way to mitigate it.
- (a) A start-up cannot afford an ERP system to monitor inventory in real time.
- (b) A union threatens a strike when CCTVs are installed on the shop floor.
- (c) A new GST law changes input-tax-credit rules halfway through the financial year.
- (d) The HR head cannot quantify "team culture" for the annual appraisal.
- (a) → Costly affair; mitigate via cloud-SaaS at low monthly cost / open-source ERP.
- (b) → Resistance from employees; mitigate via dialogue, transparent privacy-policy and union representation in monitoring committee.
- (c) → Little control over external factors; mitigate via flexible plans and quick-update finance SOPs.
- (d) → Difficulty in setting quantitative standards; mitigate via 360-degree feedback, anonymous surveys and qualitative anchors.
8.5 Relationship Between Planning and Controlling — Inseparable Twins
NCERT describes planning and controlling as inseparable twins of management?. The relationship is so symmetrical that one of the most-quoted lines in business studies is: "Planning without controlling is meaningless, and controlling without planning is blind."
Planning is Prescriptive; Controlling is Evaluative
Planning is basically an intellectual process — involving thinking, articulation and analysis to discover and prescribe an appropriate course of action for achieving objectives. Controlling, on the other hand, checks whether decisions have been translated into desired action. Therefore planning is prescriptive, while controlling is evaluative.
"Looking Ahead" vs "Looking Back" — A Partial Truth
It is often said that planning is looking ahead while controlling is looking back. NCERT calls this only partially correct. Planning is forward-looking — based on forecasts of future conditions. Controlling, like a "post-mortem of past activities", looks backward to find out deviations from standards. However, planning is itself guided by past experience, and the corrective action triggered by control is meant to improve future performance. So both are simultaneously backward-looking and forward-looking.
| Dimension | Planning | Controlling |
|---|---|---|
| Nature | Intellectual / prescriptive | Evaluative / corrective |
| Direction | Looks ahead (forward-looking) | Looks back & ahead simultaneously |
| Process Role | Initiates the management cycle | Completes & restarts the management cycle |
| Output | Standards, plans, programmes | Deviation reports, corrective actions, revised plans |
| Reinforcement | Provides the basis for control | Provides feedback for the next round of planning |
| Without the Other | "Planning without controlling is meaningless" | "Controlling without planning is blind" |
How They Reinforce Each Other
- Planning makes controlling possible — without standards, managers have nothing to compare against.
- Controlling makes planning effective — feedback derived from past experience improves the next plan.
- Together they close the loop — every cycle of management ends with control feeding back into a refreshed plan, which feeds the next cycle of control.
Read this NCERT-paraphrased extract and answer the question that follows.
Question: Identify the two dependencies expressed in this extract and explain why each makes planning and controlling inseparable.
- Dependency 1 (control depends on planning): Standards — the very basis of control — are provided by planning. Therefore controlling cannot even start without prior planning.
- Dependency 2 (planning depends on control to be effective): Once operational, plans need controlling to monitor, measure and correct. Without control, the plan goes "operational" but never reaches "complete".
- The two dependencies make them inseparable: each is the operational guarantor of the other.
Bridging to Part 2 — The Process & Techniques of Controlling
Having established what controlling is and why it matters, the next part of this chapter addresses how controlling is actually executed. Controlling is a systematic process: NCERT lays it out in five sequential steps — setting performance standards, measuring actual performance, comparing actual with standards, analysing deviations, and taking corrective action. Alongside the process, managers use a battery of techniques — both traditional (personal observation, statistical reports, breakeven analysis, budgetary control) and modern (Return on Investment, ratio analysis, responsibility accounting, management audit, PERT/CPM, Management Information System).
In Part 2 we will work through each step in detail, examine Critical Point Control and Management by Exception as twin guiding principles for analysing deviations, and walk through every traditional and modern technique with worked numericals — including a full breakeven calculation and a comparative ROI illustration.
Part 1 Summary & Key Takeaways
Controlling is the management process of ensuring that actual activities conform to planned activities. Triggered by the airline DCS opening case — where 98% of e-ticket interactions are routed through one continuously monitoring system — the chapter establishes that controlling is goal-oriented, pervasive, performed by every manager, and brings the management cycle back to planning. NCERT lists six benefits — accomplishing goals, judging accuracy of standards, efficient use of resources, improving employee motivation, ensuring order and discipline, and facilitating coordination — and four limitations — difficulty in setting quantitative standards, little control over external factors, employee resistance, and cost. Planning and controlling are inseparable twins: plans are blueprints, control is conformance; without each other, plans go astray and control loses meaning.
📝 Competency-Based Questions — Meaning, Importance & Limitations
Options: (A) Both A & R true, R correctly explains A · (B) Both true, R does not explain A · (C) A true, R false · (D) A false, R true.