हिंदी

Elements of Planning

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Estimated time: 14 minutes
CBSE: Class 12

Introduction

  • Planning in management involves deciding in advance what to do and how to do it through different types of plans.
  • These plans include objectives, strategies, policies, procedures, methods, rules, programmes and budgets, which together guide organisational activities towards desired results.
CBSE: Class 12

Elements of Planning

Objectives

  • Desired future position or end result that management wants to achieve (e.g., increase sales by 10%, earn 20% profit).
  • Represent the end point of planning; set mostly by top management and expressed as specific, measurable written statements for a given time period.

Strategy

  • Comprehensive long-term plan defining organisation’s direction and scope through objectives, course of action and resource allocation.
  • Must consider economic, political, social, legal and technological environment; major decisions include staying in same business, adding new activities or seeking dominant market position.

Policy

  • General statements that guide thinking and decisions, and help interpret broad strategy.
  • Exist at all levels (major for outsiders, minor for insiders) and define parameters within which managers act, e.g., recruitment policy, pricing policy, Purchase Policy.

Procedure

  • Routine, chronological steps showing exactly how work is to be performed.
  • Intended for insiders; enforce policies and help achieve pre-determined objectives within a broad policy framework.

Method

  • Prescribed way of performing a specific task or step of a procedure.
  • Proper method selection saves time, money and effort; training methods differ for higher management (orientation, lectures, seminars) and supervisors (on-the-job, work-oriented).

Rule

  • Specific statement of what must or must not be done, allowing no discretion.
  • Simplest type of plan; not changed unless a policy decision is taken.

Programme

  • Detailed project statement covering objectives, policies, procedures, rules, tasks, human and physical resources and budget.
  • Includes all activities and aligns them with organisational policy within a broad framework.

Budget

  • Statement of expected results in numerical terms; quantifies future facts and figures (e.g., sales budget, worker requirement).
  • Facilitates comparison of actual vs expected figures, acts as a control device and is a fundamental planning instrument.

Cash Budget

  • Basic tool for planning and controlling cash; shows estimated cash inflows and outflows over a period.
  • Net cash position = inflows − outflows (surplus/deficiency); management must hold adequate but not excess cash.
CBSE: Class 12

Example: Mitticool – Objective, Strategy and Policy

  • After the January 2001 earthquake, Mansukhbhai’s goods were damaged; he distributed undamaged stock to quake-affected people of Kutch.
  • A photo of his broken water filter appeared in Sandesh Gujarati Daily with caption “The poor man’s broken fridge”.
  • He received support from Gujarat Grass-roots Innovation Augmentation Network (GIAN), Ahmedabad.
  • After several soil and design tests, he developed the Mitticool fridge in 2005 and later more clay products.
  • The company follows a policy of keeping product prices low so they are affordable for poor people.
  • Future plans include starting a factory with National Innovation Foundation at IIM Ahmedabad and building a Mitticool house, a green clay house using only renewable energy and no electricity.
CBSE: Class 12

Key Points: Elements of Planning

  • Objectives are specific, measurable end results and are the starting point of planning.
  • Strategy is a comprehensive long-term plan shaped by the business environment.
  • Policies, procedures, methods and rules translate strategy into guided day-to-day actions.
  • Programmes combine objectives, policies, procedures, rules, tasks, resources and budgets into project plans.
  • Budgets, especially cash budgets, quantify plans and act as key tools for planning and control.
  • The Mitticool case shows how clear objectives, supportive strategy and low-price policy lead to innovative, eco-friendly products for poor communities.
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