Antonio Dávila , Giovanni-Battista Derchi , Daniel Oyon , Maël Schnegg
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External complexity and the design of management control systems: a case study
Increasing complexity and dynamism in technologies and markets are putting new demands on management control systems beyond those that these systems traditionally address. This longitudinal case study traces the experience of a real estate fund management company in addressing the need to make sense of increasing external complexity and its effort to design a management control system to support top management in this task. Our findings indicate that internally-focused systems used interactively fail to fulfill this role because of their paucity in terms of information on external complexity. As a result, the company experimented with various designs and developed a management control system that relied on information external to the organization and mostly qualitative. This system became the infrastructure for continual discussions on strategic but also tactical implications of external events. The system that the company developed relied on the wisdom of crowds, structured meetings, and information technology to gather and process qualitative information to enhance peripheral vision. Overall, the case study illustrates the challenges and potential responses to the design of management control systems for the strategic surveillance of external complexity.
期刊介绍:
Management Accounting Research aims to serve as a vehicle for publishing original research in the field of management accounting. Its contributions include case studies, field work, and other empirical research, analytical modelling, scholarly papers, distinguished review articles, comments, and notes. It provides an international forum for the dissemination of research, with papers written by prestigious international authors discussing and analysing management accounting in many different parts of the world.