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PRINCIPLES OF CONTROL - Coggle Diagram
PRINCIPLES OF CONTROL
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PRINCIPLE OF EXCEPTION
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Frederick Taylor, father of management, adopted a fairly simple operational control system that was not based on average performance but on checking for exceptions or deviations from normal standards.
The exception principle is based on condensed and summary reports that show only the deviations, omits the normal facts and makes them comparative and easy to use and visualize.
The exception principle is an information system that presents its data only when the results, effectively verified in practice, are divergent or differ from the expected results in a program.
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PRINCIPLE OF ACTION.
The control is only justified when it indicates provisions capable of correcting the deviations detected or verified, with respect to the plans.
The objective of the control is to indicate when, how much, how and where the correction should be executed.
Corrective action that adjusts operations to pre-established standards in the essence of control, and its basis is the information that managers receive.
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