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SME
Management (MGT-601)
VU
Lesson
18
This
chapter deals with the teething
problem that a newly established
company faces.
ASSESSMENT
OF PERSONAL REQUIREMENTS AND
ORGANIZATIONAL
CAPABILITIES
Human
beings provide the motive force to an
enterprise. For this purpose, it is
necessary to consider the
available
talent and skills consonants
with the organization structure. An
inventory must be made of
the
skills
needed for effective implementation of
new venture. The steps in undertaking the
exercise relating to
determination
of personal requirements and
designing the initial organizational
structure are
described
below:
A)
Ascertaining
the anticipated workflow and the various
activities (called activity
analysis).
At this stage, the total range of
activities and level of skills are
identified.
B)
Grouping
the activities into set of tasks
that individuals can handle
effectively.
C)
Categorization
of various tasks to form the
basis of structure of
organization.
D)
Determination
of interrelationship between different
positions and designing of
organizational
hierarchy.
Analysis
of Competition
In
order to ensure the survival and
growth of enterprise, it is essential to
make competition
analysis.
Generally,
every organization to face two
types of competition:
A)
Direct
competition from similar
products.
B)
Indirect
competition from
substitutes.
Competition
analysis must seek to
identify potential competitors, the
strategies adopted by them
and
their impact on proposed
enterprise, specific advantages
enjoyed by the purpose venture
and
formalization
of strategy in consonance with
these advantages. The entrepreneur
must guard against
being
content
with neutralization competitors strategic
advantages. The aim should be to
have superior strategies
at
least during the initial
stages.
Field
Problems of Starting a New
Enterprise
Identification
of a venture after a thorough analysis of the
five major aspects described
earlier
should
not be regarded as the end of
all problems. Rather the
real problems have been
summarized in the
following
paragraphs.
(1)
Pre-operator problems
(a)
Problem of selecting an appropriate form of
business organization.
(b)
Problems related with the acquisition of
basic facilities such as sources of
raw materials,
power,
transport etc.
(2)
Problems during the construction
phase.
These
would be connected
with:
(i)
Acquisition of land;
(ii)
Construction of building and other
aspect of civil
works;
(iii)
Acquisition of machinery and
its installation;
(iv)
Preliminary
work about the sources of supply of raw
materials , labor and
managerial
inputs;
(v)
Prospecting
about marketing;
(vi)
Preliminary
work regarding sources of
working capital;
(vii)
Coordination
problem connected with the acquisition of
different kinds of
assets
or completion of jobs;
53
SME
Management (MGT-601)
VU
(3)
Post Operative Problems of a New
Enterprise
Several
Problems are common to starting a y
enterprise-whether small or large.
They need not always
arise
but
an awareness regarding them could enable
their timely avoidance
prevention. Below are given some
of
the
post operative problems.
(i)
Lack
or absence of profits.
(ii)
Experience
Factor:
(a)
Unfamiliarity of lack of experience in
product or services
line.
(b)
Lack of experience in management. There
is a vast difference between being a
machinist and being
able
to manage a machine
shop.
(c)
Over concentration of experience .e.g.
.focusing only on the area of
interest says, sales,
finance,
production
etc and neglecting
others.
(d)
Incompetence of management.
(iii)
Sale
Causes
(a)
Weak competitive position
;
(b)
Lack of proper inventory
control;
(c)
Low sales volume ;
(d)
Poor location ;
(e)
Decline in demand due to recessionary
trends in the particular industry
;
(f)
Inappropriate marketing strategy ;
(g)
High production costs and
consequent high pricing
;
(iv)
Expense
Causes i.e. failure to
control operating expenses that
reduce profit and
Pose
a threat to survival of the firm. For
instance, borrowing too heavily
may force business to
close
if debts cannot be timely paid;
(v)
Neglect
Causes
Common
Cases of neglect are; poor
health, laziness, family or
manage
Problems
.Entrepreneurs needs to establish
priorities for themselves
relative
To
their involvement in the firm. They
must concentrate on objectives of
the
Firm.
(v)
Capital
Causes
(a)
Low a over estimation of capital
needs;
(b)
Fund mismanagement ;
(c)
Cash losses;
(d)
Poor debt collection or unfavorable
credit terms.
(vi)
Customer
Causes .i.e. extension of credit on
liberal terms.
(vii)
Personnel
Causes.
(a)
High rate of absenteeism &/or
labor turnover;
(b)
Unhealthy industrial
relations;
(c)
Frequent strikes and lockouts;
(d)
Low productivity ;
(e)
Militant trade unions.
(xi)
Natural
calamities such as burglaries,
earthquake .fire etc.
(x)
Government
Regulations.
(a)
Difficulty of compliance due to
excessive cost burden;
(b)
Interference and dilatory
tactics adopted by government authorities.
(xi)
Unmindful
expansion so that sufficient
business is not generated to
sustain
Expanded
capacity.
(xii)
Environmental
Causes.
(a)
Changes in government policy ;
(b)
Changes in social or political
conditions ;
(c)
Inflationary pressures leading to
increases in the input
cost.
(xii)
Production
Causes
(a)
Technological obsolescence ;
(b)
Low capacity utilization
;
54
SME
Management (MGT-601)
VU
(c)
Inability of labor to correctly
understand technology ;
(d)
Non availability of spares
and replacement ;
(e)
Poor machinery
maintenance.
Reference
Corporate
Collapse; the causes and
symptoms byJohn wiley
Book
Recommended
Entrepreneurship
and small business by C L
Banasal
55
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