Title: Week 9 Performance Measures
1Week 9 - Performance Measures
- Chapter 24 - Performance Measurement,
Compensation, and Multinational Considerations
2Learning Objectives
- 1. Measure performance from a financial and
non-financial perspective - 2. Design an accounting-based performance measure
- 3. Analyze profitability using the DuPont method.
- 4. Use the residual-income measure and recognize
its advantages. - 5. Describe the economic value added method.
- 6. Distinguish between current cost and
historical cost asset measurement
3Learning Objectives, Continued
- 7. Indicate the difficulties that arise when
comparing the performance of divisions operating
in different countries. - 8. Recognize the role of salaries and incentives
in compensation arrangements. - 9. Describe the management accountants role in
helping organizations provide better incentives. - 10. Back-of-the-chapter exercises and problems
- 11. Customer relationship management
- 12. Analysis practice, Case 12, Jones Company
- 13. Case Web1, Brights Lodging and Travel
4Balanced Scorecard, translate strategy into
operational terms
- Financial
-
- Customer Internal Processes
- Learning and Growth
5Balanced Scorecard, Continued
- External financial perspective
- - bottom -line financial performance, return on
capital, earnings per share growth - Customer perspective
- - performance in target customer, market segments
- Internal business process perspective
- - focuses on those processes that will increase
value to customers and lowers costs for improving
financial performance - Learning and growth perspective
- - people, systems, and organizational procedures
6Balanced Scorecard, Example
- Consider that you are the CEO of Canadian Tire,
and that you want to develop a BSC for Canadian
Tire Stores. What would the BSC look like? (What
is the strategy of Canadian Tire?) - Financial
- Customer
- Internal processes
- Growth and learning
-
7Accounting-Based Performance Measurement
- Steps to Take in Designing a System
- Step 1 Choose variable(s) that represent top
managements financial goal(s) - Step 2 Choose definitions of the items included
in the variables in Step 1 - Step 3 Choose measures for the items included in
the variables in Step 1 - Step 4 Choose a target against which to gauge
performance - Step 5 Choose the timing of feedback
Pages 825 - 826
8Return on Investment (ROI)
Income Investment
- Return on Investment
- popular approach to incorporate the investment
base into the performance measure - includes all the major ingredients of
profitability (revenues, costs and investment) - can break out the basic formula as follows
(sometimes called the DuPont formula) to measure
investment turnover and profitability
Return on Investment
Revenues Investment
Income Revenues
x
Profitability
Turnover
Pages 827 - 828
9Residual Income (RI)
- Residual Income
- Income - (Required Rate of return x
Investment) - required rate of return is also called the
imputed cost of capital - favoured by some firms as managers will focus on
maximizing an absolute dollar amount (dollars of
residual income) rather than a percentage (ROI) - maximizing a may result in suboptimal
performance - managers earning high ROIs may reject projects
that earn more than the companys required rate
of return - managers earning low ROI may accept projects
that earn less than the companys required rate
of return
Pages 828 - 829
10Economic Value Added (EVA)
Economic Value Added
Weighted-average cost of capital
After- tax Operating Income
Total assets
Current liabilities
-
x
-
- EVA uses the weighted-average cost of capital
(WACC) as the minimum required rate of return - WACC represents the after-tax cost of capital
from all debt and equity sources - many companies also make adjustments to the
accounting definition of operating income such as
capitalizing (and amortizing) RD, restructuring
costs, and leases
Pages 829 - 831
11Alternative Measures of Performance
- When calculating ROI and RI, can consider
investment as being - total assets available
- total assets employed
- working capital plus long-term assets
- stockholders equity
- When considering long-term assets, firms value
these assets based on - current costs
- gross book value (historical cost)
- net book value (historical cost - accumulated
amortization) - replacement cost (cost to replace productive
capacity)
Pages 834 - 837
12Distinction Between Managers and Units
- Must distinguish between the performance of the
manager and the performance of the organizational
sub-unit or division (what the manager can
control) - Company may put the strongest manager in the
weakest division to change its fortunes - Recognize the role of salaries and incentives in
compensation arrangements - Be aware of moral hazard situations where an
employee prefers to exert less effort than the
effort desired by the owners because the
employees efforts cannot be accurately measured
and monitored - Benchmarking or relative performance evaluation
may be used to filter out the effect of common
uncontrollable factors
Pages 839 - 843
13Creating Incentives versus Imposing Risk
- Incentives are used to motivate employees to do
what is best for the organization. To work well
employees should have sufficient control.
Success should not be based on extrinsic factors - Risk is the probably that remuneration will vary.
Risk is influenced by many factors, and when
there are factors beyond the control of
employees, remuneration should not be tied to
those factors.
14The Management Accountants Role
- Provide technical assistance in designing the
incentive system. - - knowledge of the different techniques
- - understanding of the effect that organizational
performance has on the techniques. - - understanding of the motivational consequences
of the techniques. - Implement benchmarking.
15Performance Measures at the Individual Level
- Most employees have multiple roles which need to
be considered when measuring performance. - Team-based compensation arrangements reflect the
need for cooperation
16Executive Compensation Packages
- Base salary
- Fringe benefits
- Annual incentives
- Long-term incentives
17Employees, Executives Act on Incentives
- Sales
- Profits
- Customer satisfaction
- Costs
- Production, output
- Making good decisions
- Ownership
- Common share performance
18Incentives With a Long-Term Job Security
- Assume salary increases over time, annual
performance reviews, and termination for
deficient performance. - Employees with make the best decisions in order
to keep from being terminated because they do not
want to lose a valuable asset. - Employee will not only focus on short term, but
will also consider long term as employee will
still be with the firm and therefore accountable
19 Back-of-the-Chapter Exercises and Problems
- Exercises 24-18, Problems 24-30, 24-34
20Customer Relationship Management (CRM)
- CRM systems automate and increase the efficiency
and effectiveness of front offices - interaction
with customers - Customer facing applications ensure staff on
frontlines have easy access to customer
histories, interactions and transactions
21CRM - Customer data warehouse
- All customer information
- From all touch points -- web, telephone, e-mail,
face-to-face, point-of-sale - In-bound and out-bound
- History of customer purchases
22CRMs are Important
- 1. Customers are the most valuable asset
- 2. Allows an organization to coordinate among
touch points - 3. The internet and information technology allow
a greater proportion of customer interaction to
be captured.
23CRM Software
- Examples, Siebel, Clarify
- Allow for the collection and analyze of customer
data - Integrate all touch points
- Determine customer spending and other patterns
24CRM examples
- Grocerygateway.com
- Amozon.com
25Analysis Practice
26Case, Web1, Brights Lodging and Travel
- The case will be reviewed in class
- After each paragraph or exhibit a student will
identify possible issues - Then the root issue or issues will be determined
through analysis
27 The End