Week 4 Revenue Analysis, Variances - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

Week 4 Revenue Analysis, Variances

Description:

13. Sizzler Barbecue, case 24 of the casebook. 2000 Prentice Hall Canada Inc. ... Sizzler Barbecue, case 24 of the casebook. The case will be read in class ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:400
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: atkinso
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Week 4 Revenue Analysis, Variances


1
Week 4 - Revenue Analysis, Variances
  • Chapter 16 - Revenues, Sales Variances, and
    Customer Profitability Analysis

2
Learning Objectives
  • 1. Give examples of the bundling
  • 2. Allocate the revenues of a bundled package to
    the individual products in that package
  • 3. Provide additional information about the
    sales-volume variance by calculating the
    sales-mix and sales-quality variance
  • 4. Provide additional information about the
    sales-quantity variance by calculating the
    market-share and market-size variance
  • 5. Explain what information is pivotal to the
    reliability of market-share and market-size
    variance

3
Learning Objectives, continued
  • 6. Discuss why revenues can differ across
    customers purchasing the same product.
  • 7. Prepare a customer-profitability report
  • 8. Apply the concepts of cost hierarchy to
    customer costing
  • 9. Understand mix and yield variances for
    substitutable inputs
  • 10. Management accounting profession
  • 11. In-class assignment
  • 12. Back-of-chapter exercises and problems
  • 13. Sizzler Barbecue, case 24 of the casebook

4
Revenue Allocation
  • Revenue allocation occurs when revenues, related
    but not traceable to individual products
    (services or customers), are assigned to
    individual products
  • A bundled product is a package of two or more
    products or services, sold for a single price,
    each with their own stand-alone prices
  • Bundled products are often called suite sales

5
Bundled Products, Revenue Allocation
  • selling prices
  • unit costs
  • physical units
  • stand-alone product revenues
  • incremental revenues

6
Revenue Allocation Methods
  • WordMaster
  • 250

SpreadMaster 300
FinanceMaster 450
Suite price for all three products
760 Allocation based on Stand-Alone
Prices WordMaster 250 / (250 300 450) x
760 190 SpreadMaster 300 / (250 300
450) x 760 228 FinanceMaster 450 /
(250 300 450) x 760 342 760
7
Sales Volume Variance
  • Static Budget Variance

Flexible Budget Variance
Sales Volume Variance
SalesMix Variance
Sales Quantity Variance
Sales Volume Variance (actual unit sales -
budgeted unit sales) x budgeted contribution
margin per unit
Market Size Variance
Market Share Variance
Pages 558 - 559
8
Sales-Mix and Sales-Quantity Variances
  • Sales-mix variance
  • Actual Actual Budgeted Budgeted
  • units of all x sales - sales x contribution
  • products sold mix mix per unit

Sales-quantity variance Actual Budgeted Budge
ted Budgeted units of all - units of
all x sales x contribution products
sold products sold mix per unit
Pages 561 - 563
9
Market-Share and Market-Size Variances
  • Market-share variance
  • Actual Actual Budgeted Budgeted avg
  • market size x market - market x contribution
  • in units share share per unit

Market-size variance Actual Budgeted Budgeted
Budgeted avg market size - market
size x market x contribution in units in
units share per unit
Pages 563 - 565
10
Information Pivotal to the Reliability of
Market-Share and Market-Size Variances
  • Market size and market share information is not
    always available
  • When available, market size and market share
    information is often late in arriving and subject
    to estimates.
  • Thus, market size and market share variances
    often need to be interpreted carefully.

11
Customer Profitability Analysis
  • Requires understanding the revenue and costs for
    customers or customer groups.
  • Allows management to know which customers or
    customer groups to pursue, and under what prices
    .

Pages 566 - 571
12
Customer Cost Analysis
  • Consider profitability of individual customers
    taking into account the following hierarchy
  • customer specific costs
  • distribution channel costs
  • customer support costs
  • corporate sustaining costs
  • Note, for manufacturing the hierarchy of costs
    was unit, batch, product-sustaining, and
    facility-sustaining.

13
Selling-Related Activities, an example
  • Order taking
  • Sales visits
  • Delivery vehicles
  • Product handling
  • Expedited deliveries
  • These costs can vary by customer or customer
    group.

14
Customer-Profitability Analysis
  • Customer revenue
  • Less customer costs
  • Equals customer specific contribution
  • Rank customers by contribution maximize positive
    contributions.

15
Assessing Customer Value
  • Look at customers in terms of short-run and
    long-run profitability
  • likelihood of retention
  • growth potential
  • increases in overall demand from well-known
    customers
  • ability to learn from a customer

16
Mix and Yield Variances for Inputs
Mix variance Actual Budgeted Actual
total Budgeted input x input x inputs x price
per mix mix used input unit
Yield variance Actual total Budgeted
total Budgeted Budgeted units of - units
of x input x price per input used inputs
used mix input unit
Pages 576 - 579
17
Management Accounting, Two Aspects
  • One is management accounting as a professional
    designation.
  • The other is management accounting as a set of
    practices.
  • Source Chee W. Chow, president, 2000-2001,
    Management Accounting Section, American
    Accounting Association, Fall, 2000.

18
Management Accounting, Changes
  • With non-accounting employees increasingly taking
    on functions that had traditionally been
    considered part of management accountants
    domain,and management accountants getting more
    and more involved in what had traditionally been
    considered line responsibilities, whether there
    still is room for management accounting as a
    distinct professional designation may be worth
    discussion.

19
Management Accounting, Changes Continued
  • But regardless of the outcome of such discussion,
    it seem quite clear that the many functions
    traditionally attributed to management accounting
    practice - including measurement and
    interpretation - still will be performed within
    organizations, perhaps with even greater import
    and broader scope than before. Thus, I have no
    doubt about the continued relevance of our
    specialty. But I also believe that we need to
    examine how environmental, technological, and
    organizational changes are affecting the scope
    and nature of management accounting practices.

20
In-class Assignment
  • Case 9, Government Services
  • Read in class
  • What is the issue or what are the issues, why?
  • Recommendations

21
In-class Assignment, Continued
  • Actual solution

22
Back-of-chapter exercises and problems
  • Exercises 16-16, 16-24, problem 16-34

23
Sizzler Barbecue, case 24 of the casebook.
  • The case will be read in class
  • After each paragraph or exhibit a student will
    identify the issues
  • Then the root issue will be determined through
    analysis

24
Root Issue or Issues
25
Analysis
26
Recommendations
27
The End
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com