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Revenues, Sales Variances, and Customer-Profitability Analysis

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Sedona Languages Institute buys English language software programs locally and ... Sedona sells the following programs: Grammar, Translation, and Composition ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Revenues, Sales Variances, and Customer-Profitability Analysis


1
Revenues, Sales Variances, and Customer-Profitabil
ity Analysis
  • Chapter 16

2
Introduction
  • Companies that prosper make revenue planning and
    revenue analysis top priorities for their
    managers.
  • This chapter examines revenue allocation issues
    and sales variances.
  • It also explores topics related to customer
    revenues and customer costs.

3
Learning Objective 2
  • Allocate the revenues of a bundled
    package to the individual products in that
    package

4
Revenue Allocation Methods
  • Sedona Languages Institute buys English language
    software programs locally and then sells them in
    Mexico and Central America.
  • Sedona sells the following programs Grammar,
    Translation, and Composition
  • These programs are offered stand-alone or in
    a bundle.

5
Revenue Allocation Methods
  • Stand-alone Price
    Grammar 255 Translation 85
    Composition 185
  • Purchasing these software programs cost Sedona
    the following
    Grammar 180 Translation 45
    Composition 95

6
Revenue Allocation Methods
  • Bundle (Suites) Price
    Grammar
    Translation 290 Grammar Composition 350
    Grammar Translation
    Composition 410

7
Revenues and Bundled Products
  • What businesses provides bundled products?
  • Banks provide
  • Checking
  • Safety deposit boxes
  • Investment advisory

8
Revenues and Bundled Products
  • Hotels provide
  • Lodging
  • Food and beverage services
  • Recreational activities
  • Tours provide
  • Transportation
  • Lodging
  • Guides

9
Revenue Allocation Methods
  • The two main revenue allocation methods are
  • The stand-alone method
  • The incremental method

10
Stand-Alone Revenue Allocation Method
  • The stand-alone revenue allocation method uses
    product-specific information on the bundle of
    products as the weights to allocate the bundled
    revenues to the individual products.
  • The term stand-alone refers to the product as
    a separate (non-suite) item.

11
Stand-Alone Revenue Allocation Method
  • There are four types of weights for the
    stand-alone revenue allocation method.
  • Selling prices
  • Unit costs
  • Physical units
  • Stand-alone product revenues

12
Stand-Alone Revenue Allocation Method
  • Consider the Grammar and Translation suite, which
    sells for 290 per day.
  • How much weight should Sedona Languages Institute
    assign to each item?

13
Stand-Alone Revenue Allocation Method
  • Selling prices The individual selling prices
    are 255 for Grammar and 85 for Translation.
    Grammar 255
    340 0.75
    0.75 290 217.50
    Translation 85 340 0.25
    0.25 290 72.50

14
Stand-Alone Revenue Allocation Method
  • Unit costs This method uses the costs of the
    individual products to determine the weights for
    the revenue allocations.
  • Grammar 180 225 0.80
    0.80 290 232
    Translation 45 225 0.20
    0.20 290 58

15
Stand-Alone Revenue Allocation Method
  • Physical units This method gives each product
    unit in the suite the same weight when allocating
    suite revenue to individual products.
  • With two products in the suite, each product is
    allocated 50 of suite revenues.
    1 (1 1) 0.50
    0.50 290 145

16
Stand-Alone Revenue Allocation Method
  • Stand-alone product revenues This method
    captures the quantity of each product sold as
    well as their selling prices.
  • Assume that the stand-alone revenues in 2001 are
    Grammar 734,400, Translation 81,600, and
    Composition 133,200.
  • What are the weights for the Grammar and
    Translation suite?

17
Stand-Alone Revenue Allocation Method
  • Grammar 734,400/816,000 0.90
    0.90 290 261
    Translation 81,600/816,000
    0.10 0.10 290 29

18
Stand-Alone Revenue Allocation Method
  • Revenue Allocation
    Weights Grammar Translation
    Selling prices 217.50 72.50
    Unit costs 232.00
    58.00 Physical units 145.00
    145.00 Stand-alone
    product revenues
    261.00 29.00

19
Stand-Alone Revenue Allocation Method
  • The selling price and stand-alone product revenue
    weights have the advantage that they
    frequently are a good indicator of the minimum
    benefits customers receive from those products.

20
Incremental Revenue Allocation Method
  • The incremental revenue allocation method ranks
    the individual products in a bundle according to
    criteria determined by management.
  • This ranking is used to allocate the bundled
    revenues to the individual products.

21
Incremental Revenue Allocation Method
  • The first-ranked product is termed the primary
    product in the bundle.
  • The second-ranked product is termed the first
    incremental product.
  • The third-ranked product in the second
    incremental product, and so on.

22
Incremental Revenue Allocation Method
  • Assume that Grammar is designated as the primary
    product.
  • If the suite selling price exceeds the
    stand-alone price of the primary product, the
    primary product is allocated 100 of its
    stand-alone revenue.

23
Incremental Revenue Allocation Method

  • Revenue
    Remaining to be
    Revenue Allocated to Product
    Allocated Other Products Grammar 255
    35 (290 255) Translation 35
    -0- Total revenue
    allocated 290

24
Learning Objective 3
  • Provide additional information about the
    sales-volume variance by calculating the
    sales-mix and sales-quantity variances

25
Sales-Volume Variance Components
  • The following information relates to Sedona
    Languages Institute budget for the year 2001.
  • Product Grammar Trans.
    Comp.
    Selling price
    per unit 259 87 185
    Variable
    cost 189 50 95
    Contribution
    margin per unit 70 37 90

26
Sales-Volume Variance Components
  • Product Grammar Trans.
    Comp.
  • Contr. margin 70 37 90
  • No. of units 3,185 980 735
  • Total 222,950 36,260 66,150
  • Sales mix
  • based on units 65 20
    15
  • Total budgeted contribution margin 325,360

27
Sales-Volume Variance Components
  • The following are the actual results for Sedona
    Languages for the year 2001.
  • Product Grammar Trans. Comp.
    Selling price/unit 255 85 185
    Variable cost 180
    45 95 Contribution
    margin
    per unit 75 40 90

28
Sales-Volume Variance Components
  • Product Grammar Trans.
    Comp.
  • Contr. margin 75 40 90
  • No. of units 2,880 990 630
  • Total 216,000 39,600 56,700
  • Sales mix
  • based on units 64 22
    14
  • Total actual contribution margin 312,300

29
Market-Share Variance
  • Assume that Sedona Languages Institute derives
    its total unit sales budget for 2001 from a
    management estimate of a 20 market share and a
    total industry sales forecast by Desert Services
    of 24,500 units in the region.
  • In 2001, Desert Services reported actual industry
    sales of 28,125 units.

30
Market-Share Variance
  • What is Sedonas actual market share?
  • 4,500 28,125 0.16
  • Budgeted total contribution margin is 325,360.
  • Budgeted number of units is 4,900.
  • What is the budgeted average contribution margin
    per unit?
  • 325,360 4,900 66.40

31
Summary of Variances
Static-Budget Variance 13,060 U
Level 1
Flexible-Budget Variance 17,370 F
Sales-Volume Variance 30,430 U
Level 2
32
Summary of Variances
Sales-Volume Variance 30,430 U
Level 2
Sales-Mix Variance 3,870 U
Sales-Quantity Variance 26,560 U
Level 3
33
Summary of Variances
Sales-Quantity Variance 26,560 U
Level 3
Market-Share Variance 74,700 U
Market-Size Variance 48,140 F
Level 4
34
Learning Objective 6
  • Discuss why revenues can differ across customers
    purchasing the same product

35
Customer Revenues and Customer Costs
  • An analysis of customer differences on both
    revenues and costs can provide important insight
    into why differences in customer profitability
    exists.

36
Customer Revenue Analysis
  • During the first six months of 2002, Sedona
    Languages Institute expanded its market and sold
    200 composition programs to two new customers in
    Colombia.
  • Customer A is in Bogota and customer B is in
    Barranquilla.

37
Customer Revenue Analysis
  • Customer

    A B Programs
    sold 140 60 List selling
    price 185 185 Invoice price 175
    180 Total revenues 24,500 10,800
  • What explanation(s) can be given for these
    revenue differences?

38
Customer Revenue Analysis
  • Two variables explain revenue differences between
    these two customers
  • The volume of programs purchased
  • The magnitude of price discounting
  • Price discounting is the reduction of selling
    prices below listed levels in order to encourage
    increases in customer purchases.

39
Customer Cost Analysis
  • Assume that Sedona Languages Institute has an
    activity-based costing system that focuses on
    customers rather than products.
  • Activity Area Cost Driver and Rate
    Order taking 80 per purchase order
    Set-up 100 per batch

40
Customer Cost Analysis
  • Customer
    A
    B Number of
    Purchase orders 7
    2 Batches 7 2
  • What is the cost of servicing each customer?

41
Customer Cost Analysis
  • Customer A
    Ordering 7 80/order 560
    Set-up 7 100/batch
    700 Total 1,260
  • Sedona can use this information to persuade this
    customer to reduce usage of the ordering and
    set-up cost drivers.

42
Customer Cost Analysis
  • Customer B
    Ordering 2 80/order 160
    Set-up 2 100/batch 200
    Total 360

43
Learning Objective 7
  • Prepare a customer-profitability report

44
Customer-Profitability Profiles
  • Managers find customer profitability analysis
    useful for several reasons
  • It highlights how vital a small set of customers
    is to total profitability.
  • When a customer is ranked in the marginal
    category, managers can focus on ways to make
    future business with this customer more
    profitable.

45
Customer-Profitability Profiles
  • Which customer is more profitable, A or B?
  • A
    B Revenues 24,500 10,800
    Cost of good sold
    (95 per unit) 13,300
    5,700 Contribution margin 11,200 5,100
    Other expenses 1,260 360 Operating
    income 9,940 4,740

46
Customer-Profitability Profiles
  • Customer A seems to be more profitable.
  • However, customer B has a higher gross profit
    percentage.
  • Customer A has a gross profit of 40.6 (9,940
    24,500).
  • Customer B has a gross profit of 43.9 (4,740
    10,800).

47
Customer-Profitability Profiles
  • Customer profitability reports often
    highlight that a small percentage of
    customers contribute a large percentage
    of operating income.
  • It is important that companies devote
    sufficient resources to maintaining and expanding
    relationships with these key contributors to
    profitability.

48
Learning Objective 8
  • Apply the concept of cost hierarchy to customer
    costing

49
Cost Hierarchy
  • Customer cost hierarchies are being used by
    companies such as General Motors to highlight how
    some costs can be reliably assigned to individual
    customers while other costs can be reliably
    assigned only to distribution channels or
    to corporate- wide efforts.

50
Cost Hierarchy
  • General Motors uses a seven level cost hierarchy
    to analyze profitability.
  • The aim of this cost hierarchy is to assign
    costs to the lowest level of the hierarchy at
    which they can be identified.

51
Cost Hierarchy
  • Enterprise-related activities
  • Market-related activities
  • Channel-related activities
  • Customer-related activities
  • Order-related activities
  • Parts-related activities
  • Direct materials

52
End of Chapter 16
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