Title: Lecture 10 Chapter 15, LS, T
1Lecture 10Chapter 15, L-S, T H
- Managing costs and time for customer value
2Outline
- Define cost management and explain how it
differs from conventional approaches to cost
control. - Use the four steps of activity-based management
to reduce costs and increase customer value. - Identify opportunities for cost reduction by
undertaking value analysis.
3Outline continued
- Select activity-based performance measures to
manage cost, time and other sources of customer
value. - Understand the impediments to implementing
activity-based management. - Understand the four major steps involved in
business process re-engineering, to manage costs
and other sources of value.
4Outline continued
- Analyse lifecycle costs and revenues and
understand how to use lifecycle management to
reduce costs. - Estimate target costs and describe the processes
of target costing that lead to cost reduction and
enhanced customer value.
5Outline continued
- Estimate how time-based management can be used to
manage time drivers as well as costs and other
sources of value - Undertake analyses using the theory of
constraints and throughput accounting to manage
costs and time.
6Cost management
- Improvement of an organisations cost
effectiveness through understanding and managing
the real causes of cost - It is a philosophy, an attitude, a set of
techniques to create more value at a lower cost
7Conventional cost control vs contemporary cost
management
- Drivers of cost
- conventional - managers control costs by bringing
them into line with some predetermined goal - focus is on cost results or outcomes
- contemporary - reduces costs by identifying waste
and eliminating it through identifying the real
cost drivers - focus is on determinants of cost
8Conventional cost control vs contemporary cost
management
- Strategic perspective
- conventional - control costs within the
organisation - internal perspective
- contemporary - cost management also concerned
with achieving value for the customer - a strategic perspective
9Conventional cost control vs contemporary cost
management
- Process perspective
- conventional - control costs by reporting results
for responsibility centres based on functional
areas of the business - contemporary - recognises that customers needs
are met by processes which flow across the
business - may cross functional areas
10Activity-based management (ABM)
- Process of using information from activity-based
costing to analyse activities, cost drivers and
performance so that customer value and
profitability are improved - Customer value
- features of a product which customers are willing
to pay
11Activity-Based Management
12Activity-Based Management (ABM)
Evaluates the costs and values of process
activities . . .
. . . To identify opportunities to improve
efficiency.
Process Improvements, Customer Value, Reduced
Costs
Activity-Based Costing
Valued-Added Analysis
13Activity-Based Management
How can we increase our market share for this
product?
14Activity-Based Management
15Activity-Based Management
16Activity-Based Management
17Activity-Based Management
18Activity-Based Management
19Two-Dimensional ABC and Activity-Based Management
Cost Assignment View
Assign resource costs to activity cost pools.
Resource costs
Performance Measures
Root Causes
Activity Triggers
Assign activity costs to cost objects using cost
drivers.
Cost Objects
20Using ABM to reduce costs
- Identify the major opportunities for cost
reduction - Determine the real causes of these costs
- Develop a program to eliminate the causes, and,
therefore, the costs - Introduce performance measures to monitor the
effectiveness of cost reduction efforts
21Identifying the major opportunities for cost
reduction
- Value-added activities
- provide essential value to the customer, or are
essential to the functioning of the business - Non-value-added activities
- do not add value to a product or service from the
customers perspective or for the business and,
therefore, can be eliminated without detriment to
either
22Elimination of Non-Value-Added Costs
Activities
Analysis andClassification
Value-AddedActivities
Non-Value-AddedActivities
Reduce orEliminate.
Continually Evaluate and Improve.
23Elimination of Non-Value-Added Costs
Non-Value-AddedActivities
Can be eliminatedwithout reducingproduct
qualityor performance.
Add costs but not value to the product.
24Elimination of Non-Value-Added Costs
- Examples of non-value-added activities are
- Storage of materials, work-in-process, or
finished goods. - Moving parts, and materials in the factory.
- Waiting for work.
- Inspection.
Get ridof them!
25Using ABM to Eliminate Non-Value-Added Activities
and Costs
- Identify Activities.
- Identify Non-Value-Added Activities.
- Understand Activity Linkages, Root Causes, and
Triggers. - Establish Performance Measures.
- Report Non-Value-Added Costs.
Select vendor
Receive parts
Produce goods
Rework defective products
Specify parts
Inspect finished goods
26Building activities into processes
- Eliminating non-value-added activities requires a
clear understanding of the way work is done in an
organisation - Linking activities into processes
- a series of activities that are linked together
to achieve a specific objective - often cross the boundaries of responsibility
centres, such as functional departments
27Cost driver analysis
- Identification of root-cause cost drivers for the
major non-value-added activities - Analysis of root-cause cost drivers of
value-added activities may also lead to more
efficient use of resources - Value-added management (or value analysis)
- the process of targeting and eliminating
non-value-added activities
28Measuring performance in cost reduction
- Activity-based performance measures can be used
to monitor the effectiveness of cost reduction
effort - Performance measures may be based on previous
activities
29Using the costing dimension of ABC to help manage
costs
- Customer cost analysis
- the costs of products purchased by the customer
are assigned to the customer, along with the cost
of any other customer-driven activities - Customer profitability analysis
- estimating the profits from individual customers,
or customer groups, by comparing customer costs
and revenues
30Other activity-based management issues
- Impediments to implementing ABM
- lack of awareness of ABM
- uncertainty over potential benefits
- extensive resource requirements to implement
- resistance to change
Cont.
31Other activity-based management issues
- Behavioural aspects of activity-based management
- resistance to change
- using activity-based information to create
particular incentives - The role of strategy and activity-based costing
- enables strategies to be managed taking a
customer perspective
32Implementation Of Activity-Based Costing
Management
The Focus of ABC
The Focus of ABM
Developing improved product or service costs
given current processes
Identifying opportunities for improving processes
Consider cost-benefits
33Keys to Successfully Implementing ABC and ABM
1. Organisational Culture.
2. Top-Management Commitment.
3. Change Champion.
4. Change Process.
5. Continuing Education.
34Implementation Of Activity-Based Costing And
Management
What Organizations Adopt ABC and ABM?
Companies facing price competition
Companies producing many different, complex
products from common facilities
35Achieving Cost Reduction
Activity Reduction
Activity Selection
Reduce Non-Value-Added Costs
Activity Elimination
Activity Sharing
36Business Process Re-engineering
- The complete redesign of a process, with an
emphasis on finding creative new ways to
accomplish an objective.
37Business process re-engineering
- The fundamental rethinking and radical redesign
of business processes to achieve dramatic
improvements in critical areas of performance
such as cost, quality and delivery - Focus is on strategic processes
- those processes that focus on achieving a
companys business objectives and strategies
38Business process re-engineering
- Four major steps
- preparing a business process map
- a flow chart of the activities that make up the
business process - establishing goals
- reorganising work flow
- implementation of the program
39Business process re-engineering vs ABM
- ABM focuses on process improvement
- the incremental, continuous improvement of
processes - Business process re-engineering involves
fundamental changes to the way processes are
structured - Both use activity analysis to identify processes
and activities
40Product life cycle costing
- A strategic approach to product costing and cost
management - Broadens the perspective of costing beyond
manufacturing - Encourages a multidisciplinary approach to cost
management - Results in decisions which can directly support
the strategies of the business
41Life cycle costing
- Analyse the costs of activities, including both
upstream and downstream costs, that occur over
the life cycle of the product - Four stages of the product life cycle
- product planning and initial concept design
- product design and development
- production
- distribution and customer (logistic) support
42Life cycle budgeting
- Involves estimating the expected costs and
revenues for each year of the expected life of a
product - Useful in product mix or pricing decisions
43Managing costs through a life cycle costing
- A lack of awareness, or uncertainty about how to
calculate life cycle costs - Not easy for products with longer lives as it is
more difficult to assess - Changes in consumer tastes
- Impact of competitors actions
- Effects of inflation
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45Impediments to life cycle costing
- A lack of awareness, or uncertainty about how to
calculate life cycle costs - Not easy for products with longer lives as it is
more difficult to assess - changes in consumer tastes
- impact of competitors actions
- effects of inflation
46Target costing
- An extension of product life cycle costing
- Strategically-oriented approach to cost
management - Involves examining competitors market prices for
a product - Determine the level of product cost that needs to
be achieved in order to price the product
competitively
47Target costing
- A tool for planning profits and reducing costs
- Reducing a products cost to a target cost, by
working on the design to decrease production (and
customer support) costs - Target cost - the product cost that must be
achieved for a product to be viable in the long
term
48Target Costing
- Design a product, and the manufacturing process,
so that the product can be manufactured at a cost
that will enable the firm to make a profit when
the product is sold at an estimated market-driven
price.
Target Price
Target Cost
Target Profit
49Target Costing
Market researchdetermines the priceat which a
new product will sell.
Management then computes a manufacturing cost
that will provide an acceptable profit margin.
50The target costing process
- Market-driven costing
- Determine target selling prices
- Determine target profit margin
- Calculate allowable cost
- The target cost at which a product must be
produced if it is to be sold at the target
selling price and generate the required rate of
return
continued
51The target costing process
- Product-level costing
- Cost reduction objective is the degree of cost
reduction needed to achieve the allowable cost - Need to estimate the current costthe cost that
the product could be manufactured for, prior to
any cost reduction objectives - Product level target cost is the difference
between the current cost and the target cost
reduction objective
continued
52The target costing process
- Component-level costing
- Breaking down the product-level target cost into
target costs for components - Value engineering (VE) reviewing the product or
process design to make changes to reduce cost,
while still maintaining the functionality of the
product - Pursue continuous improvement once production
begins
53The three steps in target costing
- Developing the target cost
- Driving down the planned cost towards the target
cost during the design phase - value engineering (or value analysis)- reviewing
the product or process design to make changes to
reduce cost, while still maintaining the
functionality of the product - Pursuing continuous improvement once production
begins
54Target Cost Example
After conducting a market research study, Garden
Lights decides to produce a new light fixture to
complement its outdoor lighting line. According
to the estimates, the new fixture can be sold for
a target price of 20, and the estimated annual
sales target is 100,000 light fixtures. Garden
Lights has a 20 expected return on sales target.
What is the target cost?
55Target Cost Example
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57Key features of target costing for cost management
- It is price led
- Focuses on the customer and customer expectations
- Based on principles of life cycle management,
placing primary emphasis on managing downstream
and manufacturing costs - Cross-functional, involving managers from across
the value chain
58Managing time
- Time dictates the rate at which products are
produced and revenue generated - Time determines how long resources are tied up in
processes, and unavailable for other uses - Time delays lead to inventory build-ups
- Time to develop new products and delivering
products to customers may be key to innovation
59Time-based management
- Measures for developing new products and services
- New product development time time from
identification of initial concept to release of
product to the market - Break-even time (BET) the time from
identification of initial concept to when a
product has generated enough profit to pay back
the original investment
continued
60Time-based management
- Time take to fulfil a customers order
- Measures of customer response time, order receipt
time, waiting time, production time and
production lead time (cycle time), - Reliability in meeting scheduled delivery dates
61Measuring Cycle Time
The average time necessary to complete and
deliver all good units and dispose of units that
have to be reworked or scrapped because of
defects.
62Time Drivers
- Any factor that changes the duration of an
activity.
63Time Drivers
- Poorly structured order, production and delivery
processes - Bottlenecks in order, production and delivery
processes - Poor quality
- Inefficient inventory management
- Poorly structured RD processes in developing new
products and services.
64Managing throughput
- Another approach to managing costs and improving
performance in quality and delivery - The theory of constraints
- focuses on identifying and removing bottlenecks
to improve the rate of throughput - recognises that the rate of production is limited
to the capacity of the constraints (or
bottlenecks) that exist in the organisation
65Theory of Constraints
- A management approach seeking to maximise
long-run profit through proper management of
organisational bottlenecks or constrained
resources.
66Managing throughput
- The theory of constraints
- Focuses on identifying and removing bottlenecks
to improve the rate of throughput - Recognises the rate of production is limited to
the capacity of the constraints (or bottlenecks)
that exist - Throughput accounting
- Measuring effects of bottleneck and other
operational decisions using measures of
throughput, inventory and operating expenses