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Minerva Partners LLP

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Finance and Strategy Support. Step Up, providing guidance and development in ... Trust, British Youth Council, Merlin, Amnesty International, YWCA, Norwood ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Minerva Partners LLP


1
Costing and Pricing
  • Presentation to SCFDG
  • Minerva Partners experience with their Clients

2
Minerva Partners
  • Two Partners
  • Nigel Scott MBA
  • Alexis Chapman ACA
  • Partners with you
  • Finance and Strategy Support
  • Step Up, providing guidance and development in
    financial management
  • Training in strategic and financial management

3
Nigel Scott MBA
  • 1991 2002 Finance Director in major charities
  • 2005 Course Director MSc Charity Finance, London
    South Bank University
  • 2002 now Minerva Partners, clients include
  • CFDG, ActionAid, The Redress Trust, British Youth
    Council, Merlin, Amnesty International, YWCA,
    Norwood
  • Trustee Interact Worldwide, Richmond CVS,
    Sporting Chance Foundation, Lorna Young Foundation

4
Agenda
  • Using Full Cost Recovery
  • Client examples
  • Using Activity Based Costing
  • Client example
  • Developing a pricing policy
  • Accounting or Marketing?
  • Quality issues

5
What does FCR mean?
  • The principle that an organisation should be able
    to recover the full costs associated with
    providing a service (or other output). This
    includes
  • Direct costs
  • Direct Support costs
  • Indirect Support Costs
  • Governance and Development Costs

6
SORP 2005 Glossary
  • Support costs are those costs that, whilst
    necessary to deliver an activity, do not
    themselves produce or constitute the output of
    charitable activity.
  • Similarly, costs will be incurred in supporting
    income generation activities such as fundraising,
    and in supporting the governance of the charity.
  • Support costs include the central or regional
    office functions such as general management,
    payroll administration, budgeting and accounting,
    information technology, human resources and
    funding

7
SORP 2005
  • Charitable activities are all the resources
    expended by the charity in the delivery of goods
    and services, including its programme and project
    work that is directed at the achievement of its
    charitable aims and objectives.
  • Such costs include the direct costs of the
    charitable activities together with those support
    costs incurred that enable these activities to be
    undertaken.

8
The ACEVO Model Full Cost Recovery
  • Published October 2002
  • Provides a template to help organisations in
    applications for contract and grant funding
  • Broad support including HM Treasury and NCVO
  • Adopted by Big Lottery Fund and other funders
  • But not everyone!

9
The manual categories of activity
  • Direct output costs
  • Category 1 costs
  • Category 2 costs
  • Category 3 costs
  • Front-line activity
  • Direct support work
  • Indirect support work
  • Governance and strategic development work

10
ACEVO model weakness
  • Costs are allocated to projects on the basis of
    the value of Direct and Direct Support costs
  • Not appropriate to UR
  • Needed an alternative ABC!!

11
ACEVO Model used by STAR
  • BLF continuation project
  • Full model turned into a spreadsheet
  • Included a contribution to reserves
  • BLF accepted model, except for
  • Contribution to reserves!

12
Local Authorities
  • Approach to costing local authority social
    services generally not based on Full Cost
    Recovery and variable
  • CIPFA Code of Practice on Best Value Accounting
    (2000) excludes governance and strategic
    development costs
  • CIPFA guidelines also excludes Unapportionable
    Central Overheads such as pension fund charges,
    unallocated IT costs and fixed asset costs

13
Government view
  • Nobody can force organisations to bid for
    things or get them to do things they dont want
    to do. Its part of the programme of initiatives
    such as Futurebuilders that the sector builds up
    its own sustainable structures, so it isnt
    dependent on grants and is able to have a solid
    base of its own.
  • Paul Goggins
  • Minister for the Voluntary and Community Sector

14
Local Government view
  • If our friends in the voluntary sector started to
    play hardball services would improve.
  • We would need to stop seeing them as a soft touch
    and make longer-term, higher-risk commitments.
  • Maybe thats why so many council chief executives
    feel able to disparage the efforts of the third
    sector on their patch it is a comfortable
    position, and it avoids financial commitment
  • But, in the long run, there can only be winners
    if we help the voluntary and community sector
    build its confidence
  • Reported by Warren Hatter, New Local Government
    Network

15
Our experience
  • Over 60 Local Authorities working with three
    clients
  • 26 different identified models for residential
    care
  • Core costs continues to be the big issue for them
  • Lack of strategic view on pertnerships

16
Costing at YWCA
  • Moved out of residential care
  • Retains a large HO infrastructure
  • Local projects bid for at local level are
    required to achieve 15 management charge
  • Projects can pick from a menu of HO services to
    suit the requirements of the local funder

17
Costing at Norwood
  • Long-term residential care
  • Some residents are under-charged
  • Need a pricing model for new residents
  • Need a separate costing model based at home level
  • Danger of subsidy
  • Mixed costing/pricing

18
Activity Based Costing
  • Activity drivers
  • Quantifiable requirement that means you need to
    undertake an activity
  • Activity rate
  • The average expenditure for each unit of the
    activity driver
  • Pricing decisions
  • Using activity rates to determine the real cost
    to a funder

19
Activity Based Costing
  • Using the Cost Classification
  • Identify the activity drivers
  • Identify the costs associated with each
    Classification and their relationship to the
    drivers
  • Identify those costs which do not relate to a
    driver or Classification
  • Decide whether the surplus costs are needed for
    regulatory purposes

20
ABC at United Response
  • Determined the Activity driver as
  • Contact Hour
  • Included anticipated organic growth
  • This enabled a cost per hour to be calculated
  • Total hours were 2,880,677

21
Simple spreadsheet!
  • Staff hours per week calculated
  • Day, Night, Sleep In
  • Area Support Manager
  • Division Support Manager
  • Recharged per capita
  • Insurance, Audit, Training, Recruitment
  • HO costs as management fee
  • Direct support, Indirect support, Governance

22
Result
  • Wide variance in surplus or deficit in each
    service
  • At Division level this showed up the competence
    of budgeting
  • Some Divisions historically undershot their
    projected net surplus
  • One Division was always spot on, now they seemed
    to have a very low margin, yet

23
United Response output
  • Pricing model
  • Divisions must achieve surplus
  • Enables local negotiation to suit purchaser
    limitations
  • Puts beneficiary first
  • Some local services will operate at a deficit

24
But how to price?
  • Pricing per service varied enormously across and
    within regions
  • Previously profitable services now seemed
    loss-making
  • Need to decide where the balnce must be taken

25
Pricing Policy the accounting approach
  • Market pricing
  • External focus
  • Prices charged by competitors are examined
    together with the amount customers are willing to
    pay
  • Cost-plus pricing
  • Internal focus
  • Total costs of the product are established and
    then a profit mark-up is added

26
Pricing Policy the marketing approach
  • Target Costing
  • A price is set with reference to market
    conditions and customer purchasing patterns. A
    target profit is then deducted to arrive at a
    target cost. The target profit is set before the
    product is manufactured.

27
Setting the Price
  • Price-quality strategies
  • Selecting the pricing objective
  • Determining Demand
  • Estimating Costs
  • Analysing Competitors Prices and Offers
  • Selecting a Pricing Method
  • Selecting the Final Price

28
Price-quality strategies
29
Selecting the pricing objective
  • Survival
  • Maximum Current Profit
  • Maximum Current Revenue
  • Maximum Sales Growth
  • Maximum Market Skimming
  • Product-Quality Leadership

30
Selecting the Final Price
  • Psychological pricing
  • The influence of other Marketing-Mix elements
  • Pricing Policies
  • Impact of Price on Other Parties

31
Questions and Discussion
  • Nigel Scott MBA
  • Minerva Partners LLP
  • nigel.scott_at_minervapartners.co.uk
  • Tel 07973 743924
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