Chapter 2 Introduction to Cost Management Systems Cost Accounting Traditions and Innovations...

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Chapter 2 Introduction to Cost Management Systems Cost Accounting Traditions and Innovations Barfield, Raiborn, Kinney

Transcript of Chapter 2 Introduction to Cost Management Systems Cost Accounting Traditions and Innovations...

Page 1: Chapter 2 Introduction to Cost Management Systems Cost Accounting Traditions and Innovations Barfield, Raiborn, Kinney.

Chapter 2

Introduction to Cost

Management Systems

Cost AccountingTraditions and Innovations

Barfield, Raiborn, Kinney

Page 2: Chapter 2 Introduction to Cost Management Systems Cost Accounting Traditions and Innovations Barfield, Raiborn, Kinney.

Learning Objectives (1 of 2)

• Explain why companies have management control systems

• List cost management system goals

• Describe what factors influence the design of cost management systems

• Explain why organizational form, structure, and culture are important to the design of cost management systems

Page 3: Chapter 2 Introduction to Cost Management Systems Cost Accounting Traditions and Innovations Barfield, Raiborn, Kinney.

Learning Objectives (2 of 2)

• Explain how the internal and external operating environments affect cost management systems

• List the elements that affect the design of cost management systems

• Describe the use of gap analysis when implementing cost management systems

Page 4: Chapter 2 Introduction to Cost Management Systems Cost Accounting Traditions and Innovations Barfield, Raiborn, Kinney.

Management Information System• A structure of interrelated elements that

• collects, organizes, and communicates data

so managers may • plan, control, evaluate performance, and

make decisions

• Emphasizes satisfying internal demands for information rather than external demands

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Internal Information Flows

Planning

Control

Decision

Performance

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External Information Flows

Clients

Government

Competition

Suppliers Creditors

Organization

Intelligence

Organizational communications

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Control System Components

• Detector or sensor

• Assessor

• Effector

• Communications network

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Management Control System

Detector

Assessor

Effector

Control device

Entity being

controlled

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Cost Management System (CMS)

• Formal methods to plan and control an organization’s cost-generating activities with major challenges of:– Achieving profitability in the short run– Maintaining a competitive position in the long run

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Integrated Cost Management System

Marketing

Quality Control

Financial Accounting

Production Planning and Scheduling

Research and Development

Cost Accounting

Inventory Management

Production Reporting

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Cost Management System Goals

• Develop product costs• Assess product/service life-cycle performance• Improve understanding of processes and

activities• Control costs• Measure performance• Allow pursuit of organizational strategies

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Designing a Cost Management System

ANALYZE

DETERMINEdesired outputs

PERFORMgap analysis

ASSESSgap reduction

Improve

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CMS Information

• Enables managers to perform analyses on:– determining core competencies and

organizational constraints– positive and negative financial and non-

financial factors of strategic and operational plans

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Organizational Form, Structure, Culture

• Choice of form affects– Cost of raising capital– Cost of operating business– Cost of litigating– Statutory authority to make decisions

• Forms of business include– Corporations, Partnerships, LLPs, LLCs

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Organizational Form, Structure, Culture

• Distribute authority and responsibility – Centralized, decentralized decision making

• Group subunits– geographically – by similar missions – by natural product clusters

• Determine accountability for cost management and organizational control

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Organizational Form, Structure, Culture

Underlying set of assumptions about entity and goals, processes, practices, and values

that are shared by its members

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Organizational Mission and Core Competencies

• Business mission regarding competition– Avoid competition

• Differentiation• Cost Leadership

– Confront competition

• Business mission in relation to product life cycle

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Organizational Mission and Core Competencies

• Timeliness

• Quality

• Customer service

• Efficiency and cost control

• Responsiveness to change

Cost management system gathers data and reports about core competencies

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Operating and Competitive Environment and Strategies

• Fewer costs susceptible to short-run control

• Cost management efforts targeted toward– the longer term– capacity management

• Decreased flexibility when responding to a change in short-term conditions

Page 20: Chapter 2 Introduction to Cost Management Systems Cost Accounting Traditions and Innovations Barfield, Raiborn, Kinney.

Operating and Competitive Environment and Strategies

• Being first to market - pricing flexibility increase market share or large per-unit profit

• Reduce product cost substantially– develop new production processes– capture learning curve effects– increase capacity utilization– create a focused factory arrangement– design for manufacturability, logistical

support, reliability, maintainability

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Operating and Competitive Environment and Strategies

• Supplier relations– link electronically

• Integration of entire information system– payroll– inventory– budgeting– costing

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CMS Elements

• Motivational elements

• Informational elements

• Reporting elements

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CMS Elements

• Motivational elements– Performance measurements– Reward structure– Support of organizational mission and

competitive strategy

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CMS Elements• Motivational elements

• Informational elements– Support budgeting process– Identify cost drivers– Reduce/eliminate non-value-added activities– Emphasize product life cycle– Adapt to changing competitive conditions– Relate cost to product/process design– Focus on capital spending– Minimize cost distortions

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CMS Elements• Motivational elements

• Informational elements

• Reporting elements– Prepare financial statements– Implement responsibility

accounting system

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Implement CMS

Perform GAP analysis

Information Needs

<Information Available>

Gap to OvercomeGAP

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Implement CMS

• Gap Analysis– Identify gap to overcome– Prioritize differences– Develop and deploy improvements

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Enterprise Resource Planning

For a truly integrated CMS

• Automate and integrate business processes

• Share common data and practices

• Produce and access information in real-time

Page 29: Chapter 2 Introduction to Cost Management Systems Cost Accounting Traditions and Innovations Barfield, Raiborn, Kinney.

Questions

• Why do companies have management control systems?

• Are organizational form, structure, and culture important to the design of cost management systems? Explain.

• How do the internal and external operating environments affect cost management systems?