Value Creation in Management Accounting
eBook - ePub

Value Creation in Management Accounting

  1. 192 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Value Creation in Management Accounting

About this book

Value creation is at the heart of an economic enterprise, defining its capability to serve customers and generate profits and growth. This fact has led to an ever-increasing set of tools and techniques that start with customers, focusing on serving their preferences from the very inception of a product until its disposal. And this data is required to implement a value creation approach that has its roots in the Management Accounting System (MAS). The resulting model is called the Value-based Cost Management System (VCMS). If you or any manager want to take the lessons you learned in product development, process management, and marketing, this book will help you extend this knowledge to your MAS. This book makes this transformation both logical and easy to implement, with a focus on the new types of information that can be garnered when the MAS is modified to fit the value creation approach. The authors of the book will provide, upon request, a simplified automated data collection template that will ease the implementation process.

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Yes, you can access Value Creation in Management Accounting by CJ McNair-Connolly in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Business & Managerial Accounting. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

CHAPTER 1
A Focus on the Customer
The value of all things, even our lives, depends on the use we make of them.1
Value creation is at the heart of an economic enterprise, defining its capability to serve customers and generate profits and growth. This fact has led to an ever-increasing set of tools and techniques that start with customers, focusing on serving their preferences from the very inception of a product until its disposal. Most of these tools and techniques are based in either marketing or product development, with a constant eye toward helping companies capture more of the value created with their industry chains.
The focus of this book is on one specific, and overlooked, perspective on value creation—management accounting. Using the results of many years of field data collection, analysis, and development, a comprehensive model that captures the essence of the value creation process in diverse organizations is presented. Two key perspectives are taken into consideration in the discussion. First, the book emphasizes how companies can increase the value they create for customers—enhancing their product/service value proposition—by effective design of their products and services. This value needs to be effectively communicated to customers so that they can incorporate it in their buying decision.
The second major perspective is internally focused—helping companies eliminate the nonvalue-added activities that build waste, not value, into their products and services. By removing and minimizing wasteful work, more funds can be reinvested in value-added activities that help grow the top line of the business. It is a win-win solution that starts with understanding how customers perceive value.
The Concept of Value
Value is defined as the sum of perceived benefits received by the customer in return for the sacrifices made in terms of price paid, costs incurred, and effort spent in order to acquire a product or service.2 Value is the result of the amount of resources (time, money, and energy) expended by the final consumer in the entire value chain. Value is not created in the interchange of goods and services between trading partners—it does not exist until a willing consumer validates its existence.3 All trading partners contribute to the final value of a product or service as defined by the consumer, but they do not create value until the final consumer makes the decision to purchase the good or service at a specified price.
These facts place the consumer, as final arbitrator of exchange value, at the center of every business organization. If there is a chain of customers (a supply chain), then companies may have to deal with conflicting demands on their time and resources. How to choose among the demands of trading partners versus those of the final consumer is straightforward—the final consumer wins the debate. Throughout this book the final consumer will be the focus, with the term “customer” meaning the final consumer, not a supply chain partner.
That being said, cost can be incurred by companies in a supply chain that no consumer will pay for. So, it simply makes good business sense to seek to optimize the product and service offerings of the firm from the customer’s perspective regardless of where the company exists in the overall supply chain. Well-run companies can reap the larger shares of the consumer-defined value creation, or revenues, by managing their trading relationships efficiently and effectively. This is called value capture.4
Value from a Customer’s Perspective
Customers have well-defined expectations regarding the benefits they want, and perceive exist, in a product or service. For instance, customers value responsiveness to their questions and concerns when dealing with a product or service provider. Responsiveness is a common value attribute that makes up a customer’s profile, or list of valued product/service features. The customer has an entire list, consisting of multiple attributes that provide the basis for their final assessment of value delivered by a specific product or service. This list of value attributes, and the relative importance of each attribute in the buying decision, creates the opportunities for companies to maximize their reach to the consumer marketplace—to optimize their profit.
Every product or service presents the customer with a range of features, which is called the product’s or service’s value proposition. The value proposition is the sum of all the benefits promised to the customer and is the basis for customers making choices among competing products. The value proposition consists, then, of all of the value attributes embedded in a product or service. When asked to name these attributes, customers have very little trouble. Customers know what they are buying and why. While their reasons can range from something as specific as the size or weight of a product, through functionality, and even on to statements such as the product “makes me look cool,” customers can detail their wants (their value profile) and assess how closely a specific product or service matches their needs and wants.
Figure 1.1 summarizes the value creation process from a customer’s perspective. The expected benefits of the product or service are its value proposition. As noted, the expected benefits gained from these product, service, and cultural attributes depend on how closely they match the customer’s own value profile—their specific wants and needs. To gain these benefits, a customer incurs several types of costs. These not only include the transaction cost, or price paid to acquire the product or gain access to the service—the expected costs include the product’s or service’s life cycle costs (total cost of ownership for its useful life) and the riskiness of the purchase decision.
Image
Figure 1.1. Value creation: the customer’s perspective.
The more a customer knows about a product or service, in other words the more often they purchase it, the lower the risk and overall transaction costs of the purchase. For instance, the decision to buy paper towels is shaped by the cumulative experience the customer has had with the specific brand of paper towels. Risk is low and the need to do prepurchase research is also low (low transaction costs), so the decision is easy to make.
When we talk about a major purchase, though, such as the purchase of a kitchen stove, a new car, or a new home, the decision becomes much more complex for the customer. Risk may be high because the decision comes with a high price tag and uncertainty regarding actual functionality and life cycle costs. The customer doesn’t make this decision often, so the search for information prior to purchase ramps up the transaction costs and risk even more. Clearly not all customers are equally informed, but all are faced with a much riskier choice when large ticket items are purchased than when daily usage items are obtained.
Let’s think about a fairly large purchase decision for a customer—choosing the windows for a new or existing home. While there are a broad range of providers of windows, the consumer has narrowed the choice down to two of the top selling brands—Andersen Windows and Pella Windows. The value attributes and relative weightings for the two different companies’ windows are in Figure 1.2.
Image
Figure 1.2. Comparative value propositions.
The value attributes driving the decision are the quality of the product, its durability, size selection, overall appearance, shapes available (design), and reputation of the firm. For a customer whose primary focus is on quality, durability, and reputation of the firm, Andersen Windows is the obvious choice. If, on the other hand, the customer is more concerned with choice in sizes and design to add an architectural feel to their home, they would tend to buy from Pella. Since an entire group of windows is purchased at once, the style variables can become quite important to the competiveness of the firm. They also lead to two different companies with two different value propositions for a window. The result is two very different customer value segments.
A Market-based View of a Company’s Value Creation Profile
Armed with this basic terminology, we can now create a different perspective on the challenge faced by a company in the marketplace. This perspective is provided in Figure 1.3. While the customer’s final choice of one product over another is based on the total package of value attributes provided, the choice decision translates this process into a single dimension—the price the selling company receives for the product or service provided.
Image
Figure 1.3. Value creation: a market perspective.
We now see several things of interest. First, the value-added core of attributes that customers have used in their purchase decision now makes up only part of the cost the company incurs in providing the product or service. For a well-run company, it is normal for this value-added core of attributes to consume 20–25% of the total costs of the firm. Clearly, there are other things the company spends its scarce resources on. To denote the majority of these, we’ve coined the term business value-add to recognize that there is a reason for the activities, just not one the customer directly values.
The first layer is denoted as “business value-add—indirect.” These are many of the support services that are critical to long-term relationships with a customer but that the customer is not willing to pay for directly. For instance, a company has to issue an invoice when it sells a good or service. The customer doesn’t want to pay the company for the activity of issuing an invoice, but the customer can become very dissatisfied if the invoice is wrong, requiring more investment of their time and effort to correct. The fact that these activities impact overall customer satisfaction with their relationship with a firm have led many researchers to place them in a category called “service logic” and to make them part of the value-added core.5 This amount has been included in value-add by some companies we’ve done research with and excluded by others. The term “indirect” is used simply because the customer tends not to pay attention to these activities unless there is an error—they serve as potential dissatisfiers, not value creators.
The next layer is business value-add—future. Included here are all of the R&D, strategic, and marketing activities of the firm. For investors, these are very important activities, but for the current customer they are not. Why? Because the customer has already made a purchase decision based on existing offerings. It is doubtful if they want to pay the company to have their purchase decision made outdated. New customers are influenced by these new options, which are the life blood of the long-term health of the firm, but they are not of value to today’s customers and hence don’t garner any price.
Attention is next focused on all of the business value-add—administrative activities of the company. Some researchers call these nonvalue-add activities, but it is very difficult to actually implement a system where some peoples’ entire job gets called nonvalue-added. And, in reality, the company cannot exist if someone doesn’t tend to payroll, for instance. These activities are more (or less) required for the business to operate. They are activities, though, which sometimes can be eliminated or reduced...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half Title
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright Page
  5. Abstract
  6. Contents
  7. About The Authors
  8. Chapter 1 A Focus on the Customer
  9. Chapter 2 Customer Value-Add and Its Impact on Revenue
  10. Chapter 3 Business Value-Add: Minimizing the Activities that Reduce Customer Value
  11. Chapter 4 A Focus on Waste: Eliminating Nonvalue-Added Activities
  12. Chapter 5 Multiplying Value
  13. Chapter 6 Implementing a Value-Based Cost Management System—Part I: Scoping the Project
  14. Chapter 7 Implementing a Value-Based Cost Management System—Part II: Collecting and Analyzing the Data
  15. Chapter 8 Value Creation and Process Management
  16. Chapter 9 Using VCMS in a Job Shop
  17. Chapter 10 VCMS and Product/Service Development
  18. Chapter 11 Building VCMS in to the Organization
  19. Chapter 12 Revisiting the Basics
  20. Notes
  21. References
  22. Index
  23. Ad Page
  24. Backcover