mahm8e chapter16.ab.az
TRANSCRIPT
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PowerPoint Presentation by
Gail B. WrightProfessor Emeritus of Accounting
Bryant University
Copyright 2007 Thomson South-Western, a part of The
ThomsonCorporation. Thomson, the Star Logo, and
South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.
MANAGEMENT
ACCOUNTING
8thEDITION
BY
HANSEN & MOWEN
1INTRODUCTION
16LEAN ACCOUNTING, TARGETCOSTING, & BALANCED SCORECARD
STUDENT EDITION
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1. Describe the basic features of lean
manufacturing.
2. Describe lean accounting.3. Explain the basics of life-cycle cost
management & target costing.
4. Discuss the basic features of the BalancedScorecard & its role in lean manufacturing.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
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LEAN MANUFACTURING:
Definition
Is an approach designed toeliminate waste & maximize
customer value.
LO 1
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DIMENSIONS OF LEAN
MANUFACTURING
Delivering the right product
Right quantity
Right quality (zero defect)At time needed
At lowest possible cost
A cost reduction strategy that redefinesactivities performed
LO 1
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5 PRINCIPLES OF LEAN
THINKING
1. Precisely specify value by each particular
product
2. Identify the value stream for each3. Make value flow without interruption
4. Let customer pull value from producer
5. Pursue perfection
LO 1
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VALUE STREAM: Definition
Is all activities, both value-added& non-value-added, required to
bring product group or service from
starting point to finished product in
hands of customer.
LO 1
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VALUE STREAM
Types of value streams
Order fulfillment
New product
Value stream activities
Non-value-added
Activities avoidable in the short run
Unavoidable activities due to current technology orproduction method
Value added
LO 1
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MANUFACTURING CELL:
Definition
Contains all operations in closeproximity that are needed to
produce a family of products.
LO 1
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PULL VALUE
Lean manufacturing uses a demand pull
system to reduce waste.
JIT inventory
Reduces inventory levels
Requires close relations with suppliers
Suppliers benefit from
Long term relationsBetter competitive position
LO 1
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LEAN ACCOUNTING:A Comparison
LO 2
Traditional cost management systems may
not be compatible with Lean
Accounting. Lean Accounting makesproduct costs more simple & direct.
More labor and overhead costs are
assigned to products through directtracingrather than allocation.
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FOCUSED VALUE STREAMS
Are more simple & accurate in product costing
Have limitations
Initially, labor costs may be difficult to assign if
people are employed in several value streams
Labor costs should assigned proportionately
Are organized around a family of products
LO 2
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VALUE STREAM DECISIONS
May lead to
Short term decisions
May not reflect long term consequences
LO 2
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PERFORMANCE
MEASUREMENT:A Comparison
LO 2
Lean accounting replaces standard cost
system measurements with a Box
Scorecard that compares a) operational,
b) capacity, & c) financial metrics with
prior week performances. A mixture of
financial & nonfinancial measures areused.
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What are product life cycle
& life cycle costs?
Product life cycleis the time aproduct exists from conception
to abandonment. Life cycle
costsare all costs associated
with a product for its life cycle.
LO 3
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VALUE CHAIN: Definition
Is the set of activities requiredto design, develop, produce,
market, and service a product.
LO 3
O 3
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When are most costs
incurred?
During the development stage.
This is also the time costs
should best be managed.
LO 3
development stage
LO 3
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TARGET COST: Definition
Is the difference between salesprice needed to capture a
predetermined market share &
desired per-unit profit.
LO 3
LO 3
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TARGET COSTING
Uses 1 of 3 methods
Reverse engineering
Tearing down a competitors product to discover
design features that create cost reductions
Value analysis
Attempting to assess the value placed on product
functions by customers
Process improvement
LO 3
Process improvement
LO 3
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LIFE CYCLE COSTING:AComparison
LO 3
Life cycle costing includes development
costs unlike conventional cost systems.
Inclusion of more cost information canbe useful for assessing effects on costs
and benefit future design.
LO 4
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BALANCED SCORECARD
PERSPECTIVESFinancial perspectiveEconomic consequences of actions taken in other 3
perspectives
Customer perspective
Defines customer & market segments where the businessunit will compete
Internal business process perspectiveDescribes internal processes needed to provide value for
customers, owners
Learning & growth (infrastructure) perspectiveDefines capabilities that an organization must have to
create long term growth & improvement
LO 4
Financial
LO 4
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STRATEGY + TRANSLATION
Is the ways in which a companyimplements it strategy for profit & growthwithin the balanced scorecard framework.
It includes choices of type of customer,product, market, internal & businessprocesses, etc. Strategy translation meansspecifying objectives, measures, targets
& initiatives.
LO 4
LO 4
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PERFORMANCE MEASURES
Must be balanced between:
Lead measures (performance drivers)
Lag (outcome) measures
Objective (quantifiable & verifiable) measures
Subjective (more judgmental) measures
Financial & nonfinancial measures
External & internal measures
LO 4
LO 4
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LINKING PERFORMANCE
MEASURES & STRATEGYTestable strategy
Using cause & effect
Link objectives to overall goal
Double loop feedback
Managers receive information on effectiveness of
strategy & its underlying assumptions
Single loop feedbackEmphasizes only effectiveness of strategy
LO 4
LO 4
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FINANCIAL PERSPECTIVE
Flows from other 4 perspectives
Revenue growth
Cost reduction
Asset utilization
LO 4
LO 4
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CUSTOMER PERSPECTIVE
Source of revenue component within the
financial perspective
Core objectives & measures
Customer value
Difference between what customers receive and what
they have given up
Delivery reliability
LO 4
LO 4
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PROCESS PERSPECTIVE
Process value chain made up of 3 processes
Innovation process
Operations process
Cycle time & velocity
Manufacturing cycle efficiency
Day-by-hour report
Postsales service process
LO 4
LO 4
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LEARNING & GROWTH
PERSPECTIVE
Source of capabilities that enable the
accomplishment of other 3 perspectives
Employee capabilities
Motivation, empowerment, alignment
Information systems capabilities
LO 4
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THE END
CHAPTER 16