Final Exam Cost Accounting

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acct for rework in process costing

1. normal rework-same as common normal in job 2. abnormal rework-same as job abnormal rework

2 methods for accounting by-products

1. nrv from sale of by-products deducted from joint costs b4 allocate to main products 2. proceeds from sale of by-products are treated as other rev

3 types of budgeting

1. periodic 2. rolling 3. zero-based

4 ways of setting standards

1. stretch 2. practical 3. minimum 4. mgt by exception

variable costs are caused by:

cost drivers

actual costs

cost incurred in present or past

key feature of job-order costing

cost of one job differs from that another and must be kept track of seperatly

J job costing rev

d-a/r c-rev

J job costing cogs

d-cogs c-fg

J job costing deprecation

d-moh c-accum dep

general J for allocating overhead

d-moh control c- dep/utlities/etc payable(cash

how to close moh-control and moh-allocated

d-moh-allocated c-moh-control c-wip c-fg c-cogs

J job costing indirect materials used

d-moh-control c-materials

JOB COST j FOR ABNORMAL SPOILAGE

debit: loss on abnormal spoilage debit: marterials inventory (recovered) credit: wip-job x

J conversion costs used in production dept 1

debit=wip dept 1 credit misc accts

RELEVANT costs and benefits

decideing whether to make changes to imporve quality consider these

budget creep

demand more money than needed to make achieving goals easier

design specs and customer satisfaction difference

design quality failure

objectives

dimension of performance you want to improve

genreal plant costs cost driver

direct costs

job order cost sheet

dm+dl+applied oh=product cost

three types of costs assigned to cost objects

dm, dl, and moh aka inventoriable costs (b/c are an asset)

costs allocated for many reasons

dmaking, fin stment reporting, cost reimbursements contracts

the production report

document used in a process costing system, details all manu quantities and costs, show the computation of cost per eup indicates the cost assignment to goods produced during the period

sales value at split off

doesn't require many predictions

single driver assumes:

driver generates same amt of oh. but conceals hidden differences(use rates should be diff) and ignores other activites that may drive differences ie: hidden driver

customer support

external failure cost

warranty

external failure cost

step 1 nrv

find ratio to allocate. g1= units* sp (sep costs)=x x/total all goods=ratio

what does a focus on quality do?

generally builds expertise in producing it, lowers the cost of providing it, creates higher satisfaction for customers using it and generates higher future revenues for the company selling it.

process further template in sales value at split off

good sell @split further rev units *sp f units*fsp xtra p - (sep cost) sep s&a - (units * m cost) total < or >

2 measures of profitability

gross margin, gross margin %

gross profit margin %

gross profit/revenue

what does bsc targets get compared to?

actual

operating income is u if

actual < std income

cost is u if

actual > std costs

operating income is f

actual > std income

actual incurred costs

actual costs*actual units

nrv

assume don't know sales price at split off

how to find cost of goods manufactured

beg bal wip +dm used +direct labor used +moh -end bal wip =cogm

`cogs calc

beg fg+cogm-end fg

fg end units inventory calc

beg fg+produced-sol=end fg

cogm calc

beg wip+dm+dl+moh-end wip=cogm

slack

build in room for budget which is bigger issue in rolling budget b/c its so fast

behavioral biases

cold biases, hot biases, combo biases

constant gross margin

combat disadv of gross margin in nrv, sales, and phsycial

shapely value

combo stand alone and incremental pshop= (pshop sell price+(incremental pshop price))/#of users

where do performance measures are from

company's vision, strategy, and objectives

fifo method of process costing

computes an avg cost per eup using only current production and current costs info; units and costs in beg i are accct for seperatly

difference between actual performance and design specifications

conformance quality failure

revenue allocation

use common costing

why use weighted avg process costin

vat sort of production (paint or chemicals)

operatin expense

vc +fc

absorption costing operation income calc

vc operting income-fmoh in invetory previous years+fmoh in I deferred to future periods

J dm-x used in production in dept 1

wip-deptx debit materials inventory credit

abormal spoilage definition

would be avoided if process and people work as they are supposed to. avoidable, controllable, and is a loss not inventoriable

appraisal costs

— inspecting and checking the product (may have several inspection points)

recipricol method assumption

most realistic b/c assumes that all service depts serve each other

hot biases

motivated reasoning, fundamental attribution error

salves value at split off

nee to know split off time sales price! template p1 ptotal sv@split (units *sp)=p1 To allocate (p1/ptotal)* total cost to make total column

design and sepc costs cost driver

number of producgts

compliance costs cost driver

number of products

shipping costs cost driver

number of shipments

machine repair cost driver

number of units

4 parts of each bsc areas

objectives, measures, targets, initiatives

method 1 by products

sales value of g1-add process cost=nrv at split off subtract sales value of by product(only subtracted in by-prod column and total)-remain joint costs (only in non byprod column and total)=gm then find gm %

by-prod method 2

sales value-add process cost=nrv at split off-allocated joint costs=gm then find gm%

what does the direct method assume

service depts don't serve each other, so they don't get any of each other's costs

what does std costing mean

set up std inputs, direct materials, direct labor, oh-variable oh, fixed oh

what is price variance called in vmoh

spending variance

flexible budget

std costs*actual units

volume related activity examples

supplies, lubricating oil, machine repair

physcial measures example

good #phys units ratio* total amt good 1: (good 1 phycial units/total phsycial units) x process cost total=allocation amt

how to find normal spoilage units

good units* percent of good units(given)

coordination-facilitating

helping people coordinate their decisions often across units

decision-facilitating

helping people make better decisions, primarily through presenting relevant information in a format that is easy to understand

operation costing

hybrid of job and process. are made in batches but vary model to model such as: clothes, jewelry, shoes

labor stds

ideal, practical, and minimal stds labor rate: want real cost of the employee

when is price variance unfave

if ap >budgeted price

why using gross margin in nrv sales and physical problem still?

if don't understand joing cost allocations here and should not be used for dmaking could lead to poor decisions

allocate over/under applied oh. 2.write off cogs

if immaterial, amount closed to cogs under: debit (inc) cogs over: credit (dec) cogs

how does bsc describe and implement an orgs strategy

Provides a language that executive teams can use to discuss direction and priorities Translates vision/strategy into a coherent and linked set of performance measures

when to not include and objective?

if your organization can't or won't tie it to an initiative If you can't identify an initiative, then you can't do much to control whether you are hitting the objective If you won't identify an initiative, the objective isn't that important

typical pitfalls for bsc

Senior management not committed One senior manager tries to build the scorecard alone Scorecard responsibilities don't filter down Treating the scorecard as a one-time event Mistaking the BSC for a systems project Introducing the BSC only for compensation

ah

actual direct labor hours used

flexible budget variance

actual dl vs flexible budget at same amount of units as actual. favorable if actual <=flex

ar

actual hourly wage rate

debit side of moh

actual oh

aq

actual quantity of input used

ap

actual unit price per unit of input

static budget variance is

actual vs static budget amt, favorable if ao<=to

variance analysis framework

actual------flex----static=static budget variance actual to flex=flex budget variance flex to static=volume budget variance

cost is favorable if

acuta <std costs

job costing examples

ad campaign, audit, aircraft assembly

how to find profit line profitability

add the costs that were allocated using abc for line + cogs=total costs subtract total costs from revenue to get operating income

when is spoilage found

at inspection point- the point where units are inspected or tested. any units that have passed inspectioni share some costs of normal spoilage

at end of period normal spoilage for process costing

at period end, take normal spoilage cost and spread it over good units that passed inspection in the current period

firsm should determine its ________ and then choose ____________ to measure strategy

competitive strategy; performance measures

J product was finished

d- finished goods-control c-wip-control

J sell spoiled units on acct for job costing

d-a/r c-materials control/inv

sold goods J

d-a/r (how much sold) c-sales rev (how much sold) d- cogs (actual cost) c-finished goods (actual cost)

J job costing cogm

d-fg c-wip

j write off cogs

d-many alloc c-moh control-actual c-overr alloc cogs d-under alloc cogs

normal and specific spoilage and job costing J

d-materials inventory (recovered) aka disposal value c-wip-job x

J how to allocate indirect costs ex: rent

d-moh control c- rent payable(cash)

J job costing misc manu oh

d-moh control c-misc acct

J normal and common spoilage and job costing

d-moh control d-materials inventory(recovered) c-wip-job x

j purchase materials on account (both indirect and direct)

d-raw m c-a/p

J job costing moh allocated

d-wip c-moh-alloc

dl for std cost system, wages pay

d-wip (sp*sq*ao) c-wage pay (ap*aq*ao), if dif need to add in dl efficiency and price variance

J job costing dm used

d-wip control c-materials

J for allocate costs using actual hours and estimated moh rate

d-wip control c-moh allocate

J job costing direct labor

d-wip control d-moh c-wage/pay

J for direct and indirect labor

d-wip control (direct lab) d- moh-control (indir lab) c- wages pay (total) wip and moh control are inventoriable costs

j allocate to the 2 jobs (can do for both materials and labor, if labor use wages pay not raw m)

d-wip job 1 d-wip job 2 c-raw material I (total) d-moh-indirec materials=x c-raw m inventory =x

J for a is dm and b is indirect materials

d-wip-control (dm=a) d-moh-control (indir m=b) c-raw m (total materials)

how to find profit line profitability when comparing lines

divide operating income by revenue for line to determine which is more profitable based on ranking (higher %=better)

conversion costs

dl and oh b/c are small relative to dm

supplies cost driver

dl cost

cogs

dm +dl+voh+foh

how to allocate one support dept

dual rate system

in general think balance scorecard measures cause

each other, aka learn and grow lead to high internal bus process to high customer perform to high fin performance.

unfavorable variance

effect of dec operating income relative to the budget amt

favorable variance

effect of increasing operating income relative to the budget amt

what does product quality support?

enviromental progress

MOH Rate

estimated moh/estimated base activity=total pool/total cost driver

costs assignment weighted vs fifo

fifo: costs carried fwd from prev period are assgined directly to completed weighted: calc the avg equiv unit cost of the work done to date regardless of when the work was done

why need to allocate joint costs among joint products?

figure out inventory values and cogs

activity based costing

first assigns costs to activities then to prodcuts based on product's consumption of activities

thearoy of constraints assumes all products other than direct materials are

fixed

performance measures should be balanced among:

performance drivers and outcome measures, obj/subj measures, ext/internal measures, fin/nonfin measures

if not inventoriable costs are...

period costs, b/c they are always expensed in same period they are incurred ex: sg&a and r&d expenses

combo biases

planning fallacy, escalation biases

process costing examples

postal delivery, oil refining

burden rate

predetermined oh rate acts as a tax on cost driver. sometimes could discourage behavior

budgeted costs

predicted, estimated to occur in future

cost of new part

prevention cost

examples of what costing: flour mill

process

examples of what costing: oil refinery

process

examples of what costing: pharmaceutical company

process

examples of what costing: tire manufacturer

process

key features of process costing

process costing, the challenge is determining how much work has been done and how to spread the costs over the WIP units and the completed ones. We use some kind of averaging to do our costing. We do not try to match up particular costs with particular units. We use an idea called "equivalent units". EUs measure production in terms of how much of an input has been added to it so far.

death spiral

process that begins by attempting to inc price to meet reported product cost. can cause demand for fewer units

operations process

produces and delivers existing products and services to customers Three common objectives (with measures): Increase process quality (Quality costs, Output yields (good output/good input), % defective units) Increase process efficiency (Process cost measures, Process productivity measures) Decrease process time (Cycle time, Velocity, Manufacturing cycle effectiveness (MCE))

undercosting

product consumes high level of resoucrs but is allocated low costs per unit

overcosting

product consumes low level of resources but is allocated high costs per unit

prevention costs

product design, vendor days, training and hiring intelligent workers

material handling cost driver

production runs

why use activity based costing?

products consume activites and activities consume resources

why use fifo process costing

products made in an assemply line

joint products

products that are made from same raw material and a joint process (can't be identified until split-off point)

examples of cost objects

products, services, departments

tm

sales-dm costs(only)

abc costing in admin

same as other abc

types of stand alone

sell price, prod cost, physical units

dual rate system

seperate the two departments that use the 1 support dept. 1. for vc use budegted rate*actual use=allocated for each dept using the support 2. to allocate fc budget rate(fc/total budget hrs)*budget use b/c fc related to capacity

batch related costs examples

setup costs, material handling, shipping costs

setup costs cost driver

setup hours

what is overhead

shared resources—resources consumed to achieve multiple goals, which therefore (in the terminology of cost accounting) must be allocated and applied to multiple cost objects,

when to use plantwide

similar products using same resources

acct for scrap in process costing

similar to common scrap in job.

DEPT OH RATE

similar to plantwide expcept oh cost pools and selected base are obtained by dept

single rate system

similar to pooled method

bottleneck

something that is operating at capacity with no excess

between actual and flex is

sp*aq, actual to that is price, that to flex is efficiency

flexible budget in variance anlaysis

sp*sq*ao

static in variance analysis

sp*sq*to

to find static budget for direct labor

sp*sq/unit *ao=dl

sp in voh variance analysis

sp=estimated voh costs/estimated base activity

what does flexible budget do between actual and static budget

splits static budget variance into sales volume variance and flexible budget variance

completed units what come from and go to

started and finished in curr period units goes to finished at end of period

end wip from and goes to

started but not finished in curr period goes to remain end wip and beg wip for next period

what does beg wip come from and go to

starts in prev period finished in curr peiod and becomes finished at end of period

static v actual results issue

static can still be technically correct, but is off b/c made more product or could be per unit cost is off

static budget

std costs*expected units, is planned

sh

std direct labor hours that should have been used

sr

std hourly wage rate

sq

std quantiy of inputs allowed for actual ouput achieved

sp

std unit price per unit input

initiatives

strategy intended to help achieve target

if it has control next to account name that means it has...

subsidiary accounts like payable control account has subsidary of electric payable and utilties payable

how to get abormal spoilage units

take the spoiled untis amt- the normal spoilage units

what is target vs actual

target is standard. is target output, standard price, standard quantity

are moh control and allocated permanent or temporary accounts?

temporary so closed at year end

when you change level of output

that means the flexible budget b/c it changes ao

quanity std

the amount of input that should be used per unit of output

if make more units than planned what happens to costs

the inc in volume with same fixed costs will cause overestimate costs

how to calc spoilage units total in process costing

transferred in +beg wip-completed units-end wip=spoilage

outcome measure

lagged indicator

performance driver

lead indicators

practical capacity and dual rate system

leaves some fc unallocated b/c operating depts aren't really causing the support dept to be so big. use total service hrs of usage possible

what if can process further in sales value at split off

less units but inc. sell price and inc. cost b/c of marketing cost. so only look at relevant costs aka dif between unfinished and finished good to determine if worth it

targets

level of measure to which performance is compared

efficiency variance u or f

u-under skilled worker f-more productive ppl or better maintained machines

undercosted product in cross-subsidization

uc product is left with too little cost so seems more profitabel than really is

allocated<acutal

under-allocated

dif between static and flexible budget is

unit difference

units accounted for calc

units completed +units in end wip

how to find equiv units

units completed+units in end wip=equiv units do this for material and conversion costs

what is spoilage

units damaged/ruined during production and can't be sold as reg product and costs the firm money

calc units to account for

units in beg wip +units started=total units to acct for

J loss from abnormal spoilage PROCESS

loss abnormal spoilage-debit wip-dept(last number) credit

lubricating oil cost driver

machine hours

process costing types of costs

material costs applied at specific poiknts, conversion costs applied uniformally, transfer costs are transferred from one dept to other

to allocate moh through out year what do we need to do BEFORE the year starts?

moh rate to apply to moh costs

how to find moh allocated

moh rate* actual cost driver base activity

spoilage and process costing

need to compute spoiled units both normal and abormal. debit abormal loss and normal is inventoriable in either all completed or prorated to wip and completed.

incremental common costing

need to find primary user of good. 1. pshop(prim)=individaul sell rpice 2. wood(increm)=total package-the pshop(prim)sell rpice 3. reverse primary user to find pshop incremental cost

material stds

need to know inputs needed, qualtiy of inputs, quantities of inputs at specific quality

abnormal wip and job costing

need to take costs of those units out of wip and put in loss acct if dispose of them

scrap J @ time of sale for job costing

no J entry, put in stores, sales results in credit to wip-control (if specific) or moh (if common)

acct for scrap in job costing

no cost assigned to scrap, but difference is scrap attirbutedd to specific job or all jobs

fmoh variance analysis

no spending or efficiency variance b/c fixed. and volume variance is production variance

do you min or max something in bsc?

no you make trade-offs among bsc items while trying to make all the targets

is there a volume variance in vmoh variance analysis?

no, but flex budget is amt allocated and estimated based on cost driver

two types of spoilage

normal and abnormal

three types of rework in job costing

normal for specific jobs, normal common to all jobs, abormal rework

normal spoilage definition

normal part of production process. -unavoidable -uncontrolabe with current production capabitlies -are inventoriable

fmoh is

not allocated, treat as operating expense in income statement

joint costs and coswt drivers

not based on drivers therefore should not be used for decision making about individual products only products together

std costing and decision making

observing varainces from std costs, mgrs must weigh the costs and benefits as well as probability of each state to determine if should investigate

overcosted in cross-subsidization

oc product absorbs too much cost so seems less profitable than really is

dept allocation method

oh costs are traded to seperate depts and applied to products using a dept allocation rate

trace or allocate for auto station? oil, rent, phone bill, supervisor salary, oil filters

oil-t rent-a phone bill-a supervisor salary-allocate oil filters-t

when making a decisions it is important to consider__________ costs which are csots that ______ between alternative courses of action

relevant, differ

normal rework attributable to specific job

rework costs are charged to that job

when to use physcial quantities method

output product price are volatile, signficant processing occurs between split-off pt and first pt of marketability, product prices are not set by market. assume no processing further b/c at split off pt

by-products

outputs of joint production that are releativly minor in quantity or value

allocate>acutal

over-allocated

weighted avg method of process costing assumptions

units produced are essentially the same. produced in stages by diff departemnets. costs accum for each dept then transferred to next using avg cots of units transferred. cost determined at end of period

BROAD AVERAGING

use broad averages to allocated costs uniformally regardless of how incurred, but caused products using fewer resources to be overcosted and products using more resoruces to be undercosted

use fifo to calc value of end fg inventory

use fg e/b units (dm +dl+moh-allocated per unit price) which changes cogs balance!

cost allocation

use manufacturing overhead(moh) ex: utilities, insurance, depreciation, indirect materials/labor

physical units stand alone

use physical units within the total package to prorate. 1pshop/(1 pshop +1 wood) *sell price of package

prod cost stand alone

use production costs prorated. pshop prod cost/(pshop and wood prod cost) * package sell price=pshop costs

for direct materials variance analysis using aq of bought and used

used bought for dif in price variance, use used for efficiency variance

what is job costing

used when products identifiable in batches or "jobs". need costs for managerial decisions(pricing) and fin reporting

decision-influencing

changing the behavior of a person who is attempting to garner rewards or avoid punishments.

abnormal rework

charged to Loss from abnormal rework

normal rework common to all jobs

costs charged to moh and spread through oh allocation over jobvs

calc the cost per equiv unit of production

costs to acct for divided by equiv units cost per equiv unit

what do you assign to cost objects

costs, some easy to track, (direct), some cannot trace (indirect) so use cost allocation

how can accountants add value?

create and enable value

each budget consists of

1. # of units 2. selling or service price per unit 3. variable and fixed costs 4. if acutal vs budget, everything will be off

what are variances used to evaluate

1. effectiveness 2. efficiency

inc motivation, empowerment and alignment (measures)

% of processes with real-time feedback mechanisms % of service employees with online access to customer and product information

calc manu cost per unit

(dm+dl+oh)/units (if vmc then subtract fixed cost rate)

internal business process measures and time

-Average manufacturing time for key products. -Manufacturing cycle efficiency for key processes. -Defective units produced at bottleneck operations. -Average reduction in setup time and processing time at bottleneck operations.

advantages of coq(financial measures)

-COQ focuses managers' attention on how poor quality affects operating income. -COQ help managers aggregate costs to evaluate the tradeoffs of incurring prevention costs and appraisal costs to eliminate internal and external failure costs. -COQ measures assist in problem solving by comparing costs and benefits of different quality-improvement programs and by setting priorities for cost reduction.

balance scorecard financial persepctive

-Concerned with the global financial consequences of the other three perspectives Most emphasize profitability Three themes: Revenue growth and mix Cost reduction or productivity improvement Asset utilization Plus, consider product life cycle (growth, sustain, harvest)

learning and growth measures and time

-Employee satisfaction. -Number of employees trained in managing bottleneck operations.

learning and growth persepective for quality

-Experience and qualifications of design engineers. -Employee turnover ratio. -Employee empowerment. -Employee satisfaction. -Employee training.

job costing

-Heterogeneous products or services -Costs are assigned to a distinct unit or batch -Resources are expended to bring a distinct product or service to market for a specific customer -Spread costs over items in the job -Typically produced for sale

process costing

-Homogeneous products or services -Costs are assigned to a mass of similar units -Resources are used to mass-produce a product or service and not for any specific customer -Spread costs over # of whole units produced -Typically produced for inventory

operations

-Hybrid costing system -Costs are assigned by batch -Heterogeneous materials but homogenous conversion processes

relevant revenues and costs delays

-Manufacturing cycle times affect both revenues and costs. -Revenues are affected because customers are willing to pay a higher price for faster delivery. -Relevant costs will likely include inventory carrying costs.

Advantages of Nonfinancial Measures of Quality

-Nonfinancial measures of quality are often easy to quantify and understand. -Nonfinancial measures direct attention to physical processes and to areas that need improvement. -Nonfinancial measures provide immediate short-run feedback on whether quality-improvement efforts have succeeded. -Nonfinancial measures are useful indicators of future long-run performance.

Nonfinancial Measures of Internal-Business-Process Quality

-Percentage of defective products manufactured. -Percentage of reworked products. -Number of different types of defects analyzed using control charts, Pareto diagrams and cause-and-effect diagrams. -Number of design and process changes made to improve design quality or reduce the costs of quality.

cold biases

-availability bias, halo effect, functional fixation

what types of inventory do service companies have?

-indirect materials (office supplies) -service in process(period end in middle of job) -parts (repair companies)

flexible budget variance could be caused by

1. efficiency of dl 2. cost/price/ wage of dl 3. check sp*aq to see if q chagnes

three options to correct moh rate and close accounts at year end

1. adjust allocate rate 2. write off to cogs (easiest) 3. prorate

to stage cost allocation to dept costing

1. allocate oh costs to dept 2. allocate dept oh costs to products or services aka can use dif cost driver

what are the functions of management reporting systems?

1. attention direction 2. decision-facilitation 3. decision-influencing 4. coordination-faciliation

theory of constraints

1. bottleneck slows everything down 2. so concentrate on maximizing throughput margin (tm) when dmaking 3. aka want to max relevant revenues - relevant costs

step 1 constant gm %

1. calc gross margin % for all products put together total sales volum-joint cost(process cost)-seperable cost=gm then find gm %

6 steps to process costing

1. calc phystic units to account for 2. calc physcial units accounted for (make sure equals step 1) 3. determine equivalent units produced 4. determine total cost to acct for 5. calc the cost per equiv unit of production 6. assign costs to inventories

how to set moh rate

1. choose allocation base (cost driver) 2. estimate cost driver base activity for the year

how to allocate over/under applied overhead 1. adjust allocate rate

1. compute actual moh rate at year end benefit: timely and convenient of normal costing

three techniques for identifying and analyzing problems (internal-business-process perspective)

1. control charts 2. pareto diagrams 3. cause-and-effect diagrams

2 attributes of quality products

1. design quality 2. conformance quality(accts better at measuring this)

why do we have two ways to allocate?

1. different assumptions or cost drivers process 2. different mang incentives

how to allocate 2+ support departments

1. direct method 2. step-down method 3. recipricol method

how to focus on the bottleneck

1. eliminate idle time at bottleneck 2. only process products that inc. tm 3. don't run non-bottleneck processes at capacity b/c inc. carrying cost 4. try to shift work from non-bneck machines to bneck machines 5. focus on quality of units going through bneck and eliminate spoilage @ bottleneck

two typs of proration

1. ending inventory balances 2. moh already in accounts

purposes of joint product costing

1. fin statement reporting 2. legal purposes (cost reimbursement, insurance, rate regulation)

4 steps to activity based costing

1. id activities that consume resources and assign costs to them 2. id the cost driver of each activity 3. compute a cost rate per coswt driver unit or transaction 4. assing costs to products by multiplying the cost driver rate by the volume of cost driver units consumed by the product

for foh variance analysis:

1. identify and estimate foh 2. chose base 3. set sq per unit 4. estiamte amt of base for yr.=sq*to 5. sp=estimate foh/estimate base

three major objectives of learnig and growth

1. inc. employee capabilities 2. inc motivation, empowerment and alignment 3. inc. info systems capabilities

three main processes of internal business process perspective

1. innovation process 2. operations process 3.postsales service process

two ways to avoid info overload

1. managerial erports are brief (key perform indicators) 2. organize kpi into meaningful framework

three recurring themes

1. match reporting systems to organizational needs, 2. managerial reporting mitigate and are comprised by intra-organizational conflict 3. no system is perfect

what does cost of quality report include

1. prevention costs 2. appraisal costs 3. internal failure costs 4. external failure costs

3 decisions invovled in unit stds

1. quantity stds 2. price std 3. cost std

1. four methods of allocating joint costs

1. salve value at split off 2. nrv 3. physcial measures 4. constant gross margin %

two aspects of job costing

1. some direct traced 2. costs can't be traced so allocated

common costs

1. stand alone 2. incremental 3. shapely value method

3 concepts of budgeting

1. static budget 2. flexible budget 3. actually incurred costs

RECIPRICOL METHOD STEPS

1. write costs of service depts in equation from total Scosts=direct cost service dept+ costs allocated to service dept aka s1=800k+20%s2 2. solve equations simultaneously 3. use template

opportunity cost from poor quality

1.Contribution margin and income foregone from lost sales. 2.Lost production. 3.Lower prices. These opportunity costs are not recorded in the financial accounting systems.

cause-and-effect diagrams

1.Identifies potential causes of defects. -Problems identified by the Pareto diagram are analyzed using cause-and-effect diagrams. -Also called fishbone diagrams because they resemble the bone structure of a fish. -The large "bones" coming off the backbone represent the main categories of potential causes of failure. -The four categories are: human factors, methods and design factors, machine-related factors and materials and components factors.

two types of time drivers

1.Uncertainty about when customers will order products and services. 2.Bottlenecks due to limited capacity. A bottleneck occurs in an operation when the work to be performed approaches or exceeds the capacity available to do it. Managers should use the five-step decision-making process to exam opportunities

% of fortune 1000 using bsc

60%

failure rate of bsc implementation

70%

how to cal gross profit

rev-cogs=gross profit

minimum stds

: Level of performance that the firm can be quite certain at least meeting, probably exceeded.

gross margin%

=gross margin/rev

process costing definition

All units processed are treated as the unit of output. Costs are allocated to each unit.

periodic

Budget for some established time frame (i.e., one month, one quarter, one year)

stretch stds

Challenging levels of performance that are attainable, but more likely to be missed than exceeded. Promotes harder working employees, but could backfire

why is time a competitive tool?

Companies view time as a driver of strategy. Managers need to measure time properly to manage it. and need to measure causes and costs of delays

how control charts created

Control charts are a graph of a series of successive observations of a particular step, procedure, or operation taken at regular intervals of time. Each observation is plotted relative to specified ranges that represent the limits within which observations are expected to fall. Only those observations that fall outside the control limits are regarded as nonrandom and worth investigating.

process costing in multi-dept setting

Costs of completed units of predecessor departments are treated as input material costs in successor departments The additional cost component is called transferred-in or prior department cost Always has a percentage completion factor of 100% Handled the same as any other cost element in the calculations of EUP and cost per EUP A successor department may add additional raw material to the units that have been transferred in or may simply provide additional labour and overhead

two operational measures of time

Customer response time: how quickly companies respond to customers' demands for their products and services. On-time performance: indicates how reliably companies meet their scheduled delivery dates.

customer measures and time

Customer-response time. On-time performance

J recording actual MOH COSTS

D-MOH-CONTROL C- rent pay c- insurance pay c- electric pay c-janitorial pay

bsc design checkpoints

Do the measures reflect the divisional strategic planks? Are they linked to the organisational strategies? Can you identify cause and effect links between the measures? For example, would you be able to construct a strategy map of your key relationships? Are your measures included within the correct perspective? Do you have an appropriate combination of financial/non-financial measures and leading/lagging measures? What difficulties did you experience deciding on the measures?

inc employee capabilites (measures)

Employee satisfaction ratings, employee turnover %, employee productivity (e.g., revenue per employee) Employee hours of training, % of critical job requirement filled

internal bus process bsc perspective

Enable business to deliver on value propositions Satisfy expectations re: financial returns Operations management processes Customer management processes Innovation processes Regulatory processes

learning and growth bsc perspectives

Enable the accomplishment of the other three perspectives' objectives Infrastructure needed to create long-term growth/improvement People Systems Organizational procedures

behavioral issues in implementing abc

Gain the support of top management and create a sense of urgency. Create a guiding coalition of managers throughout the value chain for the ABC effort. Educate and train employees in ABC as a basis for employee empowermen.t Seek small short-run success as proof that the ABC implementation is yielding results. Recognize that ABC is not perfect. (better costs but complex system)

when would the added throughput margin (tm) no longer be relevant

If the market is the same number of units don't have to fix b/c no point in increasing if at capacity in market, in this example there is unlimited demand so fix bottleneck

practial stds

Level of performance that are expected, as likely to be missed as exceeded. 50/50 could obtain

WHEN TO USE DEPT ALLOCATION

MULTIPLE PRODUCTS USING RESOURCES DIFFERENTLY

don't need to memorize just be familiar with nonfinancial measures of customer satisfaction include:

Market research information on customer preferences for and customer satisfaction with specific product features. Market share. Percentage of highly satisfied customers Number of defective units shipped to customers as a percentage of total units shipped. Number of customer complaints. Percentage of products that fail soon after delivery. Average delivery delays. On time delivery rate

customer possible objectives with measures( )

Market share (% market share) Customer retention (% repeat customers, # new customers) Customer satisfaction (customer satisfaction ratings)

5 key mgt processes important to successful strategy implementation

Mobilization - orchestrating change through leadership Strategy translation - defining SM, BSC, targets and initiatives Organization alignment - corporate, SBUs, support units, external partners, and boards of directors Employee motivation - education, communication, goal-setting, incentive compensation, and training Governance - integrating with planning, budgeting, reporting, and review

zero-based budget

Must justify budget items relative to not being funded Often used in government budgeting

pareto diagrams

Observations outside control limits serve as inputs for Pareto diagrams. Pareto diagram—a chart that indicates how frequently each type of defect occurs, ordered from the most frequent to the least frequent.

cost reduction

Possible cost reduction objectives: Per unit of product Per customer Per distribution channel Measures involve calculations of cost for each of these, as well as trends in per unit costs Activity based costing useful for calculating the cost of customers, distribution channels, etc. Principal asset utilization objective is to improve asset utilization Possible measures include: ROI, EVA

revenue growth

Possible objectives (with performance measures): Increase number of new products (% of revenue from new products) Create new applications for existing products (% of revenue from new applications) Develop new customers and markets (% of revenue from new customers) Adopt a new pricing strategy (Profitability by product or customer)

quality

Quality—the total features and characteristics of a product or a service made or performed according to specifications to satisfy customers at the time of purchase and during use.

financial measures and time

Revenue gains or price increases from fewer delays. Carrying costs of inventories.

DIRECT METHOD TEMPLATE

S1 S2 P1 P2

balance score card customer perspective

Source of the revenue component of the financial objectives Identify measures important to customer/market segments Generic: customer satisfaction, retention, acquisition, profitability, and market share Value proposition: product/service attributes, customer relationship, and image/reputation

control charts

Statistical quality control (SQC) is a formal means of distinguishing between random and nonrandom variations in an operating process. Random variations occur, for example, when chance fluctuations in the speed of equipment cause defective products to be produced. Nonrandom variations occur when defective products are produced as a result of a systematic problem such as an incorrect speed setting, a flawed part design, or mishandling of a component part.

template for 2+ support dept cost allocation FOR STEP DOWN AND RECIPRICOL

TO FROM s1 s2 p1 p2 dept costs s1 s2

why ceos fail or succeed

The mistaken belief that developing the right strategy will enable a company to rocket past its competitors. In reality, strategy is less than half the battle. In the majority of cases - we estimate 70% - the real problem isn't bad strategy... it's bad execution. Foundation of strategy is the selection and executive of hundreds of activity Must be understood and executed by everyone

design quality

They are designed to provide the customer with features they want

conformance quality

They are produced in a way that conforms to the design—they are not defective.

rolling

Update information after a period—such as have a yearly budget that is updated after the first quarter aka budget creep

Weighing the costs and benefits of improving quality

When faced with a quality issue, managers should evaluate each alternative identifying the relevant costs and benefits for each alternative. Ask: How total costs and total revenues will change under each alternative.

I goes up which method has higher amt for inventory

abosoprtion b/c foh is in inventory, but not if not inventory at all or no foh

if invnetoyr goes up, which method has higher operting income

absorption b/c foh stays in invetory. sell<produce

4 dimensions of firm performance measures

aka balance scorecard 1. financial persepective 2. customer perspecctive 3. internal process perspective 4. learning and growth

greatest gap for mgt is

alignment

plant wide allocation method

all oh costs are recorded in one cost pool and applied to products using one oh allocation rate.

process costing

all units are treated as the unit of output. cost allocated to each unit. homogenous products. mass produce. spread costs over # of whole units produced. typcially produced for inventory

how to allocate indirect costs that can't be traced

allocate as actually incur and placed in MOH control account. recording ACTUAL COSTS

prorate means

allocate proportionally through wip, fg and cogs

what is another name for flexible budget in variable manufacturing oh analaysis?

allocated amt

credit side of moh

allocated overhead

cost std

amt that it should cost to manufacture a unit of output

price std

amt that should be paid for the quantity of input to be used

innovation process

anticipates emerging and potential needs of customers and creates new products and services to meet these needs Possible objectives (with measures): Increase # of new products (Actual # new products) Increase revenue from proprietary products (Revenues from proprietary products) Decrease time to develop new products (Development cycle time (time to market)

cost object

anything where measurement of cost is required

actual in variance analaysis

ap*aq

actual oh in voh variance analysis

ap*aq

quantiy variance is favorable if

aq < sq

why do we allocate costs b4 year end?

b/c need info for pricing and don't want to overstate retained earnings

why do you need standards for budgeting?

b/c not everyone's goals are aligned

why is variable costing useful for dmaking?

b/c relevant cost and prevents managerial manipulation b/c in absorption can over produce Inventory

why is the moh considered normal costing

b/c using a normalized (yearly) rate-an average

physical qunatities method

based on measure volume, weight or other measure at split off. use

how to find direct materials used

beg bal direct materials +purchases -end bal direct materials =dm used

cogs

beg bal finished goods +cogm -end bal fg =cogs

costs to account for calc

beg wip+costs incurred during first month=total costs to account for. do this seperatly for materials and conversion costs then add totals

three buckets of inventory

beg wip, completed units, end wip

costs are also classified by:

behavior when the amount of production changes 1. variable 2. fixed

above bsc in usage by companys

benchmarking, strategic planning, mission/vision statements, customer relatinshiop management, outsourcing

what measures do mgrs use along the time dimension

both fin and nonfin measures

what do do to adjust moh at year end

budget rate d/n = actual rate

allocate moh calc

budgeted moh rate * actual cost drivedr

step 2 constant gm%

cacl joint costs and gm for each product using gm% found in step 1 g1: sales volume g1*gm%. take total rev(sales volume) subtract any sep costs and subtract gross margin to get joint costs!

when abormal spoilage is expenense/noninventoriable and job costing what happens

carrying cost of inventory is lwoer

normal and common and job costing

casued by general prodcution process used for all jobs (included in estimate of OH)

normal and specific spoilage and job costing

caused by something about particular job. leave net cost in wip-job x only recognize disposal value

product related cost examples

compliance costs, design and sepc costs

if actual cost is less than standard costs aka lower than expected

cost is favorabel

actual costs > std costs therefore higher than expected

cost is unfavorabel

when inventory sold, costs become an expense on income statement called

cost of goods sold (cogs), help with matching rev and expenses

measures

data used to asses performance on the objective

quantiy variance

dif betwee aq and sq *sp

price variance

dif between ap and s price *aq

dif between flex and actual is

difference in cost

two types of direct costs

direct labor and direct materials, easy traced b/c directly related to end product

why allocating support dept costs hard?

exist to serve other departments in the firm, including operating/production departments Some of these departments have costs which we would ultimately want to allocate to our products. However, the link to product is very indirect. So, instead we will allocate to other departments—and include in them in MOH which we allocate to products.

price variance f or u

f=lower price supplier/quantity discounts u-dm prices less effeictivly used than planned

fg J

fg inventory debit and credit wip-dept (last dept)

annual fixed manu cost calc

fixed oh annualized + deprecation expense in year

static budget variance is

for operating income, actual vs static

creating value

formulation of strategies, goals, and objs, tactical involvement

allocated remaing joint costs in method 1 and 2

g1 sales value/sales value total of all but byprodcut. multiply by the total in the column to the far right

facility related cost examples

general plant costs and plant admin costs

attention-directing

inducing people to pay attention to, and talk about, one issue instead of another

rework

internal failure cost

why called absorption costing

inventory absorbs all manu costs, but can obscure which costs will actually be relavent across alt courses of action

what is a time driver

is any factor that causes a change in the speed of an activity when the factor changes.

main diff between variable and abs costing

is the acconting for Fixed OH manu costs

if a variance is favorable

its credited

if a variance is unfavorable

its debited

@ time of production scrap in job costing J

j entry to materials control assign value due to delay. sales=credit wip control if specific and moh if common

examples of what costing: ad agency

job

examples of what costing: charetered acct firm

job

examples of what costing: custom furn manufacturer

job

examples of what costing: med care facility

job

what are costs up to split point?

joint costs, after are considered seperable costs

mgt by exception

managers investigate differences between budget/standard and actual performance

cost per equiv unit calc

manufacturing cost in the period/equivalent units for the period

operation costing

on a repetitive bais used in situations where products have some common characteristics and also some individual characteristics. Shoes, for example, have some common characteristics in that all styles involve cutting and sewing that can be done sis, using the same equipment and following the same basic procedure. Shoes also have individual characteristics. Some are made of expensive leathers and others may be made using inexpensive synthetic materials. In a situation such as this, where products have some common characteristics but also must be handled individually to some extent, operation costing may be used to determine product costs. Products are typically handled in batches when operation costing is in use, with each batch charged for its own specific materials. In this sense, operation costing is similar to job order costing. However, labor and overhead costs are accumulated by operation or by department, and these costs are assigned to units as in process costing. Examples of other products for which operation costing may be used include electronic equipments (such as semi conductors), textiles, clothing, and jewelry (such as rings, bracelets, and medallions). Products of this type are typically produced in batches, but they can vary considerably from model to model or from style to style in terms of the cost of raw materials inputs. Therefore, an operation costing system is well suited for providing cost data.

foregone contribution margin

one of the opportunity costs of having low quality

cross subsidization

one product is undercosted then at least one other is overcosted

enabling value

ongoing assessment and operational participation

if actual operating income is higher than std income therefore higher than expected

operating income is favorabel

if actual < std income is lower than expected

operating income is unfavorable

problems with physcial measures, nrv, and sales

profitability for the products can vary and therefore can lead to poor dmaking

sell price stand alone

prorate costs in proportion to stand alone costs ex. (pshop cost/(pshop+wood costs)*package cost=pshop cost

postsales service process

provides services to customers after the product or service has been delivered Possible objectives (with measures): Increasing quality of postsales service (First pass yields; i.e., the % of customer requests resolved with one attempt) Increasing efficiency of postsales service (Service productivity measures) Decreasing postsales service process time (Cycle time for service requests

step 2 nrv

ratio found* process cost total

three types of inventory

raw materials, work in process, finished goods

step down method assumption

recog some service depts serve others but can't recog that service goes both ways

what happens to bad prodcut remains in job costing of normal and specific spoilage

remains part of the cost of the job

scrap

residual material

why no actual rates for fc in dual system?

responsibiltiy accounting aka people held responsible for items they control. ex. maintence costs not always maintence mgrs fault

gross margin used for nrv, (can be used for sales, nrv and physcial)

rev good 1-sep costs(if any)- joint cost found in nrv=gross margin from there can get gross margin %

gross margin

rev-cogs=gross margin

what are all units in process costing assumed to receive?

the same amt of dm, dl, and direct manu OH. b/b and e/b hard to fin

clac to assign costs to inventory

this should balacne with costs to acct for: add goods transferred out, and end wip

what does quality management and measurement practices do?

to find cost-effective ways to reduce the environmental and economic costs of air pollution, wastewater, oil spills, and hazardous waste disposal.

find cogm per unit

total cogm/total units made

budgeted moh rate

total cost poo/cost driver

allocate over/under apply oh 3. prorate

total end balances of wip, fg, and cogs then find % in each balance. take each percent against amt and if over allocate credit, under allocate debit accounts

plantwide OH rate

total estimated OH/total estim base(determine best base) use to allocated oh costs to ALL PRODUCTS

step 3 constant gm %

total joint costs found for each good=the total processing cost

plant admin costs cost driver

vaLUE ADDED

how to reconile abs and variable operating income

variabel oi-foh b/b+foh e/b=absorption oi

what is the difference between static and flexible budget?

volume(output of units)

cost hierarhcies

volume, batch, product, facility

TO FIND OUT IF better off with old or new part relevant costs

want lowest cost old: rework, customer support, warranty new: extra contribution margin, cost of new part

define quality

way to differentiate your product.

if indirect costs can't be traced

we pool costs, then allocate the pool over our jobs

two methods of process costing

weighted avg and fifo

equiv units weighted avg vs fifo

weighted avg: cost of all work done in the current period with work done in precedcin period on goods cf on wip fifo: euiv units are determined considering work done this period only

fifo method vs weghted avg unit costs

weighted avg: smoothoes out unit costs month to month fifo: assumes the work requried to finish incomplete units is done at beg of month

calc unit costs weighted vs fifo

weighted: divid total costs by total work done regardless of when the work was performed fifo: only current costs are considered in determining the cost per equiv unit

external failure costs

when defective units are shipped—costs of warranty work, lost sales' contribution margin, recalls -Some of these costs are much easier to quantify and report than others. -They could go on the balanced score card too—Cost of Quality (CoQ) is a financial measure.

internal failure costs

when units are defective and you catch it before it leaves the firm (spoilage, rework) -A few defects may not be a big deal (too expensive to get rid of them completely) -But, if there are a lot, then it will likely be worthwhile for a firm to do something to correct the problem

for process costing what does DM, DL and OH go into?

wip of each dept then to FG then cogs

completed units transfrred to other dept J

wip-dept2 Debit wip dept 1 credit


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