Title: Operations Management: Financial Dimensions
1- Operations Management Financial Dimensions
2Chapter Objectives
- To define operations management
- To discuss profit planning
- To describe asset management, including the
strategic profit model, other key business
ratios, and financial trends in retailing - To look at retail budgeting
- To examine resource allocation
3Profit Planning
- Profit-and-loss (income) statement
- Summary of a retailers revenues and expenses
over a given period of time - Review of overall and specific revenues and costs
for similar periods and profitability
4Major Components of a Profit-and-Loss Statement
Net Sales 330,000
CGS 180,000
Gross Profit 150,000
Operating Expenses 95,250
Other Costs 20,000
Total Costs 115,250
Net Profit before Taxes 34,750
Taxes 15,500
Net Profit after Taxes 19,250
- Net Sales
- Cost of Goods Sold
- Gross Profit (Margin)
- Operating Expenses
- Taxes
- Net Profit After Taxes
5Asset Management
- The Balance Sheet
- Assets
- Liabilities
- Net Worth
- Net Profit Margin
- Asset Turnover
- Return on Assets
- Financial Leverage
6Figure 12-1 The Strategic Profit Model
7Other Key Business Ratios
- Quick Ratio
- Current Ratio
- Collection Period
- Accounts Payable to Net Sales
- Overall Gross Profit
8Financial Trends in Retailing
- Slow growth in U.S. economy
- Funding sources
- Mergers, consolidations, spinoffs
- Bankruptcies and liquidations
- Questionable accounting and financial reporting
practices
9Funding Sources
- Mortgage refinance (due to low interest rates)
- REIT (retail-estate investment trust) to fund
construction - Company dedicated to owning and operating
income-producing real estate - Initial public offering (IPO)
10Figure 12-2 Rebuilding Mervyns
11Budgeting
- Budgeting outlines a retailers planned
expenditures for a given time based on expected
performance - Costs are linked to satisfying target market,
employee, and management goals
12Figure 12-3 The Retail Budgeting Process
13Benefits of Budgeting
- Expenditures are related to expected performance
- Costs can be adjusted as goals are revised
- Resources are allocated to the right areas
- Spending is coordinated
- Planning is structured and integrated
- Cost standards are set
- Expenditures are monitored during a budget cycle
- Planned budgets versus actual budgets can be
compared - Costs/performance can be compared with industry
averages
14Preliminary Budgeting Decisions
- Specify budgeting authority
- Define time frame
- Determine budgeting frequency
- Establish cost categories
- Set level of detail
- Prescribe budget flexibility
15Cost Categories
- Capital expenditures
- Fixed costs
- Direct costs
- Natural account expenses
16Ongoing Budgeting Process
- Set goals
- Specify performance standards
- Plan expenditures in terms of performance goals
- Make actual expenditures
- Monitor results
- Adjust budget
17Resource Allocation
- Capital Expenditures
- Long-term investments in fixed assets
- Operating Expenditures
- Short-term selling and administrative costs in
running a business
18Enhancing Productivity
- A firm can improve employee performance, sales
per foot of space, and other factors by upgrading
training programs, increasing advertising, etc. - It can reduce costs by automating, having
suppliers do certain tasks, etc.