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Module 22

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Module 22 Segment Reporting and Balanced Scorecard (omit pp. 22-7 to 22-11) * – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Module 22


1
  • Module 22
  • Segment Reporting and
  • Balanced Scorecard
  • (omit pp. 22-7 to 22-11)

2
Decentralization
  • Decentralization - a form of organization in
    which sub-unit managers are given authority to
    make substantive decisions.
  • Strongly decentralized - lowest level of
    managers/workers making various quality
    decisions.
  • Strongly centralized - all major decisions made
    at the top level.
  • The key issue is whether the sub-unit has some
    degree of autonomy over its affairs.

3
Advantages of Decentralization
  • Top management is freed to concentrate on
    strategic and other high-level issues.
  • Lower level managers have greater and better
    information, which leads to greater
    responsiveness to local needs and quicker and
    better decision making.
  • Increases motivation and job satisfaction.
  • Aids management development and learning.
  • Sharpens the focus of managers and aids in
    performance evaluation.

4
Disadvantages of Decentralization
  • Lower-level managers may pursue goals that are
    incongruent with the goals of the organization as
    a whole.
  • Activities may be uncoordinated among lower-level
    managers.
  • Communication among divisions may be hindered.
  • Lower-level managers may not see the big
    picture and may have less loyalty toward the
    organization as a whole.

5
Responsibility Accounting
  • Characteristics of responsibility centers are
  • The knowledge held the centers managers is
    difficult to acquire, maintain, or analyze at
    higher levels.
  • The duties that a particular individual in an
    organization is expected to perform are specified
    for each center.
  • Types of responsibility centers (more later)
  • Cost center.
  • Profit center.
  • Investment center.

6
Segmented Reporting
  • Effective decentralization requires segmented
    reporting.
  • The concept of segmented reporting can be
    extended to the customer level as well (e.g.,
    customer profitability analysis).
  • Segment reports separate fixed costs into direct
    segment costs (costs traceable to the segment)
    and allocated common segment costs.
  • When analyzing segments, the relevant common
    costs are those that are avoidable (e.g., can be
    changed in the short run.)

7
Cost Center
  • Cost center manager has control over costs but
    not revenue or investment.
  • Examples include most service departments in an
    organization, but manufacturing departments may
    also be cost centers.
  • Goal is to minimize costs while providing
    services or products to other parts of the
    organization.
  • Minimizing costs does not necessarily maximize
    profits. Cost centers have an incentive to
    produce more units to spread fixed costs over a
    large number of units.
  • Quality of products produced by cost center must
    be monitored.

8
Profit Center
  • Profit center manager has control over both costs
    and revenues.
  • Examples may include branches or segments of a
    company where a manager sets pricing and
    production policies, but cannot control
    investment decisions. Example "Six Flags"
    amusement parks.
  • Problems with profit centers
  • How to allocate traceable fixed costs or common
    fixed costs to profit centers.
  • Profit centers that focus only on their own
    profits often ignore how their actions affect
    other responsibility centers.

9
Investment Centers
  • Investment center manager has control of
    investment opportunities as well as operating
    decisions.
  • Authority and responsibilities of investment
    center manager
  • Approve and monitor decisions of cost and profit
    centers.
  • Decide amount of capital invested or disposed.
  • Performance measurements for investment center
  • Return on investment (ROI)
  • Residual income (RI).
  • Problems with evaluation of investment centers
  • Disputes over how to measure income and capital.
  • Difficult to compare investment centers of
    different sizes.

10
Return on Investment
  • Return on investment (ROI) for an investment
    center
  • Net operating income/Average operating
    assets
  • DuPont formula separates ROI into two components
  • ROI Sales (Asset) turnover x Return on sales
    (Profit margin)
  • ROI (Sales /Avg. assets) x (Net
    op. income / Sales)
  • ROI increases with smaller investments and larger
    profit margins.
  • Three ways to increase ROI
  • Increase sales more than costs (and increase
    operating income).
  • Decrease costs (and increase operating income).
  • Reduce operating assets.
  • Performance evaluation using ROI can lead to
    under-investment, actions not consistent with the
    organizations strategy, and may lead to unfair
    evaluations when committed costs are significant
    components in ROI measures.

11
Residual Income
  • Residual income (RI)
  • Acct. Income (Minimum return x Avg.
    Assets)
  • RI is determined with financial accounting
    measurements of net income and capital.
  • Each investment center could be assigned a
    different required rate of return depending on
    its risk.
  • RI can be increased by increasing income or
    decreasing investment.
  • Residual income does not lend itself well to
    evaluating responsibility centers of different
    size.

12
The Balanced Scorecard
  • No single summary measure can provide a clear
    performance target or can focus attention on the
    critical areas of the business.
  • More firms are using a portfolio of measures to
    assess performance. These measures are both
    financial and operational (nonfinancial).
  • Kaplan and Norton (1992) have devised a balanced
    scorecard that they argue provides managers with
    a fast but comprehensive view of the business.
  • The scorecard consists of (1) financial measures
    to summarize the results of actions already
    taken, and (2) operational measures that are the
    drivers of future performance.

13
Strategic Dimensions of The Scorecard
  • The balanced scorecard is a way to clarify,
    simplify, and then operationalize the vision at
    the top of the organization.
  • Perspectives of concern
  • Financial perspective.
  • Customer perspective.
  • Internal business perspective.
  • Innovation and learning perspective.

14
Measuring Components of Balanced Scorecard
  • Employee skills - proficiency exams.
  • Employee training - courses taken.
  • Process quality - measure number of defects.
  • Process cycle time - measure time to process
    (manufacturing cycle efficiency).
  • On-time delivery - measure number of on-time
    deliveries or length of delayed deliveries.
  • Customer loyalty - number of repeat customers.
  • Return on capital - ROI, earnings per share, P/E
    ratio.

15
A Restaurant Example
  • A new restaurant is being developed at a small
    ski area. Previously, only snacks were
    available, and skiers would bring their own
    meals. The restaurant is being developed to meet
    more customers needs, and to add to the profit
    of the ski area.
  • Given IL (innovation and learning),
  • IB (internal business processes),
  • C (customer perspective),
  • and F (financial perspective).
  • Classify the following activities measured for
    the first month of the new restaurant.

16
A Restaurant Example
  • 1.Customer satisfaction with service, as measured
    by customer surveys.
  • 2.Total restaurant profit for the month.
  • 3.Dining area cleanliness, rated by a secret
    customer.
  • 4.Average time to prepare an order.
  • 5.Number of menu items.
  • 6.Customer satisfaction with menu choices,
    measured by a customer survey.
  • 7.Average time to take an order.
  • 8.Percent of kitchen staff completing cooking
    course.
  • 9.Sales
  • 10.Percentage of staff completing a hospitality
  • course.

C
F
IB
IB
IB
C
IB
IL
F
IL
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