![]() | By: Robert S Kaplan Robin Cooper Binding: Hardcover Publisher: Harvard Business School Press ISBN: 0875847889 ISBN-13: 9780875847887 Released: 01 Nov 1997 RRP: Average Rating: ![]() |


If you are interested in learning more about Activity-Based Costing, this book is not the best choice for you. Professor Kaplan has co-authored books that explore this subject in much greater detail.
Most people set as their initial priority the need to have accurate financial reporting for the entire enterprise. Fallling below that level of effectiveness is Stage I in the terms of this book. Once you have that financial reporting done accurately, you are at Stage II. But you know almost nothing about how to manage your costs better. In order to do that, you will need to establish ad hoc financial reporting processes designed to help your organization learn from its experience & identify opportunities for improvement, built around Activity-Based Costing (ABC). ABC is simply a way of more accurately applying overhead costs back to activities & then processes that permits accurately understanding more about which combinations of products & services & customers are profitable & which are not. Then, within each activity, you can also see the inefficiencies in what you are doing that present opportunities for improvement. The book also has a nice discussion of Kaizen costing that is widely used in Japanese companies looking for on-going cost improvements, based on Professor Cooper's research. There are a few case histories to illustrate the principles, but most will find these insufficient to guide them through the process. In other books, Professor Kaplan has pointed out that there is a lot of acquired art in the subject & you probably need help to get it right. I concur. Once you have ABC operating in stand-alone systems, you are at Stage III.
At this point, you will have a financial reporting system that is separate from the ABC system. How do you put them together? That the subject of chapter 14, which is the key value-added part of this book. You will see what the systems architecture & process flow needs to be in order to combine ABC with Enterprise-Wide Systems (EWS) of the sort that many large companies have invested in during recent years. Putting the two together will greatly improve planning, budgeting, design of new products & services, & operational improvements. Chapter 15 expands into the area of how to apply the combined system to budgeting & transfer pricing. Combing ABC & EWS puts you at Stage IV, a level rarely reached today.
The book's main message is that it's a mistake to try to go from Stage II directly to Stage IV. There's a lot of experimentation & mistakes that you can benefit from in an extended Stage III. I agree again, based on my experience with ABC.
The one caution you should have about ABC in this context is that if you are going to radicallly change your business model every 2-5 years as many companies are, Stage IV is probably unattainable & undesirable. You can't hold back business model innovation for better cost systems. The next business model innovation will probably give you better costs than tweaking the current business model with ABC will.
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