A few brave finance and accounting managers are changing how they track costs
to support lean manufacturing and improve decision making.
By
David Drickhamer
As wary as executives are these days of anything that smacks of "creative"
accounting, there's a quiet revolution unfolding among lean manufacturers. The
idea creeping into the heads of a few radical thinkers is that the financial
numbers reported should actually reflect the underlying reality of the
business. Armed with more relevant information, business unit managers could
then make better decisions when it came to product pricing, make-versus-buy
questions, and product and customer rationalization.
Falling under the general heading of "lean accounting," the approach does not
require any new math or tricky algorithms. But it does demand a fundamental
change in perspective. Wayne Thompson, global finance manager for value stream
analysis at Southco, a Concordville, Pa., company that makes latches,
fasteners and hinges, offers an example of this approach to decision making.
A unit of his company had an opportunity to bid on a component with a market
price of $3.75. The standard accounting showed it would cost $4.61 for the
unit to make and sell the product.
"We took a look at it and recognized that from a traditional cost accounting
standpoint, this would be a loser," says Thompson. "When in fact, if you go
through lean processes and look at out-of-pocket expenses, we actually come
away with a very profitable application."
Material accounted for $1 with standard cost calculations, and the remainder
was for labor and overhead. But because the company had the capacity to make
the product on existing equipment, and because the additional labor required
to run the machine was negligible, the new product would essentially cost
Southco only the price of the raw material. And the difference between the
price and material cost would drop to the bottom line. Southco did
successfully bid for the order, and reaped a six-figure contribution to
quarterly profits.
"Standard cost tells you that for every dollar of material you bring on,
you're going to have an incremental amount of labor and spending, and that's
just not true," stresses Thompson. Essentially, the lean-accounting approach
treats many of the costs typically regarded as variable as fixed, depending
upon available capacity and the real investments in people and equipment
required.
The lean accounting movement was born of frustration. Many manufacturers that
have used the techniques championed by Toyota to reduce set-up times and
convert from batch production methods to workcells and one-piece flow, don't
immediately realize the results on the bottom line. In fact, during the
transition, which can stretch over a number of years, net earnings take a hit
as obsolete inventory is written down. If sales remain flat, lower production
volumes caused by the reduction of excess inventory also increase the overhead
burden on the remaining output.
Lean accounting proponents argue that lean production operations simply cannot
be measured in the same way that traditional batch manufacturing is.
Traditional accounting methods encourage high-volume production runs that
fully absorb overhead and build work-in-process and finished-goods inventory.
They reflect the era in which they were developed, which was characterized by
less product variety and economy-of-scale thinking. What's more, using the
information generated by traditional methods can lead to decisions that are
not only wrongheaded, but tragic.
A manager at an IW 500 company tells the story of a plant in one
division hit by a market downturn and subsequent lower sales volumes. This
reduced overhead absorption, which increased the overhead and led to an
increase in prices that reduced sales even further. Hastening this death
spiral, rather than source products from this plant, which had plenty of
available capacity, other business units within the division purchased parts
from outside suppliers because of non-competitive transfer prices based upon
standard cost plus 15%. If the products had been priced to accurately reflect
the incremental cost of production, the internal customers would have paid
less in-house than they did outside. Eventually, company executives chose to
shut down the under-utilized plant.
At heart, the lean accounting approach takes a simpler look at what goes on
between the inputs and outputs of a production process, tracking costs in
less-minute detail, expensing material as soon as it's pulled into production,
and eliminating work orders, the tracking of transactions and the reporting of
variances altogether. Many manufacturing plants today rely on such activities
to monitor product costs and track the value of inventory. But,
lean-accounting advocates say that such procedures are inherently wasteful.
Before a manufacturer can drop such activities, however, the production
operation has to be far enough into lean manufacturing to be organized by
value streams, a customer-centric structure that pulls together all of the
fulfillment functions from order receipt to delivery. Under a lean accounting
system each value stream has its own, slightly modified, profit-and-loss
statement. Traditional financial statements are still needed to satisfy
auditors and reporting requirements, but these statements aren't used to run
the business. The ultimate result: Accountants give up their roles as traffic
cops and start providing the type of analysis and reports that make
decision-making more straightforward, rather than a battle over the accuracy
of the numbers.
"From a financial perspective, when you create a true value stream -- cells
with all of the workcenters connected to each other -- the investment decision
when you're looking at equipment is so much easier to make," says Jerry
Solomon, vice president of manufacturing, Marquip Ward United, a Hunt Valley,
Md., company that builds complex machinery for making corrugated paperboard.
"I'm sitting here in my office right now, and I have a value stream map
hanging on the wall," Solomon says. "I know I can improve certain operations
in those data boxes I have up there, but it will do me no good in getting
product through the system to the customer, unless I improve this particular
operation first." Such constraints are invisible in a standard printout from
accounting that lists how many minutes or hours are required at each
operation.
Solomon even wrote a business novel, "Who's Counting," that describes the
transition to a lean accounting approach within a manufacturing company. The
story shows, even though the concepts pique a lot of people's interest, why
it's so difficult to do and why so few companies have actually made the
change.
First, it's hard for managers to give up methods taught in business school and
abandon the metrics that they've always used to track performance. Lean
accounting also has a broad impact on the organization. In addition to
adoption by the accounting and finance departments, it requires buy-in from
managers in engineering, purchasing, IT and customer service. Getting all of
these people on board is difficult, if not impossible, without a mandate from
the top.
Those who have begun to change the way they track financials say it's worth
the effort. If asked directly, few CEOs and even controllers can explain what
drives all of their variances or how they are calculated. But when the numbers
make intuitive sense, and business performance isn't cloaked in accounting
jargon, people at all levels can make better -- and more profitable --
decisions.
"It allows the workforce to understand what they're spending -- i.e., what the
input is to get a certain level of output. Then they can focus on how to do it
better," Solomon says.
Still, making the transition requires some convincing. When looking at whether
Southco can make an adequate profit at a certain market price, Wayne Thompson
says they often put a standard operating income statement next to a modified
one to prove the point that a product that might not meet a gross margin test
can actually be very beneficial to the bottom line.
"People know and breathe and die by standard cost," Thompson says. "They want
to see it side-by-side and look at it incrementally and see where standard
cost breaks down and where we can make a better decision."
Plain
English P&L
TRADITIONAL
|
Sales |
$ 9,570,000 |
100.0% |
|
Cost of Sales |
$ 6,364,758 |
66.5% |
|
|
|
|
|
Gross Margin |
$ 3,205,242 |
33.5% |
|
Total Adjustments |
$ 270,007 |
2.8% |
|
|
|
|
|
Net Manufacturing Margin |
$ 2,935,235 |
30.7% |
|
Other Operating Costs |
$ 738,164 |
7.7% |
|
|
|
|
|
Net Operating Margin |
$ 2,197,072 |
23.0% |
|
Total Sales Expense |
$ 139,358 |
1.5% |
|
|
|
|
|
Net Operating Margin |
$ 2,057,713 |
21.5% |
|
SG&A Expense |
$ 195,973 |
2.0% |
|
|
|
|
|
Net Earnings |
$ 1,861,741 |
19.5% |
LEAN
|
Sales |
$ 9,570,000 |
100.0% |
|
Costs |
|
|
|
Procurement |
$ 910,184 |
9.5% |
|
Conversion |
$ 6,388,710 |
66.8% |
|
Distribution |
$ 337,509 |
3.5% |
|
Support |
$ 762,116 |
8.0% |
|
|
|
|
|
Total Costs |
$ 8,398,519 |
87.8% |
|
|
|
|
|
Margin |
$ 1,171,481 |
12.2% |
|
Change in Inventory |
$ 690,259 |
7.2% |
|
|
|
|
|
Net Earnings |
$ 1,861,741 |
19.5% |
Comparison of a traditional profit and loss statement (P&L) and a
lean-accounting P&L. In this example, high conversion costs reflect a
capital-intensive business. The top and bottom line are the same in both
examples. One advantage of the lean accounting P&L is that the type of costs
are broken down into recognizable categories. If the company is trying to rein
in procurement costs, for example, the impact of such efforts would be readily
apparent on the P&L.
Bron:
Industryweek, december 2004