ETD: 740 SPECIAL REPORT: Direct Costing: The Better Approach To Costing Your Product Line

E-Tailer's Digest etd_post@gapent.com
Thu, 20 Nov 2003 06:02:34 -0500


  E-Tailer's Digest --- Everything for the  Retailer
  Issue #0740                     November 20, 2003
  George Matyjewicz, Moderator         mailto:georgem@gapent.com
  Published by:  GAP Enterprises, Ltd.  http://www.etailersdigest.com
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   CONTENTS

  [1]  Greetings
  [2]  SPECIAL REPORT: Direct Costing: The Better Approach To Costing Your 
Product Line

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  [1]  Greetings.
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Hi All:

Today we have a special report "Direct Costing: The Better Approach To 
Costing Your Product Line."  While direct costing is usually associated 
with a manufacturing operation, if you look deep, you will see that direct 
costing can apply to any business - wholesale, retail, even service.  The 
concept of direct costing is very simple - assign costs to the products - 
costs that will go away if you don't carry the products.  All other costs 
are indirect costs, and will remain even if you don't sell products.

What do you think?  Can you apply direct costing to your business?

Now, let's get to everything for the retailer.

Sincerely


George Matyjewicz, PhD
Chief Global Strategist, GAP Enterprises, Ltd.
mailto:georgem@gapent.com
http://www.etailersdigest.com
Now, let's get to everything for the retailer.

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  [2]  Direct Costing: The Better Approach To Costing Your Product Line
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By George Matyjewicz, PhD
Chief Global Strategist,
GAP Enterprises, Ltd.

What does it really cost to produce or distribute your present line, 
whether it consists of toys, gift items, wrenches, sweatshirts or plastic 
blocks? How much should you charge for each item? How many do you have to 
sell to break even? To make a profit? To make the maximum profit that the 
marketplace will accept? If you're not selling enough of a particular 
product, should you lower the price, discontinue the item, redesign it, or 
replace it with another?

These are typical short-term problems that you as business executives face 
every day. While there is no single "right" answer, we believe there is a 
rational, intelligent approach that will get you moving in the right 
direction. It is called DIRECT COSTING, and it is a simple but powerful 
management tool that can help your company to maximize its profits.

Direct costing can be best understood by comparing it to the conventional 
method of treating costs known as absorption costing. Under absorption 
costing, a portion of fixed costs (that is, items such as rent, utilities, 
maintenance etc.), which are typically committed for a relatively long time 
period, are included in the variable short-term costs of producing a 
product. However, by allocating such indirect fixed or nearly fixed costs 
to the direct variable costs of a product, management distorts the 
decision-making process.

A much better approach for management purposes is to use direct costing, 
which treats these indirect expenses in a totally different way. It counts 
as the direct costs of manufacturing a product only those out-of-pocket 
expenditures, which were made or incurred to produce and sell the product; 
put another way, direct costs are those costs, which disappear if the 
product is no longer made.

In the case of a manufacturer, direct costs would include the cost of the 
material and the labor involved in making the product: indirect costs, for 
items such as machinery, the plant foreman, the company president and 
support staff, would not be counted because they would continue to be a 
company expense even if the product were not manufactured.

For the manufacturer, the result of adopting a direct costing system might 
be the discovery that making one product contributes relatively few dollars 
per unit toward the company's gross profits, while making a more complex 
product contributes far more. Indeed, the information provided by a direct 
costing system might lead to an entirely different product mix than that 
suggested by an absorption costing system.

By using direct costing, the manufacturer can determine the amount 
contributed by each product and then rank products according to their total 
dollar-contribution to overhead. Products with little or no contribution 
could be redesigned or eliminated, while production of products with a 
significant contribution could be increased. Of course, the total estimated 
dollar-contribution of all products must cover the company's overhead and 
produce a profit. Otherwise, the company must switch gears and chance 
selling prices or estimated quantities, reduce overhead or product costs, 
or revise its product mix.

Direct costing can also be used to determine the amount of 
dollar-contribution per scarce resource. For example, manufacturing one 
product line might require one hour of large machine time (a scarce 
resource) and might contribute $100 per hour of machine time; manufacturing 
another product line might require the same amount of machine time but 
contribute $125. Faced with maximizing the use of a finite, expensive 
resource - the large machine - the manufacturer clearly would do better 
producing the second line.

Time and again, we have found instances where conventional absorption 
costing indicated a product was not profitable, while direct costing found 
that it was making a significant contribution to overhead.

To sum up, the virtue of direct costing is that it separates fixed 
long-term costs, which a company incurs no matter what products it is 
making, from variable short-term costs, which are highly dependent upon 
product mix. In effect, direct costing separates the cost of doing business 
from the cost of being in business.

This is not to say that there is no role for absorption costing in 
business. Even though direct costing is a vital tool that enables 
management to make sound, informed decisions, it is an account­ing system 
for internal use only. Absorption costing remains the traditional format 
for a company's external financial statements.

If your company is not already using this powerful management tool, please 
contact us. We would be delighted to help you implement a new cost 
accounting system that will provide you with financial information in the 
form you need, at the time you need it.  Send a message to 
mailto:georgem@gapent.com?subject=Direct_Costing_Help

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