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CHAPTER 15 The Changing Business Environment: A Manager’s Perspective REVIEWING THE CHAPTER Objective 1: Distinguish management accounting from financial accounting and explain how management accounting supports the management process. 1. Management accounting is the process of identifying, measuring, accumulating, analyzing, preparing, interpreting, and communicating information that management uses to plan, evaluate, and control an organization and to ensure that its resources are used and accounted for appropriately. The information that management accounting provides should be timely and accurate and support management decisions about pricing, planning, operations, and many other matters. The need for management accounting information exists regardless of the type of organization or its size. 2. Although both management accounting and financial accounting provide information essential to decision making, they differ in a number of ways. The primary users of management accounting information are people inside the organization—managers, as well as employees, who depend on the information to make informed decisions, to perform their jobs effectively, and to achieve their organization’s goals. Financial accounting, on the other hand, uses the actual results of management decisions to prepare financial reports primarily for use by parties outside the organization—owners or stockholders, lenders, customers, and governmental agencies. Whereas the format of management accounting reports is flexible, driven by the users’ needs, financial accounting reports must conform to GAAP. The nature of the information in the reports also differs (historical or future-oriented in management accounting reports; historical and verifiable in financial accounting reports), as do the units of measure used and the frequency of the reports. 3. Although management actions differ from organization to organization, they generally follow a four-stage process. The four stages of the management process are to (1) plan, (2) perform, (3) evaluate, and (4) communicate. Management accounting provides an ongoing stream of relevant information that supports management decisions in each stage of this process. a. In the planning stage, managers use management accounting information to establish strategic, tactical, and operating objectives. Strategic objectives are long-term goals, tactical objectives are interim goals, and operating objectives are short-term goals that support the company’s mission statement, the fundamental way in which the company will increase stakeholders’ value. Managers formulate a comprehensive business plan for achieving those objectives. The business plan is usually expressed in financial terms in the form of budgets. b. For successful performance, managers must implement the company’s business plan in ways that make optimal use of available resources. The information that management accounting provides about such matters as deliveries and sales is extremely useful in managing the supply chain—the path that leads from the supplier of the materials from which a product is made to the final consumer. c. When managers evaluate operating results they compare actual performance with planned performance and take steps to correct any problems. d. The final step in the management process is communicating the results of the efforts undertaken in the previous three stages. Accounting reports, whether prepared for internal or external use, should present accurate information that is clear and useful to the reader. The key to preparing such a report is to apply the four w’s: why, who, what, and when. Objective 2: Describe the value chain and its usefulness in analyzing a business. 4. The value chain conceives of each step in the manufacture of a product or the delivery of a service as a link in a chain that adds value to the product or service. These value-adding steps—research and development, design, supply, production, marketing, distribution, and customer service—are called primary processes. The value chain also includes support services—human resources, legal services, information services, and management accounting. Support services facilitate the primary processes but do not add value to the final product. Value chain analysis enables a company to focus on its core competency, the thing that a company does best and that gives it an advantage over its competitors. Analysis of the value chain frequently results in the outsourcing of parts of the value chain that are not among a company’s core competencies. Objective 3: Identify the management tools used for continuous improvement. 5. Several management tools have been developed to help firms compete in an expanding global market. They include the just-in-time (JIT) operating philosophy, total quality management (TQM), activity-based management (ABM), and the theory of constraints (TOC). All of these methods are based on the concept of continuous improvement—that is, that management should never be satisfied with the status quo but should continue to seek better methods, better products or services, better processes, and better resources. a. The just-in-time (JIT) operating philosophy requires that all resources—materials, personnel, and facilities—be acquired and used only as needed. Its objectives are to improve productivity and eliminate waste. Management accounting responds to a JIT environment by providing an information system that is sensitive to changes in production processes. b. Total quality management (TQM) requires that all parts of a business work together to build quality into the firm’s products or services. The costs of quality include both the costs of achieving quality and the costs of poor quality. Managers share accounting information about the magnitude and classification of costs of quality with their employees to stimulate improvement. c. Activity-based management (ABM) identifies all major operating activities or tasks, determines the resources consumed by each of those activities and the cause of the resource usage, and categorizes the activities as value-adding or nonvalue-adding. Value-adding activities add value to a product or service, as perceived by the customer. Nonvalue-adding activities add cost to a product or service but do not increase its market value. ABM seeks to eliminate or reduce the cost of nonvalueadding activities. In assigning costs, ABM relies on activity-based costing (ABC), a management accounting practice that identifies all of an organization’s major operating activities (both production and nonproduction), traces costs to those activities or cost pools, and then assigns costs to the products or services that use the resources supplied by those activities. d. According to the theory of constraints (TOC), limiting factors, or bottlenecks, occur during the production of any product or service, but by using management accounting information to identify such constraints, managers can focus attention and resources on them and achieve significant improvements. TOC thus helps managers set priorities on how they spend their time and other resources. Objective 4: Explain the balanced scorecard and its relationship to performance measures. 6. Performance measures are quantitative tools that gauge an organization’s performance in relation to a specific goal or an expected outcome. Performance measures may be either financial or nonfinancial. a. Financial performance measures use monetary data to assess the performance of an organization or its segments. Examples of these measures include return on investment, net income as a percentage of sales, and the costs of poor quality as a percentage of sales. b. Nonfinancial performance measures include the number of times an activity occurs or the time taken to perform a task. Examples are number of customer complaints, the time it takes to fill an order, number of orders shipped the same day, and the hours of inspection. Such performance measures are useful in reducing or eliminating waste and inefficiencies in operating activities. 7. Managers use performance measures in each stage of the management process. In the planning stage, they establish performance measures that will support the organization’s mission and the objectives of its business plan. As managers perform their duties, performance measures guide and motivate the performance of employees and assist in assigning costs. When managers evaluate performance, they use the information that performance measures have provided to analyze significant differences between actual and planned performance and to improvise ways of improving performance. When managers communicate, performance measurement information is useful in reporting performance evaluations and developing new budgets. 8. The balanced scorecard helps an organization measure and evaluate itself from a variety of viewpoints. It links the perspectives of an organization’s four stakeholder groups—financial (owners, investors, and creditors), learning and growth (employees), internal business processes, and customers—with the organization’s mission, objectives, resources, and performance measures. The balanced scorecard uses both financial and nonfinancial performance measures to assess whether the objectives of the four perspectives are being met. 9. To ensure its success, a company must compare its performance with that of similar companies in the same industry. Benchmarking is a technique for determining a company’s competitive advantage by comparing its performance with that of its closest competitors. Benchmarks are measures of the best practices in an industry. Objective 5: Prepare an analysis of nonfinancial data. 10. Using management tools like TQM and ABM and comprehensive frameworks like the balanced scorecard requires analysis of both financial and nonfinancial data. In analyzing nonfinancial data, it is important to compare performance measures with the objectives that are to be achieved. Objective 6: Identify the standards of ethical conduct for management accountants. 11. Conflicts between external parties (e.g., owners, creditors, governmental agencies, and the local community) can create ethical dilemmas for management and for management accountants, who have a responsibility to help management balance the interests of external parties. Throughout their careers, management accountants have an obligation to the public, their profession, the organizations they serve, and themselves to maintain the highest standards of ethical conduct. To provide guidance, the Institute of Management Accountants has issued standards of ethical conduct for practitioners of management accounting and financial management. These standards emphasize practitioners’ responsibility in the areas of competence, confidentiality, integrity, and objectivity.