Dakota Office Products - Case Study
Dakota Office Products - Case Study
Dakota Office Products - Case Study
CASE BACKGROUND
Dakota Office Products (DOP) is a merchandising company managed by John Malone,
the General Manager. DOP is a regional distributor of office supplies to institutions and
commercial businesses. The company had introduced the Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) in
year 1999 and a new Internet site in 2000. This is to provide convenience to customers in
making orders and delivery of products. The launching of electronic services was believed to
improve the companys profit margin but despite of increase in sales, actual financial result of
operation for the year 2000 were reported to be Net Loss.
PROBLEM STATEMENT
What caused the loss of the company for the financial year 2000 and what actions must
it employ to gain back its profitability?
OBJECTIVES
1. To be able to understand the companys current situation and be able to point out
possible reasons for the companys net loss for the year.
2. To be able to recommend actions to aid DOP to gain back its profitability.
3. To be able to recognize the relationship of cost management and customer
profitability to proper pricing.
2. To appreciate ABC costing in a non-manufacturing company like DOP.
AREAS OF CONSIDERATION:
1. DOP is a retail business and thus its operating expenses (except cost of items purchased)
are all considered indirect costs.
2. Launching of Innovations: Desktop delivery option and EDI, new internet site created a
variety in product and customer demands. Customers are now given a choice between
commercial shipment delivery or desktop delivery option, between manual order process or
electronic data interchange. And this variety of services demand per customer affects
costing per customer. The current cost system failed to address this issue. This change,
innovation, has not yet been reflected in the companys cost structure.
3. Product Costing - With the introduction of desktop delivery option and EDI, operating
expenses are now overlapping among activities. We now have warehouse personnel
assigned as drivers to make desktop deliveries and manual order operator who also caters
the EDI orders. In this case, it must be noted that it is not very sensible to just total all the
expenses and spread it over all the activities especially when it is indirect costs. In the
current system of DOP, it assigned all warehouse, distribution and order entry as the same
for costing customer A and customer B (as seen in exhibit 1) which is not very acceptable. It
does not consider what services did A or B avail for the specific period.
The direct cost which is usually the cost of sales can easily be determined and assigned to
the product. But the cost of indirect overhead could not easily be determined and assigned.
Therefore, the company should use a costing system that is fitted to the business in
determining more relevant unit cost.
4. Understanding customer mix and its profitability
Customer A
Order Size
Few large orders
Order Placement
Uses EDI
Order Delivery
Commercial Shipment
Time to pay bills
Within 30 days
Ave A/R Balance
$9,000
Exhibit 1 Differences between Customer A and Customer B
Customer B
Many more orders
Manual Order
Desktop delivery option
90 days or more
$30,000
From this table, we compare customer A from customer B. Accordingly, Customer A utilizes
EDI and avails of the commercial shipment which attached a lower cost to it (EDI, less labor
hours for processing orders and cheaper cost of delivery if commercial). On the other hand,
Customer B orders manually and chooses desktop delivery option which cost a little higher
compared to its counterparts (Manual longer time to process orders and additional
premium for desktop delivery). By this, we can determine that A is low cost-to-serve
customer while B is high cost-to-serve customer.
More importantly, in this table, we can understand that Customer A is a a good payor for it
can pay its bills in a shorter time compare to B. But this is where the problem arises, B being
the high cost-to-serve customer (meaning it has a higher cost of sale) is the one who cannot
contribute to companys overall profit due to its relatively large A/r balance.
5. Product Pricing DOPs existing price system was a simple mark up over purchase price
(with a small premium for desktop delivery). This system assumed that DOPs operating
expenses were proportional to the purchase costs of items it processed and delivered to
customers. It assigns 155 markup to purchased product cost to cover the warehousing,
distribution and freight which should not be the case. The pricing system failed to recognize
the cost that it incurred to serve its varied mix of customers. As customer variety increases,
a pricing scheme based on a standard markup fails to recover the cost incurred for high
cost-to-serve customers and perhaps overcharges low cost-to-serve customers.
CONS:
1. Requires substantial resources in implementing the system. Once implemented, an
activity based costing system is costly to maintain. Data concerning numerous
activity measures must be collected, checked, and entered into the system.
2. ABC produces numbers such as product margins, that are odds with the numbers
produced by traditional costing systems. Management might find it hard to adjust
with the new costing system.
3. Activity based costing data can be easily misinterpreted and must be used with
care when used in making decisions. Costs assigned to products, customers and
other cost objects are only potentially relevant. Before making any significant
decision using activity based costing data, managers must identify which costs are
really relevant for the decisions at hand.
*Analysis part shows how ABC system can work in DOP costing structure
SUPPORTING ANALYSIS
Below is the proposed ABC model to be used in costing orders.
Freight is a direct cost to all customers who opt commercial shipments of orders.
Warehouse, rent and depreciation is a direct cost to all customers.
Warehouse distribution personnel is an indirect cost. It must be spread over
ordinary customers and customer who choose desktop delivery. This is supported by
the fact the warehouse personnel also do delivery services. 90% for nondesktop
delivery option (75,000 cartons/85,000 cartons) and 10% for desktop delvery option
(5,000/85,000 cartons) rounded off.
Delivery truck expenses is direct cost to all customers who opt for desktop delivery
option.
For order entry, cost are allocated as to manual, EDI and entering individual order
lines per order. Cost driver is based on time distribution per activity. Process manual
custom order 20% (10,000 hrs/ 2,000 hrs), enter items ordered 75% (10,000/7500)
and EDI 5% (10,000 hrs/500hrs).
-We divide the cost per activity to number of units affected by the said activity.
This shows a more accurate customer profitability for both Customers A and B. Using
the ABC system, we assigned cost per activity that is unique to a specific customer. In
this case for instance, we do not assign any cost of EDI order placement to Customer B
for it did not avail of the said feature.
RECOMMENDATION
Recommended alternative is Alternative 1 Implement the ABC system model for
costing. In this way, costing can be made properly as to reflect the true costs per customer. And
proper pricing will follow in the sense that higher price must be given to high cost-to-serve
customers and also it can propse a more strict collection of receivable especially for this high
cost-to-serve customers.
CONCLUSION
With innovations there is change. Change in variety of product and services that can be
demanded by customers. And this change entails additional cost. With additional cost
comes a need to modify pricing strategy to better cover up the added cost. With pricing
comes the need to understand customer and their profitability. And with right costing
comes right pricing and profitability is the end result. In the case, the net loss for the
financial year 2000 can be greatly pointed out to the improper costing method DOP
employed. It spread it indirect cost over all the customers disregarding the customer
mix it created when it introduced the innovations on its operations. It must be noted
that change in product costing must be well addressed in the companys cost structure.
This is what DOP failed to incorporate. It caused the company to disregard the
customer. And recommending and implementing ABC system will answer this change in
cost structure. It was raised in the analysis that DOP indeed needs ABC system for two
basic concerns: (1) All costs (except cost to purchase) are all indirect cost or support
costs and (2) High variety in product and customer demands. With these concerns,
employing ABC system will result in more accurate costing and pricing of products and
when information from this will be used accordingly, the end result of profitability will
follow.