Domestic Auto Parts (DAP), a $1 billion subsidiary of a U.S. auto parts manufacturing company, manufactured and marketed original and after-market parts for automobile producers in the United States. It distributed products directly to original equipment automakers as well as to large retail chains. DAP was currently number four in market share in the United States out of nine direct competitors. Its 9% return on capital was respectable but less than that of its leading competitors. DAP’s current product line was solid, but it had not introduced new products to the market during the past three years. This had caused its projected revenues to decline and its industry position to slip. As recently as two years ago, DAP was number two in the industry, but competitors Western Auto and Just in Time Automotive had passed it, pushing DAP to number four. Western Auto had introduced higher value products to the market with the use of technology both to manufacture products and in the parts themselves. Western’s customers paid a premium price for the improved performance of the company’s products. DAP, on the other hand, had protected margins during its revenue decline by aggressively attacking costs. It succeeded in maintaining its gross and operating margin levels but at the cost of limiting plant investment and technology upgrades in manufacturing plants. It was beginning to experience maintenance problems, such as an increase in unscheduled downtime. Also, because it lacked the flexible manufacturing capabilities of competitors, it had to produce to stock rather than to order, causing inventory costs to rise to noncompetitive levels. Company management now recognized that the recent cost cutting had maintained margins in the short term but may have severely affected DAP’s ability to compete in the longer term. To help turn the company around, the parent company had recently hired a new CEO, Ellen Bright. Her job was clearly set out for her—either turn the subsidiary around in two years or close the business. The minimum requirements for continued operations were to achieve 12% return on capital employed (ROCE) and a growth rate faster than the industry’s so that it could regain its number one or two position among competitors. With this directive in hand, Bright held a meeting with her executive team to explain the situation and get their input. She started the meeting by stating: The only way we can achieve our goal is for each of you and your departments to cooperate to improve our return on capital. Product quality has set us apart in the past. We must regain our high-quality position and grow our revenues and our contribution to the parent company. My review of the economics and the competitive situation at DAP suggests that we must do three things: we need to grow; we must be customer intimate; and, we must be operationally excellent. And we must do all three things at once to be successful. Joe [the new chief financial officer brought in by Bright], you and I have been working on the economics required to achieve our financial goals. Why don’t you share our initial findings with the group? Joe Nathan described the financial goals for the turnaround: Basically, I designed a simple economic model to pinpoint the critical economic drivers needed to reach our goal of a 12% ROCE. We must increase our top line revenue by 50% through innovation and customer relationships, we need to better utilize our capital assets (both current and new)—currently we are operating at 65% on old assets—and we must get to 90% utilization on an upgraded asset base. Finally, we must minimize our total cost structure—today we are operating above the average cost in our competitor group. We need to get to the lowest-cost quartile to compete. These are the key drivers needed to get to the financial results expected by the parent company. We must balance them—one against the other—to achieve our overall goal of 12% ROCE. The question is how are we going to do this? What must we do—what objectives must we set and achieve? Ellen Bright interjected, “We are going to build a strategy to achieve each of these thrusts. I need your commitment and active contribution.” She asked Michael Milton, vice president of manufacturing, for his perspective. Milton said: I’ll admit that we certainly need to get more creative and bring to market new and improved products. But we need to do a lot of our processes better. Supplier management and manufacturing as well as product delivery have to be better coordinated so we can effectively and efficiently get new products to the customer. We need to be on time and on spec just to get the opportunity to sell new products. Key in my mind is managing the supplier pipeline, the raw materials—there is a lot of money to be saved there. We also need to balance our intense focus on cost cutting with the need to make investments in process improvements and new and upgraded equipment. Unscheduled downtime and the inability to make product switchovers on the manufacturing floor are killing us. Upgraded capital will both reduce our costs and help deliver consistently on time and on spec. We talk a lot about preventive maintenance, but we need to get real about it. This could save us big time in terms of costs and effectiveness. If we don’t do these operational things we will have trouble convincing customers to pay a premium price for our products. David Dillon, head of distribution, described the problems he faced: At the moment, I don’t have the infrastructure tools to create a first-class network of wholesalers and distributors. We need to streamline our distribution process and position ourselves as a strong business partner to attract and retain profitable customers. There are a lot of people out there with great experience and good ideas about how to achieve this, but the department is large and geographically dispersed, and there is no formal way of sharing best practices and best thinking. These steps will help us achieve our grow-revenue goal by getting products to market at a reasonable price in a reasonable time. Mary Stewart, vice president of marketing and sales, added: Improving our distribution will be a major factor in our new customer intimacy thrust by providing the opportunity for win–win relationships with our distributor customers and enhancing our reputation for efficiency and organization. In addition, we must position ourselves in the market—with the right customers—to be viable. We have recently studied our customer base and found an important segment of the current customer base that is profitable in both the direct and wholesale segments. In fact, 69% of our customers produce 90% of our profit. We went on to determine what these key customers want and will pay for. Both key segments, direct and wholesale, want essentially the same things. They expect us to deliver products on time and on spec. This, however, is expected from everyone in the industry. It’s a hurdle that must be passed just to be considered a viable vendor. The differentiator is for a supplier to understand their needs and translate that by continuous communication and productive dialogue. They want a long-term, mutually beneficial relationship with their suppliers. They want superior, technology-sophisticated products from a supplier with a superior reputation and image in the industry. Such a supplier makes their buying decisions less risky. Rita Richardson, vice president of research and development, responded to the challenge to produce state-of-the-art technologically sophisticated products: Well, we have some talented people in our R&D group who can produce the kind of products our customers need. But all the products in the world will not be bought without a good marketing communications effort. We need to be able to tell people what we have and how it can benefit them. We need a marketing effort that positions us as an innovator with new and enhanced products to offer. I think it might help to have some of our marketing staff spend time in the R&D department to get a feel for what’s going on. Sure some reskilling may be needed to achieve our innovation goals but I think we have a solid base of R&D professionals. Bright interjected at this point, “I think you have hit on something there, Rita. I think we all need to be more business focused and less functionally focused. The company seems to be suffering because employees know only what goes on inside their own area. This team needs to lead this cross functional view by example—in what we say and what we do.” She closed the meeting by challenging the group even further: None of our objectives can be accomplished without a major commitment from all of us to build a world-class workforce. To operate as an innovator we must change the way we think in this organization. Our employees must value change not resist it. We must reskill large parts—not some—of the organization. This will require training. Training involves both time and money. To support the new workforce we will also need to provide tools to work smarter and harder. We can do this and align the organization through the use of just-in-time technology. This commitment to people and organization is necessary to do the things we need to do to deliver customer benefits and ultimately financial returns. Required From the meeting of senior DAP executives, develop a strategy map of objectives, as well as potential Balanced Scorecard measures, for DAP. You can be guided by the following questions: Financial 1. Who are the shareholders, and what do they want? 2. What are the shareholders’ expectations in the following areas? (a) Revenue growth. (b) asset utilization. (c) Cost improvement. Customer 1. Who are the customers? 2. What do the customers want? How does DAP create value for them? Process 1. What processes are most important for creating value for DAP’s shareholders and customers? 2. What are the objectives and measures for each process identified here? Learning and Growth 1. What specific skills and capabilities do DAP’s people need in order to excel at the critical processes that you identified in the process perspective? 2. What other objectives can you identify to improve the human resources, information technology, and organization culture and alignment of DAP if it is to succeed with its strategy?
> Judd’s Reproductions makes reproductions of antique tables and chairs and sells them through three sales outlets. The product line consists of two styles of chairs, two styles of tables, and three styles of cabinets. Although customers often ask Judd Mol
> List three quantitative financial measures of performance in a service organization of your choice.
> List three quantitative financial measures of performance in a manufacturing organization of your choice.
> What is goal congruence?
> What are the three key dimensions of motivation?
> Balanced Scorecard objectives, cause-and-effect linkages for different value propositions Required (a) Use the objectives below to develop appropriate cause-and-effect linkages across the Balanced Scorecard’s four perspectives for the low-total-cost va
> What two broad technical considerations must designers of management and control systems address?
> What does control refer to in the context of a management accounting and control system?
> What is a stock option plan?
> What is gain sharing?
> What is profit sharing?
> What is a cash bonus?
> What type of organization is best suited to incentive compensation? Why?
> What is incentive compensation?
> What is an extrinsic reward?
> What is an intrinsic reward?
> Refer to the University of Leeds’ strategy map at http://www.leeds.ac.uk/downloads/Strategy_map_aw.pdf Required (a) What is the strategy for the university? (b) What will make it distinctive or unique? (c) What are its advantages and scope? (d) What
> What is budget slack?
> What is a stretch target?
> What is the most motivating type of budget with respect to targets?
> What are two essential elements in employee empowerment in MACS design?
> What is the single most important factor in making major changes to an organization?
> What is data falsification?
> What is meant by gaming a performance indicator?
> List three qualitative measures of performance.
> List three quantitative nonfinancial measures of performance in a manufacturing organization of your choice.
> What are some choices that individuals can make when ethical conflicts arise?
> Either by visiting a website or from a description in a published article, find a description of the implementation of a Balanced Scorecard. Required (a) Document in detail the elements (objectives, measures, and targets) of the Balanced Scorecard. (b)
> What is the human resources model view of motivation?
> What is the human relations movement view of motivation?
> What is the scientific management view of motivation?
> What are the four major behavioral considerations in MACS design?
> What four components should MACS designers consider when addressing the relevance of the system’s information?
> What are the four stages involved in keeping an organization in control?
> What are the six attributes of effective performance measurement systems?
> What are the three most common methods of setting a budget?
> What are the two interrelated behavioral issues in budgeting?
> What is an example of earnings management or smoothing?
> In the mid-1990s, Mobil Corporation’s Marketing and Refining (M&R) division underwent a major reorganization and developed new strategic directions. In conjunction with these changes, M&R developed a Balanced Scorecard around fo
> List three quantitative nonfinancial measures of performance in a service organization of your choice.
> List and explain the two categories in task control.
> How does task control differ from results control?
> How do diagnostic control systems differ from interactive control systems?
> What is an ethical control system, and what are its key elements?
> Megan Espanoza, manager of the Wells Division of Mars, Inc., a large credit card company, recently received a memorandum describing the company’s new budgeting process for the coming year. The new process requires Megan and the other division managers to
> Explain how participating in decision making and being educated to understand information received in an organization contribute toward employee empowerment in MACS design.
> Suppose that you are the manager of a production facility in a business that makes plastic items that organizations use for advertising. The customer chooses the color and quantity of the item and specifies what is to be imprinted on the item. Your job i
> Under what circumstances should both quantitative and qualitative performance measures be used to evaluate employee, work group, and divisional performance? Provide examples to support your answer.
> Cite two settings or jobs where each of the following approaches to control would be appropriately applied. Identify what you feel is the definitive characteristic of the setting that indicates the appropriateness of the approach to control that you have
> You are a management accountant working in the controller’s office. Rick Koch, a very powerful executive, approaches you in the parking lot and asks you to do him a favor. The favor involves falsifying some of his division’s records on the main computer.
> During data collection for the transition from an old management accounting system to a new activity-based cost management system, you see a manager’s reported time allotments. You know that the data supplied by the manager are completely false. You conf
> Suppose you are the chief executive officer of a manufacturing firm that is bidding on a government contract. In this situation, the firm with the lowest bid will win the contract. Your firm has completed developing its bid and is ready to submit it to t
> Refer to “Does Cheating at Golf Lead to Cheating in Business?” in the In Practice box on page 347. Discuss reasons why individuals might feel justified in cheating at golf and whether individuals who cheat at golf are likely also to cheat in business.
> List the four key behavioral considerations in MACS design and explain the importance or benefits of each.
> Explain why an understanding of human motivation is essential to MACS design.
> Four broad approaches to distributing the proceeds of a bonus pool in a profit-sharing plan are listed here: 1. Each person’s share is based on salary. 2. Each person receives an equal share. 3. Each person’s share is based on position in the organizatio
> Marie Johnston, the manager of a government unemployment insurance office, is paid a salary that reflects the number of people she supervises and the number of hours that her subordinates work. Required (a) What do you think of this compensation scheme?
> Belleville Fashions sells high-quality women’s, men’s, and children’s clothing. The store employs a sales staff of 11 full-time employees and 12 part-time employees. Until recently, all sales staff were paid a flat salary and participated in a profit-sha
> Beau Monde, Inc., a manufacturer and distributor of health and beauty products, made the following disclosure about its compensation program: Our compensation philosophy is based on two simple principles: (1) We pay for performance and (2) management ca
> Chadwick, Inc.: The Balanced Scorecard (Abridged)14 The “Balanced Scorecard”15 article seemed to address the concerns of several division managers who felt that the company was over-emphasizing short-term financial res
> Denver Jack’s is a large toy manufacturer. The company has 100 highly trained and skilled employees who are involved with six major product lines, including the production of toy soldiers, dolls, and so on. Each product line is manufactured in a differen
> During the late 1970s, Harley-Davidson, the motorcycle manufacturer, was losing money and was very close to bankruptcy. Management believed that one of the problems was low productivity and, as a result, asked middle managers to speed up production. The
> Knox Company manufactures consumer products such as cleansers, air fresheners, and detergents. During a recent quarter, the value of the products made was $50 million, and the labor costs were $3 million. The company has decided to use a Scanlon plan wit
> Sakura Snack Company manufactures a line of snack foods, such as cheese crackers, granola bars, and cookies. The production workers are part of a gain-sharing program that works as follows: A target level of labor costs is set that is based on the achiev
> Peterborough Medical Devices makes devices and equipment that it sells to hospitals. The organization has a profit-sharing plan that is worded as follows: The company will make available a profit-sharing pool that will be the lower of the following two
> Hoechst Celanese, a pharmaceutical manufacturer, has used a profit-sharing plan, the Hoechst Celanese Performance Sharing Plan, to motivate employees. To operationalize the plan, the Hoechst Celanese executive committee set a target earnings from operati
> DMT Biotech is a biotechnology research and development company that designs products for the needs of life science researchers. The company consists of an administrative unit, a research laboratory, and a facility used to develop prototypes of and produ
> Suppose that you are the owner/manager of a house-cleaning business. You have 30 employees who work in teams of three. Teams are dispatched to the homes of customers where they are directed by the customer to undertake specific cleaning tasks that vary w
> Answer the following two questions about the organization units listed below: • What behavior should be rewarded? • What is an appropriate incentive compensation system? a. A symphony orchestra b. A government welfare office c. An airline complaint desk
> What are some pros and cons of tying an individual’s pay to performance?
> Wells Fargo’s web page (https://www .wellsfargo.com/pdf/invest_relations/VisionandValues04.pdf) states that the company’s vision is “to satisfy all our customers’ financial needs and help them succeed financially.” The brochure also describes the follow
> Mike Shields was having dinner with one of his friends at a restaurant in Memphis. His friend, Woody Brooks, a local manager of an express mail service, told Mike that he consistently overstated the amount of resources needed in his budget requests for h
> Manoil Electronics manufactures and sells electronic components to electronics stores. The controller is preparing her annual budget and has asked the sales group to prepare sales estimates. All members of the sales force have been asked to estimate sale
> Budgets are usually set through one of three methods: participation, authority, or consultation. Required Write an essay stating the circumstances under which each method is most appropriate. If you disagree with a particular method, justify your answer
> Why is it important that people understand what performance is measured, how performance is measured, and how employee rewards relate to measured performance?
> When should an organization use profit sharing?
> Why should performance measurement systems and rewards focus on performance that employees can control?
> What distinguishes data falsification from gaming activities?
> Can goal congruence be increased if rewards are tied to performance? Explain.
> In a company that takes telephone orders from customers for general merchandise, explain how you would evaluate the performance of the company president, a middle manager who designs the system to coordinate order taking and order shipping, and an employ
> The City of Charlotte, North Carolina, states its vision and mission as follows:12 City Vision The City of Charlotte will be a model of excellence that puts citizens first. Skilled, diverse, and motivated employees will be known for providing quality and
> Think of any setting in need of control. Explain why you think that task control or results control would be more appropriate in the setting that you have chosen. Do not use an example from the text.
> What should a person do if the organization’s stated values conflict with practiced values? What are the individual’s choices? Why do you think such conflicts exist?
> What should a person do if faced with a conflict between his or her values and those of the organization?
> List and describe the hierarchy of ethical considerations.
> How do the scientific management, human relations, and human resource schools differ in their views on human motivation?
> Identify the four components that MACS designers should consider when addressing the relevance of the system’s information and explain why each component is important.
> Eni Corporation’s mission statement includes the following: “Our mission is to continuously improve the company’s value to shareholders, customers, employees, and society.” Interpret how each of Eni Corporation’s stakeholder groups may interpret “the com
> How would you reward a group of people that includes product designers, engineers, production personnel, purchasing agents, marketing staff, and accountants whose job is to identify and develop a new car? How would you reward a person whose job is to dis
> When should an organization use stock options?
> When should an organization use gain sharing?
> Why do a company’s operators/workers, managers, and executives have different informational needs than shareholders and external suppliers of capital?
> What does the controllability principle require?
> When should an organization use a cash bonus?
> You work for a consulting firm and have been given the assignment of deciding whether a particular company president is overpaid both in absolute terms and relative to presidents of comparable companies. How would you undertake this task?
> Explain when one would reward outcomes or outputs, reward inputs, or use knowledge-based pay.
> Do you believe that people value intrinsic rewards? Give an example of an intrinsic reward that you would value and explain why. Why are extrinsic rewards important to people? If you value only extrinsic rewards, explain why.
> What are budgeting games, and why do employees engage in them?
> What are the pros and cons of building slack into the budget from (1) The point of view of the employee building in slack and (2) From a senior manager’s point of view?
> How does participation in the budgeting process differ from consultation?