E-Book, Englisch, 229 Seiten
Rains Target Cost Management
1. Auflage 2010
ISBN: 978-1-4398-3561-6
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
The Ladder to Global Survival and Success
E-Book, Englisch, 229 Seiten
ISBN: 978-1-4398-3561-6
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
With a proven track record for helping companies achieve critical cost reductions without sacrificing customer satisfaction, target costing provides managers and executives with the tools to survive and prosper in today’s increasingly competitive market—without raising prices on customers.
Target Cost Management: The Ladder to Global Survival and Success details the preliminary steps required for a company to institutionalize target costing and the two necessary ingredients of target costing—proper organizational structure and cost tables. It describes and illustrates the interrelationships of the major techniques, tools, and methodologies needed to achieve the ultimate success.
Jim Rains shares powerful insights harvested during his two decades of studying and benchmarking target costing for leading Japanese corporations including Toyota, Nissan, and Canon. Supplying the understanding and the tools to achieve critical cost reductions while maintaining and even improving customer satisfaction, this book explains the steps needed to reap the rewards of constant, consistent, acceptable, and predictable levels of profitability.
Zielgruppe
Business owners and managers.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
The Ladder
Rung 1
Rung 2
Rung 3
Rung 4
Rung 5
Rung 6
Rung 7
Rungs 8 to 10
The Rails of the Ladder
Corporate Strategy
Focus on Long-Term Profit Goals and Objectives
Customer Focus
Respect for Humanity/Employees
Respect for the Environment
Leadership
Basic Concept of Target Costing
What Are the Characteristics of Strong Enterprises?
Roots of Target Costing
Target Costing Becomes Comprehensive Target Costing
Profit vs. Profit Margin
Cost Management
Cost Visibility
Engineering Change Requests
Survival Triplet
Cultural Differences
Does Your Firm Really Need to Do Target Costing?
Is Target Costing for My Company?
Getting Started on the Target Costing Journey
Myths of Target Costing
Organizational Breadth
Steps to Begin Target Costing
Knowing What to Do
Form Cost Planning Group
Conduct Current State Assessment
Mission and Vision Statement
Employee Training
The Process of Team Building
Team Performance
The Cost Planning/Cost Management Group
What Is the Cost Planning Group?
Mission of Cost Planning Group
What Costs Should You Establish Targets For?
What Is Most Important: Quality, Function, or Price?
Cost Management for Purchased Parts
Where to Begin Collecting Cost Information
The Development of Cost Tables
Shift in Financial Thinking
Three Major Requirements for Cost Tables
Cost Table Sophistication
Material Cost Table Development
Direct Conversion Cost Tables
Product Development Cost Tables
Cost Tables by Process
How to Set the Target Cost
Subtraction Method
Addition Method
Setting Target Costs by Function
Contingency Cost Allocation
Special Situations
Exceeding the Target Cost
Allocation of the Target Cost
Advanced Applications of Target Costing Concepts
Alpha Brain
Alpha Brain Background
The Alpha Brain System: An Example
The Model Factory
Metal-Forming Factory
Summary
Benchmarking Japanese Companies
Isuzu (1999, 2003, 2008)
Zexel Corporation (1999)
General Information
Machining Center
Cost and Value Engineering Discussion
Toyota Motomachi Vehicle Assembly Plant (1999, 2005)
Manufacturing Philosophy
Assembly Process
Material Delivery
Quality Andon
Toyota (2005)
Aisen Seiki (1999)
Hitachi Machinery Construction Company (2003)
Society of Japanese Value Engineering (SJVE)
Omron (2005)
Denso (2005)
Nissan (2006)
Canon (2006, 2008)
Each chapter concludes with a Summary