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Total Cost of Ownership. Total cost of ownership is a philosophy for really understanding all supply chain related costs of doing business with a particular supplier for a particular good or service (Lisa Ellam, May 1999). TCO. 13-3. Key Concepts. Three Components of Total Cost Acquisition Costs
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2. Chapter 13 Total Cost of Ownership
3. Total Cost of Ownership Total cost of ownership is a philosophy for really understanding all supply chain related costs of doing business with a particular supplier for a particular good or service (Lisa Ellam, May 1999)
4. Key Concepts
Three Components of Total Cost
Acquisition Costs
Ownerships Costs
Post-Ownership Costs
Purchase Price: But One Component of Cost
5. Key Concepts
TCO, Net Present Value Analysis (NPV), and Estimated Costs
The Importance of Total Cost of Ownership in Supply Management
Service Providers
Retail
Manufacturing
6. Three Components of Total Cost
Acquisition Costs
Ownerships Costs
Post-Ownership Costs
7. TCO Components Acquisition costs
Purchase price
Planning costs
Quality costs
Taxes
Financing costs
Ownership costs
Downtime costs
Risk costs
Cycle time costs
Conversion costs
Non-value added costs
Supply chain costs Post-ownership costs
Environmental costs
Warranty costs
Product liability costs
Customer dissatisfaction costs
8. Acquisition Costs Purchase Price
Planning Costs
Quality Costs
Taxes
Customs Duties and Tariffs
Regional Trade Agreements
Income-Base Shifting
Financing Costs
9. Ownership Costs
Downtime Costs
Risk Costs
Cycle Time Costs
Conversion Costs
Non-Value Added Costs
Supply Chain Costs
10. Ownership Costs Supply Chain Costs
Forecasting
Administration
Transportation
Inventory
Manufacturing
Customer service
Supplier selection/relationships
Global sourcing
11. Post - Ownership Costs
Environmental Costs
Warranty Costs
Product Liability Costs
Customer Dissatisfaction Costs
12. TCO, Net Present Value Analysis (NPV), and Estimated Costs NPV analysis is frequently incorporated into TCO analyses
NPV analyzes present values of the initial expenditure along with the likely future revenue and expenditure streams
The present value of a sum of future cash flows discounted by a required rate of return
NPV greater than zero suggests accepting the investment
NPV less than 0 suggests rejecting the investment
NPV = 0 is the point of indifference
13. Tangential Reprographics Example
14. TCO Formula
15. PVA Incorporated into a TCO Analysis
16. PVA Formulas PVAnnuity = CF [ 1/r – 1/r(1+r)t ]
CF = periodic cash inflow or outflow (must be the same each period)
r = discount rate per period (annual rate divided by the number of periods in one year)
t = total number of periods
PV = FV / (1 + r)t
FV = future value of single cash inflow or outflow
r = discount rate per period (annual rate divided by the number of periods in one year)
t = total number of periods
17. Importance of TCO in Supply Management
Service Providers
Retail
Manufacturing
Supply Chains/Supply Networks
18. Service and Retail Providers Understanding what drives the cost of overhead expenditures is crucial to any service business
Revenue must cover the direct costs, material and labor, and overhead in order to generate a profit
TCO analysis of recurring material costs are often overlooked and can yield great savings
TCO analysis of the labor base can reap lower per person costs, greater benefits, and improved morale
TCO analysis of equipment purchases may help reduce the expenditures for maintenance and parts over the lives of the investments
19. Manufacturing Manufacturers are concerned with all of the same TCO issues as service and retail firms, with some added issues
Issues that are particularly important in cost analysis for manufacturers are:
Direct materials
Manufacturing overhead
Emphasis should be placed on the variance between “should cost” and actual cost.
This should not be confused with price variance
20. Activity Based Costing A major problem in TCO analysis of manufacturers is accurate allocation of manufacturing overhead
Many manufacturers have used activity-based costing to help improve cost allocation
Activity-based costing (ABC) is a technique for accumulating cost for a given cost object that represents the total and true economic resources required or consumed by the object
21. Supply Chain/Supply Networks TCO analysis may include the study of:
Manufacturability
Infrastructure
Outsource decision
Analysis of suppliers beyond tier one
Structure of foreign and domestic tariffs/duties/taxes
Costs of delivery Foreign regulations
Foreign political/economic stability
Foreign exchange risk
Language/communication requirements
Volatility of end-customer demand
Inventory carrying costs
Inventory risk
Quality costs
22. Concluding Remarks TCO is an analytical tool and a philosophy
Accurate estimation of total costs requires a cross-functional approach
Supply management is a critical member of such a cross-functional approach
TCO is also applicable in one’s private life enabling better decision-making