Total Cost Management Presentation by Dinesh K. C. and Said Rahman III Semester, MBA
Nov 08, 2014
Total Cost Management
Presentation by
Dinesh K. C. and Said Rahman
III Semester, MBA
Introduction
Total Cost Management is a company-wide systematic and structured approach, which provides a holistic framework to control, reduce and eliminate costs, throughout the value chain. This process of managing the financial outcome of activities encompasses all operations, internal and external.For these reasons, TCM is one of the most powerful tools that corporations can wield in their quest for competitive advantage.
Introduction“The processes involved in planning, estimating, budgeting, and controlling costs so that the budget can be completed within the approved budget.”
Total Cost Management is the effective application of professional and technical expertise to plan and control resources, costs, profitability and risks.
Contd..
Total refers to TCM's comprehensive approach to managing the total resource investment during the life cycle of the enterprise's strategic assets. The enterprise can be any endeavor, business, government, group, individual, or other entity that owns, controls, or operates strategic assets.
Contd..
Simply stated, it is a systematic approach to managing cost throughout the life cycle of any enterprise, program, facility, project, product, or service. This is accomplished through the application of cost engineering and cost management principles, proven methodologies and the latest technology in support of the management process.
Cost Management Key Terms
PV - Planned Value, estimated value of the planned work
EV – Earned Value, estimated value of work done
AC – Actual Cost, what you paid
BAC – Budget at Completion, the budget for the total job
EAC –Estimate at Completion, what is the total job expected to cost?
ETC – Estimate to Complete, forecasted costs to complete job
VAC – Variance at Completion, how much over/under budget do we expect to be?
How Do We Manage Cost?
Three processes Cost Estimating Cost Budgeting Cost Control
Cost Estimating
Cost Budgeting
Cost Control
Total Cost Management – Why?
Customer decides Value (price)
Investor decides Profits (return)
Only thing in organization’s control is Cost
Therefore Cost Management becomes a Competitive
tool for Value Maximization.
[Offer more value at lesser price and still maintain profitability.]
Contd..
This necessitates an integrated approach for
cost management. i.e. at strategic as well as at
operational level. This approach is called ……
“Total Cost Management”
Total Cost Management – Concept
company-wide systematic and structured approach
provides a holistic framework to control, reduce and
eliminate costs , throughout the value chain
process of managing the financial outcome of activities
encompasses all operations, internal and external.
A must tool for competitive advantage.
Total Cost Management – typical questions
Total Cost Management – Process
Identify Inefficiencies
* In a competitive environment, inefficiency of one is becoming an opportunity for the other.• Inefficiency is in terms of the non-value–
adding activity present in the system.
To identify, to size and to eliminate inefficiencies, guiding principle are….
“ it is better to be approximately right, than to be precisely wrong”
Contd..
“a structural change in the measurement systems
is preferred than a temporal / apparent change”
Cost Is Everything
“It costs time”“It costs resources”
“ It costs money”
EVERYTHING invested in assets and
projects is aCOST
That is why it is calledTOTAL COST Management
(TCM)
For Business, TCM is An Integrated Recipe for Managing Portfolios, Programs, and Projects in
Alignment with Business Strategy!
Effective Portfolios,
Programs, Projects
Ass
ets
Better Decisions
CostEngineering
Skills &
Knowledge
Time
Risk Cost
Resources
Better Control
Top-to-Bottom Business Benefits
Profitable Asset Portfolios Makes sure your resources go where they’ll get the
best IRR/EVA
Integrated/Aligned Programs Makes sure your projects are all integrated, aligned
and coordinated
Controlled Projects Makes sure each project gives business the results
that were planned for
Contd..As mentioned, the TCM process helps you manage your asset portfolios, your programs (or groups of related projects) and individual projects. The benefit of applying a TCM-based process is ultimately improved profitability (or whatever the strategic objective of your place of business is—profitability applies to most). Management of each project, program, and asset in your portfolio will be aligned and integrated because they are all tied back to the same business strategy and objectives.
TCM Starts With a Simple Concept
Plan-Do-Check-Assess (PDCA)
PLAN(plan activities)
DO(performactivities)
CHECK(measure
performanceof activities)
ASSESS(evaluate
measures, actupon variances)
PDCACycle
TCM is at heart a quality management process. Each and every TCM process map is based on the PDCA quality management/continuous process improvement model (i.e., the Deming or Shewhart model). Before AACE published the TCM approach using PDCA in 1996, other project management models lacked a defining philosophy based on accepted quality management principles.
contd..
Other models have since tied back to this basis; it only makes sense—it is the only real process model to have stood the test of time for more than half a century.
If your company uses TQM, Six-Sigma, ISO9000, Business Process Reengineering (BPR), or just about any other management program with quality management roots, TCM will support its goals.
PDCAThe TCM process model is based upon the “PDCA” management or control cycle, which is also known as the Deming or Shewhart cycle. The PDCA cycle is a generally accepted, quality driven, continuous improvement management model. PDCA stands for “plan, do, check, and assess,” with the word check being generally synonymous with measure. The word assess is sometimes substituted with act as in to take corrective action.
Contd..
The PDCA cycle is the framework for TCM because: (1) it is time-proven and widely accepted as a valid management model; (2) it is quality driven; and (3) it is highly applicable to cost management processes, which are cyclical by nature.
The PDCA cycle in TCM includes the following steps:
Plan - plan asset solutions or project activities
Do (i.e., execute) - initiate and perform the project or project activities in accordance with the plan
Check (i.e., measure) - making measurements of asset, project, or activity performance
Assess (i.e., act) - assessing performance variances from the plan and taking action to correct or improve performance to bring it in line with the plan or to improve the plan.
TCM Attributes
PLAN
(plan activities)
DO(performactivities)
CHECK(measure
performanceof activities)
ASSESS(evaluate
measures, actupon variances)
PDCACycle
Continuous Improvement
Every TCM process employs feedback and
improvement!
Integrated
Every TCM process has P,D,C & A steps that are
All linked back to business strategy!
BenefitsA key benefit of using PDCA as the “stem cell” of TCM (i.e., all 27 TCM processes grow out of it) is that PDCA supports both Continuous Improvement and Control. With PDCA, you establish a plan with budgets, thresholds, etc.; kick the work off properly; then measure performance. Finally, you assess that performance against the plan (and ultimately strategic objectives) and make either corrective actions to stay on plan (control) or you improve the plan as needed to achieve objectives (improvement).
Benefits contd..
Another key benefit of TCM is that the processes are all integrated such that scope, cost, time, risk, value, and resources are each considered for their interrelationships. Each process map in TCM includes inputs and outputs from and to the other processes. Each assessment and planning step revisits the objectives, thereby keeping all processes aligned with business strategy.
TCM Covers the Entire Asset and Project Life Cycle
Contd..As a two-dimensional diagram, the PDCA loop looks like it returns you to the same point you started. However, it is a three-dimensional concept; you keep advancing and improving your plans as the asset or project life cycle progresses. In this illustration, the center bar represents the life cycle of an asset over time. The spiral represents the fact that PDCA is a never ending process for managing costs over that life cycle. We could show the same diagram with the project phases in the center bar (e.g., appraise, select, define, execute, closeout). The concept is the same.
ConclusionTotal cost management should be approached as a process, not a program, developed and implemented by a full-time manager. Training and skills development need constant attention. You need to obtain management support early and keep results and issues visible to maintain that support. An important part of the process is to drive ownership to the local/operational level. Resourcing the process is important and you need commitment from the parties and dedicated financial support.
References
Lewis, Rose Mary and Spencer, Gary Rock. "Total Cost Management: A Case Study in Missed Opportunity." AACE International Transactions (2007): 03.1-03.6, 6p.
Internet sources
Thank You..