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Chapter Seventeen: Mcgraw-Hill/Irwin

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
139 views37 pages

Chapter Seventeen: Mcgraw-Hill/Irwin

Uploaded by

Li'ilzam Nuur
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 37

Chapter Seventeen

McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Learning Objectives
 Discuss the strategic importance of quality

 Define accounting’s role in the management & control


of quality

Develop a comprehensive framework for the


management & control of quality

Understand Six Sigma performance expectations

Prepare and interpret relevant financial information to


support quality-related initiatives

17-2
Learning Objectives
(continued)
Discuss the use of nonfinancial performance data to
support quality-related initiatives

Describe & understand techniques that can be used


to detect and correct quality problems

 Describe lean manufacturing and changes in


management accounting systems to support a change
to “lean”

17-3
Strategic Importance of Quality
Baldrige Quality Award

ISO 9000 and ISO 14000

Conceptual linkage between Quality and


Profitability (Exhibit 17.1—see next slide)

17-4
Exhibit 17.1

17-5
Accounting’s Role in the
Management & Control of Quality
Accountants can add value to the organization by
providing decision-makers with relevant financial and
nonfinancial information related to quality

Such information actively supports the quality initiatives


embraced by management

17-6
Basic Terminology
“Quality”— customer satisfaction with the total
experience of a product or service, consisting of two
components:
Design quality (focuses on the features that customers want)

Performance quality (focuses on product/service


performance)
Total quality management (TQM)
Importance of having a good measurement system to
support TQM
Limitations of conventional accounting systems?

17-7
Creating a Comprehensive Framework for
Managing/Controlling Quality: Exhibit 17.2

17-8
Characteristics of the Comprehensive
Framework for Managing/Controlling Quality
Broad business perspective—knowledge of business
processes
Paramount role of the consumer
Relevant financial data
Nonfinancial performance indicators
Feedback loops
Linkage to operations management
Breadth of the system—value-chain approach

17-9
Setting Quality-Related Expectations
Six-Sigma approach:

Define
Measure
Analyze
Improve
Control
Goalpost vs. Absolute Conformance:
Goalpost conformance
Absolute quality conformance (robust quality approach)

17-10
Goalpost Conformance (Exhibit 17.3)
Goalpost conformance assumes that the firm
incurs no quality or failure cost or loss if
quality measures fall with the specified limits

17-11
Absolute Conformance (Exhibit 17.4)
Absolute quality conformance requires that all
products or services meet exactly the target
value with no variation allowed

17-12
Financial Measures & Cost of
Quality (COQ)
Relevant cost information for decision-making (refer
to concepts in Chapter 11):
 Future costs and revenues that differ between decision
alternatives
 “Avoidable costs” vs. Sunk costs
 Out-of-Pocket costs + Opportunity costs
Cost of Quality (COQ) Reporting

17-13
COQ Reports
• Prevention—expenditures incurred to keep quality
defects from occurring
• Appraisal—costs incurred in the measurement and
analysis of data to find out if products and services
conform to specification/customer expectations
• Internal failure—costs incurred as a result of poor
quality found through appraisal prior to delivery to
customers
• External failure—costs incurred to rectify quality
defects after unacceptable products or services reach
the customer
17-14
Sample Costs of Quality
Prevention:
– Quality training costs
– Equipment maintenance costs

Appraisal:
– Testing & inspection costs
– Quality audits
– Vendor certification
– Test equipment and instruments
17-15
Sample Costs of Quality (continued)
Internal failure:
– Rework costs
– Scrap (net of disposal value)
– Lost contribution margin because of schedule disruptions

External failure:
– Costs to handle customer complaints & returns
– Lost sales/market share (customer ill-will)
– Field service/repair costs
– Product liability lawsuits
17-16
Example:
COQ Report
(Exhibit
17.8)

17-17
Conformance and
Nonconformance Quality Costs
Cost of Conformity:
– Prevention Costs
– Appraisal Costs

Cost of Nonconformity:
– Internal Failure Costs
– External Failure Costs

17-18
Nonfinancial Quality Indicators
Internal Nonfinancial Quality Metrics:
– Process yield
– Productivity
– Machine up-time
– Safety record
– Throughput
– Cycle time efficiency

17-19
Nonfinancial Quality Indicators
(continued)
External Nonfinancial Quality Metrics:
– Customer response time (CRT)
– No. of defective units shipped
– No. of customer complaints
– Delivery delays
– On-time delivery rate
– Percentage of products that experience
early or excessive failure 17-20
Detecting & Correcting Poor Quality
Detecting Poor Quality:
– Control Charts
– Statistical Control Charts

– Run Charts

Taking Corrective Action:


– Histograms
– Pareto Diagrams (Charts)
– “Cause-and-Effect” (“fishbone”) Diagrams
17-21
Control Chart
(Exhibit 17.9, Workstation B)

17-22
Control Chart (continued)

The circled observations are unacceptable, that is, they


suggest an out-of-control process. Management may want
to investigate the underlying causes of these observations
and take appropriate corrective action. 17-23
Histogram (Exhibit 17.10)

70

60

50

40

30

20

10

0
1 2 3 4 5 6
1 Quality of chocolate 2 Liqueur
3 Egg size 4 Blending speed
5 Blending duration 6 Improper refrigeration
17-24
Pareto Diagram (Exhibit 17.11)

17-25
Cause-and-Effect (‘fish-bone”)
Diagram (Exhibit 17.12)

17-26
Chocolate Mousse
Cause-and Effect Diagram (Exhibit 17.13)

17-27
Lean Manufacturing and Accounting for Lean
Lean Manufacturing (“lean” for short)—
reconfiguring the manufacturing process to increase
product flow and product quality, reduce
inventories, improve decision-making, and enhance
profitability
Five Principles of Lean Manufacturing:
• Value
• Value Stream
• Pull and Flow
• Empowerment
• Perfection
17-28
Lean Manufacturing and Accounting for Lean
(continued)
Accounting for Lean:
• Dysfunctional (or limiting or inhibiting) nature of
traditional control mechanisms?
Value-Stream Income Statements:
• Definition of “value stream”?
• Intended to support/encourage/recognize the
value of “lean”
• Generate a more refined measure of “operating
income”
17-29
Sample Value-Stream Income Statement
(Exhibit 17.15)

17-30
Appendix: Taguchi Loss Functions
General expression of the loss function, L(x),
for an observed quality characteristic, x, is:
L(x) = k(x -T) 2

where: x = an observed value of the quality


characteristic
T = the target value of the quality characteristic
k = the cost coefficient, determined by the firm’s
failure costs
Total Quality Cost
k = ---------------------------------------------
(Tolerance Allowed)2
17-31
Taguchi Quality Loss Function
Your firm has determined that no customer will accept
sheet-metal deviating more than 0.05” from the target
thickness (0.50”). The cost to the firm is estimated as
$5,000 for each rejection by a customer.

Total Quality Cost


k= (Tolerance Allowed)2

$5,000
k= 2 = $2,000,000
0.05

17-32
Taguchi Quality Loss Function
(continued)
L(x) = k(x -T)
L(0.47) = $2,000,000(0.47 -
0.50)2
L(0.47) = $1,800
Thus, if the actual thickness of a unit is 0.47, then
the estimated total loss for the unit is $1,800.
17-33
Chapter Summary
We defined an appropriate role for accounting in terms
of the management & control of quality
We defined “quality” and its two major components,
conformance quality and design quality
We developed and discussed a comprehensive
framework for the management & control of quality,
and the role of accounting within this framework
We discussed two different approaches for setting
quality-related goals (Six Sigma and Goalpost versus
Absolute Conformance)
17-34
Chapter Summary (continued)
• We discussed two areas where financial
information can be supplied by the accountant to
support TQM initiatives:
– Relevant cost information for decision-making purposes
– Cost of Quality (COQ) Reporting

• We discussed the use of both internal and external


nonfinancial quality metrics

17-35
Chapter Summary (continued)
• We described techniques, borrowed from
operations management, that can be used for
detecting & then correcting quality problems
(including control charts, statistical control charts,
histograms, Pareto charts, and cause-and-effect
diagrams)
• We described the term “lean manufacturing” and
offered some insights as to changes to management
accounting systems needed to support “lean”
initiatives of management (e.g., the switch to “value-
stream” income statements)
17-36
Chapter Summary (continued)

• Finally, in the Appendix we explored a way to


estimate a quadratic loss functions (in conjunction
with the use of absolute conformance standards);
the Appendix also showed how the Taguchi quality
loss function can be used to set tolerances for an
operation

17-37

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