Affiliation:
1. Patricia Everaert is an Associate Professor at Ghent University, and Dan W. Swenson is an Associate Professor at Arizona State University.
Abstract
ABSTRACT
This active learning exercise simulates the target costing process and demonstrates how a management theory (goal setting theory) is relevant to a business improvement initiative (target costing). As part of the target costing simulation, student participants work in teams to address a business issue (product development) that moves across functional boundaries. The simulation begins with students learning how to assemble a model truck and calculate its product cost using activity-based costing. Students are then divided into teams and instructed to reduce the truck's cost through a redesign exercise, subject to certain customer requirements and quality constraints. Typically, the teams achieve cost reduction by eliminating unnecessary parts, by using less expensive parts, and by using less part variety. This exercise provides a unique opportunity for students to actively participate in a redesign exercise. It results in student teams creating a wide variety of truck designs with vastly different product costs. The case ends by having a discussion about target costing, goal setting theory, and the implications of the target costing simulation.
This simulation contains a number of specific learning objectives. First, students learn how the greatest opportunity for cost reduction occurs during the product design stage of the product development cycle. Second, students see firsthand how design-change decisions affect a product's costs, and the role of the cost information in guiding those decisions. Third, students experience the cross-functional interaction that occurs between sales and marketing, design engineering, and accounting during product development. Finally, this exercise helps students understand the concept of target costing. The simulation is appropriate for undergraduate or graduate management accounting classes.
Data Availability: For more information about this case, contact the first author at Patricia.Everaert@UGent.be.
Publisher
American Accounting Association
Reference17 articles.
1. Blanchard, B. S.
1978. Design and Manage to Life-Cycle Cost. Portland, OR: M/A Press.
2. Cooper, R.
1995. When Lean Enterprises Collide: Competing Through Confrontation. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press.
3. Control tomorrow's costs through today's designs;Cooper;Harvard Business Review,1996
4. Characteristics of target costing: Theoretical and field study perspectives, 2006;Everaert;Qualitative Research in Accounting and Management,2006
5. Why product development teams need management accountants;Hertenstein;Management Accounting,1998
Cited by
5 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献