Chapter 1 PDF
Chapter 1 PDF
Chapter 1 PDF
Chapter 1
1
10/3/2019
2
10/3/2019
Changing Focus
Traditionally, management accounting information has
been financial information; denominated in a currency
Management accounting information has now expanded
to encompass information that is operational or physical
(nonfinancial) information:
– Quality and process times
– More subjective measurements, such as:
• Customer satisfaction
• Employee capabilities
• New product performance
3
10/3/2019
PDCA Steps
Plan Step defines the organization’s purpose and
selects the focus and scope of its strategy
Do Step involves the implementation of a chosen
course of action
Check Step includes measuring and monitoring
performance and taking short-term actions based on
measured performance
Action Step involves managers taking actions to lower
costs, change resource allocations, and improve
quality
Behavioral Implications
As measurements are made on operations and
especially on individuals and groups their behavior
changes
– People react when they are being measured, and
they react to the measurements
– They focus on the variables and behavior being
measured and spend less attention on those not
measured
Two old sayings recognize these phenomena:
– “What gets measured gets managed.”
– “If I can’t measure it, I can’t manage it.”
© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
4
10/3/2019
Behavioral Implications
Employees familiar with the current system may
resist as managers attempt to introduce or redesign
cost and performance measurement systems
Employees have acquired expertise in the use of
the old system
Employees also may feel committed to the
decisions based on the information the old system
produced
Behavioral Implications
Management accountants must understand and
anticipate the reactions of individuals to information
and measurements
When the measurements are used not only for
information, planning, and decision-making, but also
for control, evaluation, and reward, employees and
managers place great pressure on the measurements
themselves
Behavioral Implications
Managers and employees may take unexpected and
undesirable actions to influence their score on the
performance measure
Managers seeking to improve current bonuses based
on reported profits may skip discretionary
expenditures that may improve performance in future
periods
5
10/3/2019