Case Study-1
Requirement-1
It appears that Zhivago Brands follows differentiation business strategy. Differentiation business strategy refers to a business strategy where the firm strives to differentiate itself from the competitors by finding out innovative ways to improve quality and/ or reduce costs. The firm can take differentiation advantages by either providing superior quality or providing product at the cheapest prices. In the case of Zhivago Brands, it has been observed that the firm focuses on quality improvements through innovation with the intention to outperform its competitors. Therefore, it could be inferred that the firm is following differentiation business strategy. Moreover, the firm is also seeking ways to reduce the cost of production which will enable it produce quality product at affordable prices (Grifell-Tatje and Lovell, 2014).
Requirement-2
Revenue effect of growth |
(actual units sold 2017- actual units sold 2016)*Selling price 2016 |
||||||
(63000-60000)*300 =900000 |
Favorable |
||||||
Cost effect of growth-variable cost |
(Units of input required to produce 2017 output in 2016 – Actual input used to produce 2016 output) * Input price 2016 |
||||||
Direct material |
|||||||
(450000/300*315-450000)*13.20 = 297000 |
Un-Favorable |
||||||
Conversion cost |
|||||||
(375-375)*8000 = 0 |
|||||||
selling and customer-service |
|||||||
(143-150)*10000 = 70000 |
Favorable |
||||||
Total growth component |
|||||||
(900000-297000-0+70000) = 673000 |
Favorable |
Requirement-3
Revenue effect |
|||||||
(315-300)*63000 = 945000 |
Favorable |
||||||
Direct material |
|||||||
(14.03-13.20)* 450000/300*315 = |
392175 |
Un favorable |
|||||
Conversion cost |
|||||||
(8100-8000)*375 = 37500 |
Un favorable |
||||||
selling and customer-service |
|||||||
(9865.35-10000)*143 |
-19255 |
Favorable |
|||||
Total price component |
|||||||
(945000-392175+19254.90) = 572079.90 |
Favorable |
||||||
Requirement-4
Direct material |
|||||||
(465000-450000/300*315)*14.03 = 105225 |
Favorable |
||||||
Conversion cost |
|||||||
(375-375/300*315)*8100 = 151875 |
Favorable |
||||||
selling and customer-service |
|||||||
(143-150/300*315)*9865.38 = 143048.01 |
Favorable |
||||||
Total productivity component |
|||||||
(105225+151875+143048.01) = 400148.01 |
Favorable |
Requirement-5
2016 |
2017 |
|
Units sold |
300 |
315 |
Selling price |
60000 |
63000 |
Total revenue |
18000000 |
19845000 |
Less: costs |
||
Direct materials |
5940000 |
6523950 |
conversion costs |
3000000 |
3037500 |
selling and customer-service |
1500000 |
1410750 |
Total cost |
10440000 |
10972200 |
Operating profit |
7560000 |
8872800 |
Variance |
1312800 |
Favorable |
Requirement-6
The four perspectives of balance score card for Zhivago Brands along with their relative measures are given below:
Perspective |
Measure |
2016 |
2017 |
Financial |
Profit margin |
42% |
45% |
Customer |
Increase in new customers |
56 |
21 |
Innovation and learning |
Number of times faulty materials |
9 |
2 |
Internal processes |
Late delivered ratio to total units sold |
2.00% |
0.63% |
The financial perspective refers to the measurement of business performance from the financial view points. For this purpose, profit margin ratio has been taken as the measure of performance. In the year 2016, the firm earned 42% profit margin which increased to 45% in the year 2017. This shows that the financial performance of the firm has improved in the current year.
In order to measure the business performance from the customer’s perspective, the increase in new customers has been taken as the performance measure. It could be observed that the firm added 56 new customers to its kitty in the year 2016; however, it could add only 21 new customers in the year 2017. This shows that the performance from the customer’s view point has not been good in the current year (Valmohammadi and Ahmadi, 2015).
Further, innovation and learning perspective has been analyzed with reference to number of times faulty material returned to the supplier. In the year 2016, 9 times faulty material was returned to the suppliers which decreased significantly in the year 2017 to 2. The decrease in the number of faulty material returns shows that the firm is improving in terms of innovation and learning.
Internal processes perspective has been measured with reference to late delivery ratio to total deliveries made. In the year 2016, the ratio was 2% and it decreased to 0.63% in the year 2017 showing improvement in the internal processes (Valmohammadi and Ahmadi, 2015).
Case Study-2
Requirement-1
Large Retailer Chain |
Smaller Retailers |
|
Manufacturing costs |
10,800,000.00 |
7,200,000.00 |
Order filling costs |
484,800.00 |
323,200.00 |
Sales force costs allocated |
240,000.00 |
160,000.00 |
Total |
11,524,800.00 |
7,683,200.00 |
Units sold |
27,000.00 |
18,000.00 |
Cost per bicycle |
426.84 |
426.84 |
Manufacturing costs |
18,000,000.00 |
Cost driver (units sold) |
45000 |
Cost per driver |
400.00 |
Order filling costs |
808,000.00 |
Cost driver (Orders placed) |
1,212.00 |
Cost per driver |
666.67 |
Sales force costs allocated |
400,000.00 |
Cost driver (Number of sales calls ) |
300.00 |
Cost per driver |
1,333.33 |
Large Retailer Chain |
Smaller Retailers |
|
Manufacturing costs |
10,800,000.00 |
7,200,000.00 |
(27000*400) |
(18000*400) |
|
Order filling costs |
8,000.00 |
800,000.00 |
(12*666.67) |
(1200*666.67) |
|
Sales force costs allocated |
8,000.00 |
392,000.00 |
(6*1333.33) |
(294*1333.33) |
|
Total |
10,816,000.00 |
8,392,000.00 |
Units sold |
27,000.00 |
18,000.00 |
Cost per bicycle |
400.59 |
466.22 |
Requirement-3
The cost per bike when computed using single cost driver i.e. units, arrives at $426.84 and $426.84 for large retailer chain and smaller retailers respectively. Thus, the cost per bike is same for both the customer groups. However, when the computation is revised taking ABM cost allocation methodology, the cost per bike gets changed. Under ABM methodology, the cost per bike for large retailer chain works out to be $400.59 and that for smaller retailer chain it works out to be $466.22. Thus, it could be observe that under ABM cost allocation bike made for large retailer chain get cheaper while the bikes made for smaller retailer chain get expensive. The cost allocation under ABM is done applying different cost drivers for different types of costs. The use of different cost drivers removes the biasness and helps in allocating fair portion of the costs to the products or services (Schutzer, Arthur and Anscher, 2016).
Requirement-4
Currently, the competitor is selling bikes for large retailer chain at $469.53 (426.84*110%). If the competitor offers 8% discount on the current selling price, the revised price would be $431.97. So, to be competitive in the market, Mike the Bike would need to bring the prices down from $469.53 to somewhere equal to the competitor’s prices i.e. $431.97.
One can observe that when ABM cost allocation is applied, the cost per bike for large retailer chain falls to $400.59. Applying 10% mark up, Mike the Bike can offer it at $440.65. Thus, it can reduce the price from $469.53 to $440.65 and give a tough fight to the competitor.
Case Study 3
Requirement-1
The profit of Rotor Electrics is $98 and that of Green Acres is $790. The consolidated profit of SSHA Holdings Ltd is $888. This is the case where Rotor Electrics sells its products to external customers instead of transferring the same to Green Acres.
Rotor Electrics |
Green Acres |
|
Selling Price per unit |
220 |
2100 |
Less: Production Cost per unit |
100 |
1100 |
Less: Selling Expenses (10% sales |
22 |
210 |
Profit per unit |
98 |
790 |
Units sold (assumed) |
1 |
1 |
SSHA Holdings Ltd |
888 |
Requirement-2
The profit of Rotor Electrics is $278 and that of Green Acres is $610. The consolidated profit of SSHA Holdings Ltd is $888. This is the case where Rotor Electrics does not sell its products to external customers but transfers the same to Green Acres at transfer price of $400.
Rotor Electrics |
Green Acres |
|
Selling Price/ transfer price per unit |
400 |
2100 |
Less: Production Cost per unit |
100 |
1280 |
(1100-220+400) |
||
Less: Selling Expenses (10% sales |
22 |
210 |
Profit per unit |
278 |
610 |
Units sold (assumed) |
1 |
1 |
SSHA Holdings Ltd |
888 |
Requirement-3
Due to this transfer pricing decision, the profit margin ratio of Rotor Electrics would increase to 69.50% from 44.55% while the profit margin ratio of Green Acres would decrease to 29.04% from 37.62%.
Case Study-4
Level of management |
Strategy |
Performance measure |
Enterprise strategy level |
Increasing focus on the quality and quality of production through lucrative incentive plans |
Production output ratio Defective production ratio |
Corporate strategy level |
Formulating policy for incentives for different teams with the objective to enhance their performance |
Team’s output vs resource |
Business strategy level |
Implementing the incentive scheme and monitoring the targets on a daily basis |
Daily targets vs achievement |
Functional strategy level |
Communicating the team’s targets and breaking the team’s targets into individual’s targets |
Individual target vs achievement |
References
Faisal Ahammad, M., Mook Lee, S., Malul, M. and Shoham, A., 2015. Behavioral ambidexterity: The impact of incentive schemes on productivity, motivation, and performance of employees in commercial banks. Human Resource Management, 54(S1), pp.s45-s62.
Grifell-Tatjé, E. and Lovell, C.A.K., 2014. Productivity, price recovery, capacity constraints and their financial consequences. Journal of Productivity Analysis, 41(1), pp.3-17.
Kozlova, T., Zambrzhitckaia, E., Ivanova, N., Dolgopolov, O. and Makovchuk, I., 2016. Management aspect of transfer pricing for operating companies within iron and steel holding corporations. Indian Journal of Science and Technology, 9(14).
Schutzer, M.E., Arthur, D.W. and Anscher, M.S., 2016. Time-driven activity-based costing: a comparative cost analysis of whole-breast radiotherapy versus balloon-based brachytherapy in the management of early-stage breast cancer. Journal of oncology practice, 12(5), pp.e584-e593.
Valmohammadi, C. and Ahmadi, M., 2015. The impact of knowledge management practices on organizational performance: A balanced scorecard approach. Journal of Enterprise Information Management, 28(1), pp.131-159.
Essay Writing Service Features
Our Experience
No matter how complex your assignment is, we can find the right professional for your specific task. Contact Essay is an essay writing company that hires only the smartest minds to help you with your projects. Our expertise allows us to provide students with high-quality academic writing, editing & proofreading services.Free Features
Free revision policy
$10Free bibliography & reference
$8Free title page
$8Free formatting
$8How Our Essay Writing Service Works
First, you will need to complete an order form. It's not difficult but, in case there is anything you find not to be clear, you may always call us so that we can guide you through it. On the order form, you will need to include some basic information concerning your order: subject, topic, number of pages, etc. We also encourage our clients to upload any relevant information or sources that will help.
Complete the order formOnce we have all the information and instructions that we need, we select the most suitable writer for your assignment. While everything seems to be clear, the writer, who has complete knowledge of the subject, may need clarification from you. It is at that point that you would receive a call or email from us.
Writer’s assignmentAs soon as the writer has finished, it will be delivered both to the website and to your email address so that you will not miss it. If your deadline is close at hand, we will place a call to you to make sure that you receive the paper on time.
Completing the order and download