Improvement of the costs and quality in project management.
Croitoru, Ana-Maria ; Avramescu, Valeriu ; Craciunoiu, Stefan 等
1. INTRODUCTION
On the international market all projects that have low cost and
maximum efficiency are in request.
The concept of life-cycle costing or LCC consist in
"accumulation of the activities costs which come during the entire
life-cycle if the product, from design until its abandonment by the
manufacturer and by the consumer" (Berliner & Brimson, 1988).
The cost design for a product is made using the target-costing. On
this line are necessary to be remembered the next elements of knowledge
and design.
Target-costing method goes in a strategic managerial demarche of
the products, within the cost bearer is analyzed during its life-cycle
and especially in the design stage.
The calculation matrices for target-costing are the engineering
value such as Lawrence Miles defined it in its paper "Techniques of
the analyses and value engineering" which underline: "Without
the determination of the involved costs, the decisions would never be
able to allow the realization of the adequate value". So, to be
efficient, the interest can't be limited only to the values
production from the technical and economical point of view, it must be
taken in consideration the product functions in terms of the involved
cost in the condition of a given cost. In a general conception, as it
stand from L.W. Crum paper, "The value engineering consist in a
series of systematic products, orientated to the realization of
necessary functions with minimum cost, without losing sight of the
quality, efficiency, performance and delivery" (Barringer et al.,
1996).
One of the main properties of the evaluation system by costs of the
project is given by the necessity of given to the client of well
manufactured product, superior quality and accessible costs.
Some projects are expensive, with moderate durability coefficients
which must be improved to have costs as lower as possible with a
efficiency as higher as possible. On the international market all
projects that have low cost and maximum efficiency are in request.
Related to value engineering, target-costing is a formal demarche
orientated to the functional analyses of the value-price-benefit-cost
ratio. Analyzed as a unitary and closed concept of the management by
costs, target-costing is characterized by the estimation of values as
functions, of the selling prices of the complete costs and of the
benefit per life-cycle of the product.
Such a management is characterized by the next characteristics: it
will be at the same level during life-cycle of the product; it focus on
the costs from the development stage of the product; it bases and uses
information of prices about market and starts from the information of
costs orientated to the market; it bases on the budget of the product
functions; the base of evaluation is represented by the complete costs.
Discussed as a managements demarche, target-costing are based on
the rule that the market is making the sell prices and not the companies
costs. So, to make the profitableness must go to the cost price, taking
in consideration the fact that from selling price must be cut the desire
margin to deduce the target-costing (Bouquin, 2004).
In the same time, because the market is nu interested by the
structure of the fix and variable costs or in direct and overhead
expenses, it is necessary to cover on long term all companies'
costs. Under these circumstances, the sell prices of the product must
cover all cost and the profit.
Planning phase during which the objectives and modalities of action
of the organization, in terms of getting results and performance
products able to satisfy customer demand .Make stage is implemented in
processes that are planned Verification includes system monitoring,
assessment and reporting processes, outcomes, objectives and
requirements of product. Plan of action-it is the phase in which
elaborates and implements strategies to continue imbunatirea performance
process. Effectiveness of activity-based process that receives input
data and converts the data in the output, consists in identifying and
managing interrelated processes. In this sense approach based on the
process should include identification, especially management of
interaction processes. Importance of establishing policy and quality
objectives in any organization, policies and objectives are able to
provide a pointer to guide the market profile due role in managing
resources and obtaining results.
As can be inferred, the relationship between policy objectives and
is a direct and biunivoca. If the policy of quality within an
organization provides a framework for setting and reviewing goals, the
latter must follow a consistent policy in the set, but with imposed
condition and improvement.
Doing like that, are found and solved problems and special
interests, possible conflicts between objects are found in time, and on
this way are avoided future costs necessary to modify because of the
delays in promoting the product on the market.
2. DELIMITATIONS AND BACKGROUND
It is said that Japan industry has its competitive on international
market due to a way of thinking orientated towards (Calin &
Caraiani, 1997).
The acquisition cost is the only value well known and indentified
in the structure of the life-cycle cost, but is only superficial
information. The structure of the majority of the other costs associated
to the life-cycle costs for the equipment or systems is full of
incertitude. LCC is, from the procedural point of view, an evaluation
method, based on hypothesis. As well as all known evaluation techniques,
hypothesis can lead to the important cost growing, if are not used also
logic reasoning.
Some of the limits of the LCC method (Epuran et al.,1998): LCC is
not a precise science, anyone can have different answers and these one
are not true or fall--are only acceptable or not acceptable;
The LCC results are only estimations and can't be ever more
precise than the input data and the intervals used within
estimation--particularly, this thing is true for cost-risk analyses;
The LCC estimations are not precise. The precision errors are hard
to measure because the variations taken by statistic methods are usually
big;
LCC methods are good with limited data base and the data
acquisition regarding the logistic and exploitation is very hard and
very expensive;
LCC cost models must be calibrated in order to be true;
LCC models need big quantity of data, but usually there are only
small quantity of data and most data aren't reliable;
LCC needs scenarios for: the way the money spending model will be
made for equipment acquisition, the way the model will grow up during
using, the way defects will appear, the way reparations and replacements
will be made, the way the evaluation procedures will work for different
costs (the design cost, work cost, materials cost, the parts wear,
replacement parts cost, the shipping cost, the maintenance cost), for
each time period, the way the model will be used for a period of a few
years, how many parts will be manufactured / sold and other similar
details need to make the cost scenarios; the most details need major
extrapolations, and getting data is difficult;
The LCC methods made by sellers and cost models of holding (COO),
made by the final sellers, have low credibility, because of the using of
some different values for each model.
The results of the LCC analyses are useful as instrument of compare
/ limitation of the budgets and the production of good LCC results can
be done only by working in team, because is necessary a sum of
specialized expertise.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
3. CONCLUSION
We can say that the size of the end life cost is measured by
appealing to the residual value.
The residual value is an estimated value which can be obtained by a
company from selling the product, after cutting the estimated selling
price, respective the estimated value that can be recovered from
cassation or using a product.
According to historic costs, the residual value can be defined as
being the estimated value of the product in dollars, at the present
value of the dollars (without taking in consideration the inflation), at
the end of the life-cycle of the product. The residual value must be
calculated taking in consideration the net value of any costs with
estimated assignation. In some cases, the actives will have a negative
residual value, such as, for example, when it is possible that the
entity to realize costs for assignation of the active or for bringing
the product to a previous stage, like in the case of some operations,
like retreat from mines, which suppose the environment protections or
other laws. In these situations, the period decreasing must be a higher
value than initial cost of the product, in such a way that, when the
product is transferred, to be signed on an estimated debt equal to the
negative residual valued. The residual value is, like other aspects of
the depreciation method, under an annual evaluation (Fabrycky &
Blachard, 1991).
If was chosen the method of re-evaluation for measuring the
corporate immobilized actives, the residual value must analyzed each
time the active is re-evaluated. This thing is made using the dates
regarding the possible value for similar actives, which ends the
life-cycle at the re-evaluation time, after there were used in similar
goals like the active that is analyzed. One more time, can't not be
taken in consideration the anticipated inflation, and the future value
can't be considered like updated value for knowing the money value
in time.
Like for accounting based on the historic costs for companies
actives, if the negative residual value is anticipated, this must be
known efficient during life-cycle of the active, taking in consideration
the supplementary depreciation, in such a way that the estimated debit
to be assumed until the assignation moment.
4. REFERENCES
Alazard, C. & Separi, S. (1998). Controle de gestion, Manuel
Applications, The fourth Edition, Paris
Barringer, H.P.; David, P.E. & Weber, P. (1996). Life Cycle
Cost Tutorial Fifth International Conference on Process Plant
Reliability, Houston, Texas
Bouquin, H. (2004). Accounting management. TIPOMOLDOVA Editure,
Iasi
Calin O. & Caraiani C. (1997). Calculation method as the method
of accounting, The Finance Magazine
Crum, L.W.' Value engineering
Epuran M., Babaifa V. & Grosu C. (1998). Accounting and
management control, Economical Editure
Fabrycky, J. & Blachard, B. (1991). S'Life-Cycle Cost and
Economic Analysis, Prentice Hall