Published on: June 01, 2008 Type of content: WHITE PAPER Format:
Unknown
Length: 8 pages Price: FREE
Still have questions?
Overview:
To maximize profitability, companies must know the true cost of making and delivering their products and services. Traditional cost accounting, devised in a simpler era, does not satisfy that need. Then, direct costs (chiefly materials and labor) were a large percentage of total costs, so the inability to determine indirect cost allocations was not an important factor in determining what a company earned on each of its products. Today, these indirect and overhead costs represent a far greater percentage of the total; moreover, the "product" a company sells is much more likely to be a bundled with related services, muddying the cost structure still more. Consequently, how a company allocates these indirect and overhead costs is crucial to managing profitability.
/%@ include file="/templates/metrics/user_info.jsp" %>
TechTarget provides enterprise IT professionals with the information they need to perform their jobs - from developing strategy, to making cost-effective IT purchase decisions and managing their organizations' IT projects - with its network of technology-specific Web sites, events and magazines.
BYTE Digest editors every month analyze and evaluate the best articles from Information Week, EE Times, Dr. Dobb's Journal, Network Computing, Sys Admin,
and dozens of other CMP publications—bringing
you critical news and information about wireless communication,
computer security, software development, embedded systems,
and more!