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Cost Accounting: What do you need to know about product costs in a nutshell? 1 Views
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- 00:00
And finance Allah shmoop What do you need to know
- 00:04
about product costing In a nutshell Products there what companies
- 00:11
make and sell and well track and fix and upgrade
- 00:16
and lather Rinse Repeat until they make a lot of
- 00:19
profit or go bankrupt well especially if the product that
Full Transcript
- 00:21
they make is shampoo Well the tracking and accounting for
- 00:25
products is actually strangely complex Why Well accountants have to
- 00:30
find ways to build clients right Yeah that's an accounting
- 00:34
joke Assorted But actually the tracking of products is in
- 00:37
theory a good way to optimize the way in which
- 00:39
managers run a business So products get looked at through
- 00:43
a whole bunch of lenses like this one and this
- 00:46
one and this one Weird products Weird filtered lenses So
- 00:50
let's start by breaking up a product so that its
- 00:52
production fits into a time schema We'LL think about all
- 00:56
the units of shampoo for bald men that scalp and
- 01:00
shoulders makes in a quarter of a lot of units
- 01:02
and gas Bald men shampoo too It's not just for
- 01:05
you know the haired all right We'LL scalp and shoulders
- 01:07
and makes a million bottles in those ninety one day's
- 01:10
important point here Product costs are recognized not as the
- 01:15
stuff is made but rather as expenses when they are
- 01:19
sold So they all sit on the balance sheet as
- 01:21
an asset usually at their cost or book value until
- 01:25
told otherwise those our product costs But then there are
- 01:28
costs incurred keeping the home fires burning as it were
- 01:32
you know making the shampoo But the workers in the
- 01:34
factory keep being paid whether bottles are sold or not
- 01:38
Same deal with the electricity and gas bills and insurance
- 01:42
and rent and so on All those or costs incurred
- 01:45
in that period and in parallel period costs are usually
- 01:49
expensed in the period in which they were incurred like
- 01:52
a quarter or a month or a year is a
- 01:55
period to get a clearer picture of the meaning of
- 01:57
measuring and assessing of all things product Divide that shampoo
- 02:01
bottle into two components you know like that First comes
- 02:04
the direct manufacturing costs of that bottle Stuff like the
- 02:08
goop inside of it You know the bottle itself the
- 02:10
shrink wrapping and packaging for anti tampering security like it
- 02:15
would not be cool for a prankster It's safe way
- 02:17
to replace the shampoo in a bottle of shampoo for
- 02:21
haired people with Nair So that's direct direct cost to
- 02:24
make the thing Then you have indirect costs which includes
- 02:28
like well pretty much everything else Or at least all
- 02:31
the other things that go into the process of making
- 02:33
the shampoo You know from the capital originally spent like
- 02:37
interest on it and now being depreciated on the giant
- 02:40
twenty thousand gallons that oh gu to the commitments of
- 02:44
paying rent on the buildings for years ahead and insurance
- 02:48
and employee pension benefit things all indirect costs direct cost
- 02:53
break into a few subcategories Here is well so well
- 02:56
let's just note um you have materials like plastic bottle
- 02:59
goop inside shrink wrap safety rap thing cleverly called direct
- 03:04
materials costs or raw uncooked materials for a manufacturing company
- 03:09
that makes coffee mugs with swear words on them Well
- 03:12
it'd be the mug itself with raw materials of clay
- 03:15
and glaze and then the ink for the swears and
- 03:18
then the daily cost of the robot Engraving them all
- 03:22
raw materials and direct costs and you have to figure
- 03:25
out how you want allocate cost of the kiln to
- 03:27
drive that thing there That's probably a direct costs as
- 03:29
well Appreciating the capital cost toe by that robot though
- 03:33
the swear word righty two thousand That would be an
- 03:36
indirect costs Got it So if it was human and
- 03:39
not a robot then direct labor would be a cost
- 03:41
of the human painting on you and someone that's direct
- 03:46
labour And then you have the third component of direct
- 03:49
product costs here which is just overhead like think mush
- 03:52
pot for every other expense to be thrown into the
- 03:56
secretaries who take orders and manage the building Maintenance ops
- 03:59
the janitors and of course yes the lawyers Don't forget
- 04:02
the lawyers although we wish we could They're a part
- 04:04
of what's called indirect labor in that they you know
- 04:08
labour but only indirectly to do the most important part
- 04:11
of what shareholders wanted to dio with a company to
- 04:13
do anyway which is to produce mugs or shampoo or
- 04:17
whatever a given company does for a living So we
- 04:19
saw direct materials these things and of course there are
- 04:22
indirect materials like lube for the robot and solvent to
- 04:26
clean spilled clay and glaze off the floor and the
- 04:29
monthly cleaning service for that Oh Gu And also in
- 04:33
manufacturing overhead comes the depreciation of the cap ex or
- 04:36
capital expenditures and the amortization of sales output Deals like
- 04:40
those contracts on anything else They all go into the
- 04:43
mush pot so here's more vocab to throw it your
- 04:46
head as it relates to the cost of products or
- 04:48
product costing You have prime costs like no relation to
- 04:52
the rib Prime means primary stuff you need to build
- 04:56
units of your product It's not just the materials that
- 04:58
go into the mugs or shampoo bottles or whatever's It's
- 05:01
also the labour behind it that assembled it ever so
- 05:05
lovingly ish So the term prime cost is usually attributed
- 05:09
to companies who make some things from nothing's like That
- 05:12
shampoo maker takes eighteen parts lye soap dissolves It mixes
- 05:16
it with waters from Nee Paul then ads fourteen units
- 05:19
of whale blubber and four drops of chlorine which it
- 05:22
is carefully synthesized to be of jaws The right concentration
- 05:26
or density that is the shampoo maker makes the product
- 05:29
prime ingredients for primary costs But other manufacturers do more
- 05:33
assembling then making like think about a carmaker getting great
- 05:37
tax benefits and anti protectionist breaks by assembling cars in
- 05:42
the country in which they're being sold That companies selling
- 05:44
oh say Ford trucks in France Lew Ford might have
- 05:48
made their engine in Mexico then bought tires locally from
- 05:52
Michelin and then brought in windshield wiper seats and other
- 05:55
leather goods from Morocco and then the electric guidance system
- 05:59
from Israel and well the rest shipped in from the
- 06:01
U S Of a Well all the parts were made
- 06:04
They just needed labor to assemble them in France and
- 06:07
be all ready to drive on little tiny one D
- 06:10
five hundred year old roads with bottles In that case
- 06:12
the manufacturing term for product cost really revolves around conversion
- 06:17
costs That is you're converting already assembled subsets of raw
- 06:20
materials into a finished good which people actually want Yes
- 06:24
they actually want these things So if these air manufacturing
- 06:27
costs and what are non manufacturing costs Well basically two
- 06:31
things the company has to be organized or administered So
- 06:34
there are secretaries and lawyers and CEOs and CFOs and
- 06:37
line managers and yes accountants They're all overhead They don't
- 06:40
actually make the product They just rule over people who
- 06:43
do and they get lumped as administrative costs They you
- 06:47
know administer So that's one category The other marketing Yeah
- 06:51
like how do you get stores to stock your shampoo
- 06:54
for bald men And how do you assess what color
- 06:57
bottle works best to sell at Christmas time And how
- 07:00
do you know if you should suggest a retail price
- 07:03
of seven ninety nine seven ninety five or just say
- 07:05
about eight bucks Yeah the marketing department deals with all
- 07:09
that and here's where it gets dicey Let's say you
- 07:12
sell five different types of shampoo Shampoo for bald men
- 07:15
shampoo for bald women Yes much smaller market shampoo for
- 07:18
the nether region And then of course shampoo for Democrats
- 07:21
in the Blue Bottle and shampoo for Republicans in the
- 07:24
Red One Yeah that's five products You spend one hundred
- 07:27
million dollars a year marketing them Well the division manager
- 07:30
of Shampoo for the Nether region just like all the
- 07:32
other managers gets paid on operating profits of her division
- 07:36
She feels she doesn't need marketing because everyone who wants
- 07:40
sf tnr yeah already knows about it and buys it
- 07:43
secretly Yeah they pay cash and quietly walk out of
- 07:46
the store Yet she gets charged a product cost of
- 07:50
one fifth of the marketing budget or twenty million dollars
- 07:53
that goes on her bottom line against her bottom line
- 07:55
So she gets paid a lot less in bonus money
- 07:58
then does the flagship brand shampoo for Bald Man which
- 08:00
really doesn't need the marketing spin because it's a very
- 08:03
competitive out there Well she might argue that the marketing
- 08:05
should be allocated according to the units sold of that
- 08:08
particular product or based on a brand Surveys toe why
- 08:12
people buy a given product But just dividing the marketing
- 08:15
spend in fifties and an equally apportioning it feels very
- 08:19
unfair to her right and make sense Well The company's
- 08:22
most senior management however wants this to be a team
- 08:25
company a team production a team vibe in its corporate
- 08:28
culture So it applies a kind of cost allocation socialism
- 08:33
to the big expenses They're not fair talked to a
- 08:36
bald guy or gal about fairness Yeah well what do 00:08:39.511 --> [endTime] you think Oh no
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