Implementation considerations for activity‐based cost systems in service firms: the unavoidable challenge
Abstract
Aims to increase the knowledge about benefits and drawbacks when a service firm implements activity‐based cost systems as a managerial tool for calculating the costs of different services. States that an activity‐based costing system has its starting‐point in a customer′s total perceived service quality as the needs of the customers must be met; otherwise the service firm is unable to produce the right services at the right quality level. Claims that in service firms a common problem is that overhead costs are extensive and that it is difficult to allocate costs to the right services as many activities must be carried out to produce a service. States that in some service firms it is, however, quite easy to trace costs to the right service, e.g. a bookkeeping firm.
Keywords
Citation
Kock, S. (1995), "Implementation considerations for activity‐based cost systems in service firms: the unavoidable challenge", Management Decision, Vol. 33 No. 6, pp. 57-63. https://doi.org/10.1108/00251749510087669
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1995, MCB UP Limited