Process Value Analysis - PVA

  

You run a manufacturing facility that makes monster trucks. Every time you receive a shipment of parts, the guy driving the forklift drives in a circle three times before he takes the items off the shipping deck and puts them into the warehouse. Are the three spins adding to final product? Or does the forklift guy just...have issues?

Time for a little process value analysis. It's a formalized process of looking at what everyone at the company is doing, and then deciding whether it adds to the final product.

Managers utilize PVA to judge the processes involved in producing a company's goods or services. The goal is to identify activities that don't add value to the process (and eliminate them), or find procedures that could be made more efficient.

Basically, the managers look at each of the firm's business operations and assign all the company's costs to the various tasks. That way, they can see where productivity improvements can be made, where they can eliminate steps (like spinning a few forklift donuts before moving shipments into the warehouse), and where more resources should be invested.

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Cost Accounting: How Does Differential A...1 Views

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and finance Allah shmoop How does differential analysis affect pricing

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decisions How well nicely we hope Yeah here's the basic

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gist of differential pricing analysis that whatever price we're currently

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charging for our pine scented hemorrhoid cream well it's not

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optimal right We want to set the ideal price so

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we can reap the ideal or maximum level of profit

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Underlying this whole discussion is the slope of the demand

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curve for the product So think about some examples here

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Let's step into a time machine and visit nineteen ninety

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eight The Land of Steve Urkal Blockbuster Video when it's

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so existed and peak market power for the Windows operating

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system Well simple is it seemed to us now there

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simply was no other purveyor of operating systems in that

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era And without an OS well your computer didn't work

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and you needed a computer to run your word processor

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to dial up the Internet and check your air Well

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email you know to play solitaire Well Microsoft could basically

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charge whatever it likes for that operating system At the

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peak Bill Gates and his pals charged about two hundred

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bucks a unit for their Windows operating system to be

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installed in your computer so you could use it well

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The demand curve for Windows in this era Well it

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was almost vertical like they could raise prices with impunity

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and the volumes they sold would barely diminished So people

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didn't have any other choices if they wanted a functional

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computer and so they'd pay quote anything unquote for the

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Microsoft OS The opposite is true for pure commodities right

01:35

Think copper or bananas or chalk or missile grade plutonium

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We'LL Copper is the same copper no matter where it

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comes from there are different purity ranges but inside those

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standards it doesn't make a difference whether the copper came

01:48

from Chicago or Nairobi or Southeast Moscow Well it comes

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in boxes and bins and it's the same everywhere It's

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hard to have a brand name in copper you could

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sell Maybe LeBron James endorsed copper and still not have

02:02

much pricing power There are too many choices and each

02:04

unit is essentially the same Nobody has any advantage in

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their product over anyone else And because of this fact

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if buyers can buy the same copper for a penny

02:13

less per pound net of shipping in taxes and whatever

02:15

other transport grief there is Well then they'LL buy it

02:18

cheaper so that demand curve is almost flat like tiny

02:22

moves in price mean a massive move in demand on

02:26

the supply side of things The corollary positive element here

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comes from the leveraging of technology meaning that if you

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can find a way for robots using solar power to

02:35

mind copper for ten percent less than the human labour

02:38

mining system well then you can keep the same profit

02:41

margins and sell the copper for way less than what

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everyone else is selling it for In real life most

02:47

products fall somewhere between the nineteen nineties era windows example

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and the situation with a pure commodity like copper Well

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to find the optimal price you use differential analysis to

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test all the possible points along the demand curves You

03:00

crunch the numbers to discover what each increase in price

03:03

will do to the amount of items you sell Raised

03:06

the price of dollar How many fewer units do you

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sell Lower it a dollar How many more do you

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sell Well once you have your data set you confined

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the point where your revenue and or profit are maximized

03:17

it's basically your casino and you want to make sure

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that every table and every slot machine does just enough

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to keep everyone playing while bringing in max profits to

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the house And well if you have to bribe people

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