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Purpose

To show how we can turn cost management practices around and look forward, concentrate on managing risks and costs before they occur.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper expands my PhD work, which was a synthesis of three major ideas (life‐cycle costing, activity‐based costing and Monte Carlo methods), design of an approach and testing the approach in many real‐life cases. This paper is to show how this method adds utility in strategic cost management.

Findings

My research so far shows that the approach adds the intended value in cost management in general and in strategic cost management in particular.

Research limitations/implications

Since the method has been tested in many settings and rests on well‐tested theory serious limitations are avoided. However, future research should focus on how the method can be simplified and applied in budgeting, i.e. become more operational/tactical.

Practical implications

The main practical implication is that cost management practices need to become less historically oriented and more forward looking so that costs can be eliminated and not just reported. How this can be achieved is shown in practical application.

Originality/value

Both researchers and practitioners can benefit from this paper in that they can see how the merger of Monte Carlo methods, life‐cycle costing and activity‐based costing reduce the need for accurate numbers and improve the quality of cost management in general.

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