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.
Article navigation
1 August 1995
Editors
Review Article|
August 01 1995
Implementation considerations for activity‐based cost systems in service firms: the unavoidable challenge Available to Purchase
Soren Kock
Soren Kock
Department of Marketing, Swedish School of Economics, Vasa, Finland.
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6070
Print ISSN: 0025-1747
© MCB UP Limited
1995
Management Decision (1995) 33 (6): 57–63.
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, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/00251749510087669
Download citation file:
Suggested Reading
Customer profitability analysis:: an activity‐based costing approach
Managerial Auditing Journal (October,1995)
What Customer Orders Really Cost
Mid-American Journal of Business (April,1998)
The exclusion of indirect costs from efficiency benchmarking
Benchmarking: An International Journal (July,2008)
Effects of the Austrian road toll system on companies
International Journal of Physical Distribution & Logistics Management (February,2006)
Cross‐Functional Interface of Marketing and Accounting
Mid-American Journal of Business (April,1998)
Related Chapters
Writing Winning Distance Education Teaching and Learning Grants
Electronic Learning Communities: Issues and Practices
The Evolution Is Now: Service Robots, Behavioral Bias and Emotions
Emotions and Service in the Digital Age
Managing Information and Knowledge in Service Industries
Sustaining Competitive Advantage Via Business Intelligence, Knowledge Management, and System Dynamics
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
