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Management Control System

Group 5 Dheeraj Seth, 21 Dinshah Anklesvaria, 22 Divya Sanjiva, 23

Fazalabbas Munni, 24 Gaurav Advani, 25

Q) "Adopting profit centre approach may not be an appropriate solution always". Do you agree? Give reasons for answer quoting various situations in the business.
Ans: A profit center is a unit of a company that generates revenue in excess of its expenses. It is expected that, through the sale of goods or services, the unit will turn a profit. This is in contrast to a cost center, which is a unit inside a company that generates expenses with no responsibility for creating revenue. The only expectation a cost center has is to lower expenses whenever possible while staying with a specific budget that is determined at the corporate level. Beyond that simple definition, the term "profit center" has also come to represent a form of management accounting that is organized around the profit center concept. Companies that have adopted the profit center system have organized all of their business units as either profit centers or cost centers, and all company financial results are reported in that manner. Adopting a profit center system often requires a radical shift in corporate philosophy and culture, but it can yield great returns in net before tax (NBT) profits. According to an article in Business Solutions, the data collection company Data Recognition, Inc. made the shift to a profit center-based system and was pleased with the results. The profit centers allow to better identify specific gains and losses. And that's critically important for a growing business. All companies, no matter what size, have both cost and profit For example, in most companies, units such as human resources and purchasing are strictly cost centers. The company has to spend money to operate those units, and neither has any means of producing a profit to offset those expenses. They exist solely to make it possible for other areas of the company to make money. However, without those two departments, the company could not survive. All companies have profit centers and cost centers, but not all companies organize their accounting practices around the profit center concept. In fact, most companies do things the time-honored way, producing overall profit and loss statements for the company as a whole, without making each business unit accountable for generating a profit. A cost center may actually provide services that could generate a profit if they were offered on the open market. But in most corporate environments, cost centers are not expected to generate a profit and operation costs are treated as overhead. Departments that are typically cost centers include information technology, human resources, accounting, and others. However, the satisfied acceptance that some departments will always be cost centers and can never generate a profit has changed at some companies. They recognize that cost centers can turn into profit centers by taking the services they used to automatically provide to the company's other business units and making those services available for a fee.

In a business, every cost is supposed to have an ROI, and the cost is incurred only when the ROI promises to be more than the investment itself. As an example of how a cost center may be turned into a profit center, Consider a company's information technology (IT) department. This department may provide such services as computer-aided design, network administration, or database development to other units of the company. These services have value, and they are important to the company's overall success, but they do not generate a profit. IT may charge the "cost" of its services back to the department that requested them, but it does not make a profit because it charges only for its actual costs incurred, without adding an extra margin for profit. The unit that requested the services absorbs the cost as part of its overhead; or, in some companies, the cost is not charged back and is simply part of the company's overall overhead. There are two ways that the IT department could make the switch from cost center to profit center. First, instead of writing off its services to overhead or charging them at cost, the IT department could be allowed to bill other departments for its services at going market rates. The second way the IT department could become a profit center is if the company determined that the department was one of the best in the industry, better in fact than some companies that existed just to provide IT services. The company could then allow the department the freedom to sell its services to outside customers. Thus, the department would still operate as a cost center in its dealings with other units inside the company, but it would operate as a profit center when it provided services to outside companies. Just as the company's senior management could decide that the IT department was good enough to operate as a profit center by soliciting outside clients, so too could it decide that the department is behind the times and is not providing adequate services. This would result in management choosing to shut down the department and contract with an outside vendor for the company's IT needs. Considering that HR is a crucially important function but alas, is usually bogged down by routine things like recruitment etc., and not in value-addition activities like training and development. When this change occurs, HR can be an indirect profit center through the following actions : 1. Savings through : a. Negotiation during recruitment : Trying to get the best for the least ; b. Training : For example healthcare training to save on health-related downtime and absentism /

medical bills etc. ; reducing wastages through job-oriented hard skills training etc. c. Reducing attrition, thereby cost of recruitment. 2. Raised productivity through value addition such as Hard Skills & Soft Skills training for augmenting proper job-related skills, motivation, engagement and focus etc. Thus If both the department exists only as a cost center, it faces enormous pressure to provide services at the lowest possible costs. Because it does not generate profits, it must constantly fight to remain in existence and must fight off attempts to slash its budget to free up cash for the company's profit centers.

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