ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 2001: Product and particularly customer profitability are black holes in most managers’ understanding of their business. Identifying customer revenue is easy but identifying what they cost - so we can understand whether or not they are profitable - is difficult. In a world in which competition, regulation and the increasing use of the Internet put ever greater pressure on margins it is vitally important to understand both product- and customer-profitability. Activity Based Management (ABM) enables you to do this. This book explains the power of using ABM to increase the profitability of your business. It provides step-by-step guidance on basic principles, comparisons between traditional methods, definitions of processes, activities and cost-drivers as well as details of data collection techniques and implementation steps. Through the book’s numerous detailed examples a logical picture builds up of how to obtain the benefits that ABM can deliver. On its own ABM will change management decision-making: by showing how ABM also supports other profit improvement initiatives such as Business Process Reengineering, Shareholder Value Added and Customer Relationship Management, managers will learn how they can use the best possible toolkit to put their business firmly on the road to leaps in profitability.

chapter 1|5 pages

Introduction

part I|45 pages

The Context

chapter 2|3 pages

Historical perspective

chapter 3|6 pages

What is ABM?

chapter 5|25 pages

The ABM framework

part II|63 pages

ABM in Practice

chapter 6|15 pages

The ABM flow of costs

chapter 7|23 pages

The basic principles of building models

chapter 8|11 pages

Undertaking an ABM project

chapter 9|9 pages

Integrating improvement approaches

part III|87 pages

Case Studies

part IV|6 pages

Conclusions

chapter 11|4 pages

Pulling it all together