Problem

Evaluating the Profitability of ServicesGore Range Carpet Cleaning is a family-owned busin...

Evaluating the Profitability of Services

Gore Range Carpet Cleaning is a family-owned business in Eagle-Vail, Colorado. For its services, the company has always charged a flat fee per hundred square feet of carpet cleaned. The current fee is $22.95per hundred square feet. However, there is some question about whether the company is actually making any money on jobs for some customers–particularly those located on more remote ranches that require considerable travel time. The owner’s daughter, home for the summer from college, has suggested investigating this question using activity-based costing. After some discussion, a simple system consisting of four activity cost pools seemed to be adequate. The activity cost pools and their activity measures appear below:

Activity Cost Pool

Activity Measure

Activity for the year

Cleaning carpets

Square feet cleaned (OOs)

10,000 hundred square feet

Travel to jobs

Miles driven

50,000 miles

Job support

Number of jobs

  1,800 jobs

Other (organization-sustaining and idle capacity costs)

None

Not applicable

The total cost of operating the company for the year is $340,000, which includes the following costs:

Wages

$140.000

Cleaning supplies

25,000

Cleaning equipment depreciation

10,000

Vehicle expenses

30.000

Office expenses

60,000

President's compensation

75,000

Total cost

8340,000

Resource consumption is distributed across the activities as follows:

 

Distribution of Resource Consumption Across Activities

 

Cleaning Carpets

Travel to Jobs

Job Support

Other

Total

Wages

75%

15%

0%

10%

100%

Cleaning supplies

100%

0%

0%

0%

100%

Cleaning equipment depreciation

70%

0%

0%

30%

100%

Vehicle expenses

0%

80%

0%

20%

100%

Office expenses

0%

0%

60%

40%

100%

President's compensation

0%

0%

30%

70%

100%

Job support consists of receiving calls from potential customers at the home office, scheduling jobs, billing, resolving issues, and so on.

Required:

1. Using Exhibit 7-5 as a guide, prepare the first-stage allocation of costs to the activity cost pools.

2. Using Exhibit 7-6 as a guide, compute the activity rates for the activity cost pools.

3. The company recently completed a 6 hundred square-foot carpet-cleaning job at the Lazy Bee Ranch–a 52-mile round-trip from the company’s offices in Eagle-Vail. Compute the cost of this job using the activity-based costing system.

4. The revenue from the Lazy Bee Ranch was $137.70 (6 hundred square-feet at $22.95 per hundred square feet). Using Exhibit 7- 11 as a guide, prepare a report showing the margin from this job.

5. What do you conclude concerning the profitability of the Lazy Bee Ranch job? Explain.

6. What advice would you give the president concerning pricing jobs in the future?

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Solutions For Problems in Chapter 7