The components of value measurement: the worth of a company goes beyond dollars and cents.EXECUTIVE SUMMARY * THE VALUE MEASUREMENT AND REPORTING Collaborative (VMRC VMRC Virginia Marine Resources Commission VMRC Valley Mountain Regional Center (Stockton, California) VMRC Virtual Machine Remote Client (Microsoft) VMRC Virtual Machine Remote Control ) is a global effort intended to help boards of directors, senior management, investors and other stakeholders Stakeholders All parties that have an interest, financial or otherwise, in a firm-stockholders, creditors, bondholders, employees, customers, management, the community, and the government. make better strategic decisions using value measurement and reporting. Its members believe the value of a company lies not only in its present operational value but also in its potential to create value in the future. * BUSINESSES REPORT VERY LITTLE EXTERNALLY about their human, relational or organizational capital You can assist by [ editing it] now. . As a result it's it's 1. Contraction of it is. 2. Contraction of it has. See Usage Note at its. it's it is or it has it's be ~have difficult for investors to know how well a company measures or manages factors that have the potential to create future value. The VMRC did research on how human capital, customers and clients and innovation affect future value creation in three industries--natural resources, pharmaceuticals and telecommunications Communicating information, including data, text, pictures, voice and video over long distance. See communications. . EXECUTIVE SUMMARY * A LARGE MAJORITY OF NATURAL RESOURCES companies did not disclose any measures that would allow observers to better understand the value of their customer base. Among pharmaceutical companies, only 19% commented on human capital and even then it was to report only the number of employees. * THE VMRC RESEARCH CONFIRMED THERE IS LITTLE publicly available information on the factors that drive a business's future value. No companies in the three sectors commented about the number of product categories purchased per customer or the expected life of a customer. Only pharmaceuticals companies disclosed products they had under development. * WHILE MORE WORK IS NEEDED BEFORE COMPANIES disclose information about their potential for future growth, some have begun to reveal these critical data. Two companies in the research sample disclosed information about their virtual R&D team and two others provided details about the number of new ideas "New Ideas" is the debut single by Scottish New Wave/Indie Rock act The Dykeenies. It was first released as a Double A-side with "Will It Happen Tonight?" on July 17, 2006. The band also recorded a video for the track. they had generated. What creates value in a company? The Value Measurement and Reporting Collaborative (VMRC) believes value is defined not only in monetary units but also in objects, ideas, events or processes. The VMRC, in which the AICPA AICPA See American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). participates, is a global effort of the accounting profession to help boards of directors, senior management, investors and other stakeholders make better strategic decisions using value measurement and reporting. Its members say a company's worth exists not only in its present operational value as accounted for historically in its financial statements, but also in its potential to create future value. Managing the factors that influence corporate performance is one way management adds value to the bottom line. Every investment analyst tries to look beyond the financial data for information about a company's potential. Accordingly, CPAs in senior management, board members, analysts and investors should be interested in a framework of principles and criteria to measure and report value creation and maintenance. Research undertaken on the VMRC's behalf by Roland Roland (rō`lənd), the great French hero of the medieval Charlemagne cycle of chansons de geste, immortalized in the Chanson de Roland (11th or 12th cent.). J. Burgman, Reporting on Intangibles and Intellectual Capital Assets capital assets n. equipment, property, and funds owned by a business. (See: capital, capital account) , shows the market value of equity and net debt is larger than the present value of current operations for companies in the Russell 3000 index The Russell 3000 Index is a stock market index of US stocks. The ticker is "RUA" or similar. See Russell Indexes page for main discussion. See also the iShares Russell 3000. (excluding real estate companies). This difference between the two--which the research refers to as a company's intellectual capital of a human, relational or organizational nature--is called future growth value. THE POTENTIAL FOR FUTURE VALUE Depending on the definition, intellectual capital can be the term for all value drivers or value drivers can encompass intellectual capital. Regardless of how CPAs apply the term, the issue is that while information about factors that have the potential to create value may be available internally, businesses report very little of it externally. Companies sometimes disclose future value information quantitatively or qualitatively in a management discussion and analysis (MD&A) statement, in the president's message or on their corporate Web sites. The overall lack of information means it's difficult for an analyst or investor to know how well a company is measuring or managing these factors. Even when the information is available, it often is not comparable within industries or across sectors. Acknowledging Burgman's study as a foundation, the VMRC commissioned further research focused specifically on three of the factors that drive a business's potential to create value--human capital, customers/clients and innovation--in three industries: natural resources, pharmaceuticals and telecommunications. (See the box at left for a list of these studies.) The two years of publicly available data the researchers reviewed included annual reports/ filings, annual MD&A statements, supplementary reports and corporate Web sites. Each research sample included about 60 companies headquartered in North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. , South America South America, fourth largest continent (1991 est. pop. 299,150,000), c.6,880,000 sq mi (17,819,000 sq km), the southern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. , Europe Europe (y r`əp), 6th largest continent, c.4,000,000 sq mi (10,360,000 sq km) including adjacent islands (1992 est. pop. 512,000,000). , Africa, Asia and the Australasia Australasia (ôstrəlā`zhə, –shə), islands of the South Pacific, including Australia, New Zealand, New Guinea, and adjacent islands. The term is sometimes used to include all of Oceania. region. The research showed that 20% of the companies in all three
sectors referred to human capital in some way. It most often was
discussed within the framework of intellectual capital--the interaction
of human, organizational (structural) and customer (relational) capital.
Companies disclosed human capital in both quantitative (numbers of
people, staff costs) and qualitative (quality of work life, ethics ethics, in philosophy, the study and evaluation of human conduct in the light of moral principles. Moral principles may be viewed either as the standard of conduct that individuals have constructed for themselves or as the body of obligations and duties that a and
values) terms. The three industries weighed these components
differently.In all sectors researched, customer and relationship capital were key sources of future wealth and a source of considerable goodwill in corporate acquisitions. However, the research showed that disclosure of this factor was surprisingly low. Some 22% of the companies in the research sample in the natural resources industry provided information about customer and relationship capital, as did 20% of the pharmaceuticals companies and 31% of the telecommunications sample. Even in cases where companies disclosed standard industry measures of customer and business partner relationships, they presented them on a historical basis without attached valuations. As a result investors and other stakeholders were unable to determine, with any degree of certainty, the potential of the business to create value based on its customer and relationship capital. Innovation is the value driver on which the highest percentage of companies reported--39% in the pharmaceuticals group. However, information on this vital factor often was limited. For example, while new product introductions are a fundamental indicator of innovativeness, more than 90% of the companies in the research sample did not disclose this measure. Disclosure often was limited to tangible research and development expenditures and the outcomes of R&D activities. NATURAL RESOURCES Research on human capital showed that companies in the natural resources sample cited safety and accident statistics much more often than did companies in the other two areas. Members of this sector also made relatively frequent references to environmental and community development programs directed at gaining acceptance of operational activities. Other information of a qualitative nature, such as ethics and values, enhancing employee value through training and communication and consultation with employees, also merited some references. In customer and relational capital, a large majority of the research did not disclose any measures that would allow observers to better understand the value of a company's customer base. A few, however, did provide product-line descriptions. An even smaller number disclosed market share or number of customers. For innovation capital, the natural resources sector's reports and communications stressed pragmatic management and product development. Possibly for competitive reasons, there was very little disclosure of products under development. Reporting focused on innovative practices and products to combat commercialization. More complete and consistent reporting of innovation capital would allow investors and other stakeholders to make more informed decisions about a business's potential. PHARMACEUTICALS In the pharmaceuticals industry, only 19% of companies commented on human capital. The most common statistic statistic, n a value or number that describes a series of quantitative observations or measures; a value calculated from a sample. statistic a numerical value calculated from a number of observations in order to summarize them. reported was the number of employees. The research showed the industry to be driven by science, sales and finance. Science generally was referred to as a process, with people apparently incidental Contingent upon or pertaining to something that is more important; that which is necessary, appertaining to, or depending upon another known as the principal. Under Workers' Compensation statutes, a risk is deemed incidental to employment when it is related to whatever a . The implication is that of the three components that make up intellectual capital, the science portion of the process--relational and organizational capital--is more important than human capital, the people part of the process. In customer and relational capital, the research showed pharmaceutical companies primarily sell to "channel partners" (hospitals, wholesalers and doctors, for example). In cases where the companies sold branded products, they went to significant lengths to disclose ultimate consumer/ patient needs. The implication is that branding provides considerable customer equity. Number and description of product lines were the most frequently disclosed quantitative information. The existence of joint ventures and research agreements sometimes was given as an example of relationship capital. With regard to innovation capital, the pharmaceuticals industry focused reporting on the number of patents secured to protect intellectual property. However, companies referred to the loss of patent protection more often than they did to the nature of new patents. In addition pharmaceutical companies frequently showed the stage of commercialization of new products under development, but generally did not value the entire pipeline on a forward-looking for·ward-look·ing adj. Concerned with or making provision for the future: forward-looking educators; a forward-looking corporate plan. Adj. 1. basis. The absence of such a valuation makes it difficult to examine a company's future growth or its long-term Long-term Three or more years. In the context of accounting, more than 1 year. long-term 1. Of or relating to a gain or loss in the value of a security that has been held over a specific length of time. Compare short-term. viability--particularly when measured on a consistent basis and reported annually. TELECOMMUNICATIONS Initial research showed that companies don't don't 1. Contraction of do not. 2. Nonstandard Contraction of does not. n. A statement of what should not be done: a list of the dos and don'ts. regard human capital as an important value driver. To compensate, researchers extended the sample to include computer software and hardware companies--technology-driven businesses. Even with the extension, the level of voluntary disclosure of any human capital information was very low, only 11% of the sample. Information on how much a company spends on staff training, employee diversity and leadership development and recognition would allow stakeholders to make better decisions about whether a business is being managed in a way that will help it maximize its future growth potential. Information about human capital also would help for some of the existing differences between book and market values. Research in the customer and relational capital area disclosed that the industry has a standard set of customer metrics metrics Managed care A popular term for standards by which the quality of a product, service, or outcome of a particular form of Pt management is evaluated. See TQM. , for example, average revenue per user, which many companies use. Customer satisfaction often was described as a differentiator and a source of competitive advantage. Companies provided extensive business unit and geographic segmentation of results. Disclosure of new product introductions in the telecommunications sector offered insights into the innovative strategies of the organizations in the research sample. Alliances and development pipelines were disclosed to a lesser extent. VALUE DRIVERS The research on human, customer and relational and innovation capital in the three industries resulted in two obvious conclusions. The first confirmed the anecdotal evidence anecdotal evidence, n information obtained from personal accounts, examples, and observations. Usually not considered scientifically valid but may indicate areas for further investigation and research. that there generally is a dearth of publicly available information on the factors that drive value creation and maintenance within a business. In customer and relationship capital, none of the three sectors commented publicly about the number of product categories purchased per customer or about the life or expected life of a customer. With regard to innovation capital, no company disclosed the net present value of new patents granted or the net present value of its patent portfolio. Only in the pharmaceuticals sector did all the companies in the sample comment on the number of new products in the development pipeline and provide information about the number and description of product lines. It seems some companies are willing to disclose information the majority did not. For example, two companies disclosed details of their virtual R&D teams accessible through partnerships. Two companies provided information about the number of new ideas generated. In terms of customer and relationship capital, one company disclosed the number of orders per customer, two the average customer tenure and two average margins per customer and projected revenues and margins associated with new in-licensing agreements. It's interesting to note that none of the companies in the innovation capital study disclosed the years of experience of their employees. However, one company in the human capital research sample did so. Clearly, there is considerable distance to travel before information that drives a significant portion of the company's market value--its potential for future growth--is available. The second conclusion is that the identified value drivers do not act in isolation. For example, the inventory of innovation capital measures includes human, relational and structural capital. The inventories of human capital and customer and relationship capital are even more complex. In addition the company's strategy, governance Governance makes decisions that define expectations, grant power, or verify performance. It consists either of a separate process or of a specific part of management or leadership processes. Sometimes people set up a government to administer these processes and systems. and leadership must be considered for each factor. THE FUTURE OF VALUE MEASUREMENT The next step should be to bring theory and reality together so that what companies disclose is useful to investors and analysts, who want not only historical results but also potential future growth information. At the same time, value reporting must not open the door to litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute. When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation. or put the reporting company at a competitive disadvantage. This is a challenge the VMRC is taking up in developing a framework of principles and criteria that characterizes value measurement and reporting worldwide. VMRC Research * Customer and Relational Capital Measurement and Reporting in the Context of Value Creation by Jerry Jer·ry n. pl. Jer·ries Chiefly British Slang A German, especially a German soldier. [Alteration of German. Gerard Gerard is a male forename of Germanic origin, variations of which exist in many Germanic and Romance languages. The name derives from Old Germanic 'ger' ('spear') and 'hard' ('hard/strong/brave'). Its meaning is 'strong/brave with the spear'. , Cynthia Cynthia goddess of the moon. [Gk. Myth.: Kravitz, 72] See : Moon Hiris, Steve v. t. 1. To pack or stow, as cargo in a ship's hold. See Steeve. Villani and Alan A`lan´ n. 1. A wolfhound. Wunsche, March 2004. * Innovation Measurement and Reporting in the Context of Value Creation by Alan Wunsche, Jerry Gerard and Bill Swirsky, November 2003. * Measurement and Reporting of Human Capital by Enrico Ulliana, John Macey and Peter Grant, November 2003. The Value Measurement and Reporting Collaborative, www.valuemeasurement.net, is a multiparty mul·ti·par·ty adj. Of, relating to, or involving more than two political parties. , global group of stakeholders including the AICPA that is working to develop a value measurement and reporting framework and to communicate the need for value reporting on a consistent basis to the business and financial community. Membership is open to organizations that are knowledgeable about measuring the value potential of businesses and understand the importance of reporting value that goes beyond financial information. For more information about the collaborative, CPAs and other interested parties should contact Erin Mackler at emackler@aicpa.org. Current Operations Value Vs. Future Growth Value Russell 3000 companies as of May 30, 2004 * Future growth value: $7.6 trillion 58.9% Present value of current operations: $5.3 trillion 41.1% * Excluding real estate companies. Note: Table made from bar graph. Source: Reporting on Intangibles and Intellectual Capital Assets by Roland J. Burgman. F. ANNE DROZD, FCA FCA Abbreviation for the Free Carrier , is president of ACHOS, a management consulting Noun 1. management consulting - a service industry that provides advice to those in charge of running a business service industry - an industry that provides services rather than tangible objects company in Gabriola Island Gabriola Island is one of many islands in the Strait of Georgia, in British Columbia (BC), Canada. Gabriola lies about km ( mi) east of Nanaimo on Vancouver Island, to which it is linked by ferry. and Toronto, Ontario, Canada, that provides services to the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants The Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants (CICA) is the umbrella body for the Chartered Accountant profession in Canada and Bermuda. Membership of the CICA totals 70,000 Chartered Accountants and 8,500 students. , among other organizations. She is a director of the VMRC. Her e-mail address See Internet address. e-mail address - electronic mail address is achos01@shaw.ca or anne.drozd@cica.ca. |
|
||||||||||||||||

r`əp)
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion