Every major strategic decision changes your cost structure. A new product line, a new market, a major hire, a pricing change, a capacity investment — each one reshapes how costs flow through the business.
Most companies decide first and discover the cost implications later. The ones that model first make better decisions, faster, with fewer reversals.
What Scenario Modeling Is (and Isn’t)
Scenario modeling in this context is not financial forecasting. It’s not about predicting revenue. It’s about asking: “If we do X, what happens to our cost-to-serve, our capacity utilisation, and our margin per product/client?”
The question is: can you answer that before you commit, rather than after?
Three Decisions That Benefit Most from Cost Modeling
1. New Product or Service Launch
Before launching, model the full cost-to-deliver: what activities does this product require? Which cost pools does it draw from? At what volume does it become profitable?
If your model shows breakeven at 200 units/month and you’re projecting 80 units in year one, that’s a decision, not a surprise.
2. Client Segment Expansion
Entering a new client segment — say, moving from mid-market to enterprise — often means a very different service model. Enterprise clients typically require more onboarding, longer sales cycles, dedicated account management, and bespoke delivery. Model the incremental cost-to-serve before committing to the segment.
3. Outsourcing or Insourcing a Function
“Build vs. buy” decisions are frequently made based on the visible cost of the external option versus a rough estimate of internal cost. A proper cost model shows you the true internal cost — including the overhead allocated to that function — and makes the comparison real.
How to Structure a Scenario
In CostCtrl (or in any TDABC model), a scenario is built by:
- Defining the change (new product, new client segment, new hire, etc.)
- Identifying which activities are affected and how time equations change
- Recalculating cost pool allocations under the new state
- Comparing margin-per-unit or cost-to-serve before and after
The output is not a P&L forecast. It’s a cost structure comparison — which gives management the information to decide whether the strategic move is worth pursuing, and at what scale.
The “Point of No Return” Test
For any major commitment (capital expenditure, long-term contract, headcount), run this test: what volume, price, or efficiency would be required for this decision to be profitable, and how confident are you that you can achieve it?
If the answer requires assumptions that feel optimistic, the model has done its job — it’s shown you the risk before you’ve written the cheque.
Making Scenario Modeling Routine
The goal is not to model every decision. It’s to establish a threshold: any commitment above €X or with a payback period above Y months gets a cost model scenario before approval.
This doesn’t require a new process. It requires that your cost model is current, accessible, and trusted — which is a governance question.
Take the Profitability Health Check to see how your current model and data infrastructure support strategic decision-making.