Four perspectives and a strategy map that links them by cause and effect. But two of those perspectives, financial and internal process, run on estimates, allocations and averages until they have real cost. TDABC supplies it.
Kaplan and Norton introduced the Balanced Scorecard in Harvard Business Review in 1992 and in the 1996 book. The strategy map, from 2004, linked the four perspectives by cause and effect.
How we create value for shareholders. Profitability, revenue, return.
How customers see us. Satisfaction, retention, market share.
Which processes we must excel at. Cost, quality and time of each process.
How we sustain the ability to change. People, systems and culture.
Two perspectives depend on cost. The financial and internal-process perspectives only work if you know what things actually cost. Most scorecards measure them with allocations, averages and proxies. That is where TDABC comes in.
Most scorecards measure KPIs carefully, but cost the financial and process perspectives with allocations and averages. The profitability KPI ends up being revenue minus a cost smeared across the whole organisation.
The profitability KPI rests on costs spread by allocation keys. It shows you revenue by product, not real margin by product and customer.
The process perspective measures time and quality, but rarely the real cost and capacity of each process. It does not know what each activity consumes or what is idle.
The strategy map links causes to effects, but without real cost those arrows cannot be quantified in money. It stays a narrative, not a model.
This is the gap TDABC closes: it gives real cost and margin to the two perspectives that silently depend on them.
Kaplan and Anderson created Time-Driven Activity-Based Costing in 2004. With two parameters, the capacity cost rate and the time equations, it attributes real cost to each activity, product and customer. Wired to the scorecard, it feeds the two perspectives that depend on cost.
The financial perspective starts to show true margin by product and customer, and the whale curve that reveals where margin is won and where it is lost. It stops being just revenue.
The internal-process perspective starts to show the real cost of each process and the unused capacity that averages hide. The strategy map arrows become quantified in euros.
The strategy map shows cause and effect: better learning leads to better processes, which lower cost-to-serve, which improves customer profitability, which delivers the financial result. TDABC is what quantifies each link in this chain.
A TDABC model wired to your scorecard financial and process perspectives.
True margin by product and customer for the financial perspective, with whale curve.
Real cost and unused capacity per process, for the internal-process perspective.
A strategy map where each cause-and-effect arrow carries a number in euros.
CostCTRL to keep the scorecard cost layer live as the data changes.
Independent, fixed-scope, 6 to 10 weeks. We do not sell scorecard software or KPIs. We give real cost to the perspectives that depend on it, and your team learns the method as it goes.
Related reading: Strategy and execution with TDABC · Cost-to-serve · Lean Six Sigma + TDABC · Free Profit Check
No deck, no follow-up sequence. A senior partner. Thirty minutes. Free. NDA on request.