Kaplan and Norton's six-stage Execution Premium closes the loop from strategy to operations. Stage 4, Plan Operations, is where cost and capacity decisions live, and TDABC is what makes it real.
In The Execution Premium, 2008, Kaplan and Norton describe a closed-loop management system. Most strategies do not fail in formulation, they fail in execution. Stage 4 is where execution meets money.
Source: Kaplan and Norton, The Execution Premium, 2008. The closed loop is coordinated by an Office of Strategy Management.
Plan operations is resource allocation, capacity planning, process improvement and profitability planning. Without real cost, it is budgets built on last year plus a percent, capacity assumed rather than measured, and process priorities chosen by gut.
Allocating resources without the real cost per activity moves budget without knowing what each activity consumes. The strategy's priorities go unpriced.
Planning capacity without measuring practical capacity hides what is paid for and not used. The strategy calls for growth, and no one knows if there is slack or a shortfall.
Planning profitability on averages hides which products and customers the strategy should grow and which it should fix. The average lies at both ends.
The gap. Strategy becomes profit at Stage 4, and Stage 4 needs real cost. That is the gap TDABC closes.
With the capacity cost rate and time equations, TDABC turns Stage 4 into measured decisions: which processes to fund, what capacity to add or remove, which products and customers the strategy should grow or fix. And it feeds Stage 5, monitor, with real margin, closing the loop.
Resource allocation now costs each activity by the minute consumed. Capacity planning starts from practical capacity and reveals the slack. Process-improvement priorities stop being a guess.
The monitoring stage stops looking only at revenue and volume. It now sees real margin by product and customer, which turns strategic review meetings into conversations about profit, not sales.
Strategy, stages 1 to 3. Operations, Stage 4, where TDABC lives. Monitor and adapt, stages 5 and 6. And back to strategy. Cost connects each turn of the loop: it is what an Office of Strategy Management needs to make the scorecard real.
A TDABC operating model wired to the plan: resource, capacity and profitability.
Costed process-improvement priorities, so you know what to fund first.
A profitability view by product and customer that feeds the monitoring stage.
A costed link from the strategy map to operations, from Stage 2 to Stage 4.
CostCTRL to keep the loop live: capacities, costs and margins recomputed over time.
Independent, fixed-scope, 6 to 10 weeks. We do not sell strategy or scorecards. We work the cost side of the loop, Stage 4, and connect it to monitoring. It is the half most leave undone.
Related: Balanced Scorecard + TDABC · Cost-to-serve · Profit-driven budgeting · Free Profit Check
No deck, no follow-up sequence. A senior partner. Thirty minutes. Free. NDA on request.