MIT Sloan Management Review

Financial Management

Develop Profitable New Products with Target Costing

By Robin Cooper and Regine Slagmulder

July 15, 1999

A three-step process to ensure that companies launch new products that make a profit and please customers.

With the emergence of the lean enterprise and global competition, companies face ever-increasing competition. To survive, companies must become experts at developing products that deliver the quality and functionality that customers demand, while generating the desired profits.1 One way to ensure that products are sufficiently profitable when launched is to subject them to target costing.2

Target costing is primarily a technique to strategically manage a company’s future profits. It achieves this objective by determining the life-cycle cost at which a company must produce a proposed product with specified functionality and quality if the product is to be profitable at its anticipated selling price.3 Target costing makes cost an input to the product development process, not an outcome of it. By estimating the anticipated selling price of a proposed product and by subtracting the desired profit margin, a company can establish its target cost. The key is then to design the product so that it satisfies customers and can be manufactured at its target cost.

In Japan, lean enterprises have learned to view target costing not as a stand-alone program, but as an integral part of the product development process. To document the “Japanese” approach to target costing, we visited seven companies with mature and effective target costing systems and... To read the complete article, login or sign-up using the form below.

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