strategy and management accounting for intangible assets mikhail davydov anna devyatova alexander...
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Strategy andManagement
Accounting for Intangible Assets
Mikhail DavydovAnna Devyatova
Alexander ShalamovKsenia Shneyveys
“Intangible asset management is the most important issue for top management at present…”Sumantra Ghoshal, Professor
London Business School
Intangible assets, % of market value
60
68
74
82
83
85
85
94
96
Chrysler
Honda
BP
GE
3M
ABB
Intel
Microsoft
Coca-Cola
Defining Intangible AssetsAssets having no material form that appear as a
result of (1) past events that has a (2) measurable effect and that presents a (3) future benefit . [Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB)]
Assets arising as a result of past events and possess three main attributes: they are non physical in nature, they are capable of producing future economic net benefits, and they are protected legally or through a de facto right
[Bouteiller, 2002]
Defining Intangible Assets Non-physical sources of value (claims to future
benefits) generated by innovation (discovery), unique organizational designs, or human resource practices (B. Lev, 2003)
Any asset, belonging to a company or controlled by it, having no physical or financial (in case of financial investment) form, but capable of producing future economic benefits (D. Volkov, T. Garanina, 2007)
Defining Intangible Assets
Three terms are widely used: Intangible Assets — in accounting
literature, Knowledge Assets — by economists, Intellectual Capital — in management and
law literature; “and on the whole they come to the same: to the
future benefits that are not embodied materially”.
B.Lev, 2004
Defining Intangible AssetsINTANGIBLE ASSETS =
= INTELLECTUAL CAPITAL == KNOWLEDGE ASSETS =
= INTANGIBLES
Intangible Assets, recognized according to the accounting standards in accounting and bookkeeping records
Other Intangible Assets -- Intangible Assets non-recognized in accounting and bookkeeping records
Defining Intangible Assets
Composition and structure of intangible assets
INTELLECTUAL CAPITAL
HUMANCAPITAL
RELATIONSHIPCAPITAL
ORGANIZATIONAL (STRUCTURAL)CAPITAL
developed by International Federation of Accountants (IFAC, 1998)
Defining Intangible Assets HUMAN CAPITALDefinition capability of a
company to benefit from knowledge, skills and experience of employees, which immanently pertain to the latter.
For example: capability for
innovations creativity know-how and
experience ability to work in a team motivation learning capability educational and
professional level loyalty etc.
Defining Intangible Assets RELATIONSHIP CAPITALDefinition capability of a
company to benefit from resources connected with the company's external relations (with customer, suppliers, and other counteragents).
For example: brands suppliers loyalty of the
customers distribution channels business cooperation alliances and
partnerships licensing agreements franchising
agreementsetc.
Defining Intangible Assets ORGANIZATIONAL (STRUCTURAL) CAPITALDefinitioncapability of a
company to benefit from attainments remaining inside the company.
For example:Intellectual Property patents trademarks service marks name of origin of goods copyrightetc.
Infrastructural Assets corporate culture internal administration
of the work flow information systems management philosophy decision-making systemetc.
Intangible Assets
Why are they so important?
Hard for competitors to imitate
A powerful source of sustainable competitive advantage
Measuring Intangible Assets
If you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it.
George O. Odiorne
Measuring the value of intangible assets is the holy grail of accounting.
Robert S. Kaplan, David P. Norton
Measuring Intangible Assets
34 methods for measuring intangible assets (1950’s – 2004)
Probably, the list is not closed!
4 approaches for measuring intangibles
1) Direct Intellectual Capital methods (DIC)2) Market Capitalization Methods (MCM)3) Return on Assets methods (ROA) 4) Scorecard Methods (SC)
1) Direct Intellectual Capital methods (DIC)
Estimate the $-value of intangible assets by identifying its various components. Once these components are identified, they can be directly evaluated, either individually or as an aggregated coefficient.
Example: Technology broker (TB)
Measuring Intangible Assets
(Annie Brooking, 1996)Assess the value of the IC of a firm based on diagnostic
analysis of a firm’s response to 20 questions covering four major components of IC: market assets, human-centered assets, intellectual property, infrastructure assets.
Questionnaire indicators.3 methods of calculating dollar value for IC: The cost approach: based on assessment of
replacement cost of the asset; The market approach: uses market comparables to
assess value; The income approach: assess the income-providing
capability of the asset.
Measuring Intangible Assets1)DIC Technology broker (TB)
Calculate the difference between a company's market capitalization and its stockholders' equity as the value of its intellectual capital.
Example: Market measure of company’s IC
IC=market capitalization-stockholders’s equity
Market value = $ 12.77 billionStockholder equity = $ 1.47 billion IC = $ 11.3 billion
Measuring Intangible Assets2) Market Capitalization Methods (MCM)
Step 1 : determine the “realized IC” Market value = $ 12.77 billion
Stockholder equity = $ 1.47 billion “realized IC” = $ 11.3 billion
Measuring Intangible AssetsDIC/MCM: FiMIAM methodology
Measuring Intangible AssetsDIC/MCM: FiMIAM methodology
Step 2 : identifying the relevant components of IC
Step 3 : assigning relative weights to IC components
Step 4: assigning value organizational learning 0.04 * $11,3 billion = $ 452
million knowledge product0.08 * $11,3 billion = $ 904
million patents0.07 * $11,3 billion = $ 791
million
Measuring Intangible Assets3) Return on Assets methods (ROA)Tangible assets and the annual financial
growth figures are compared to the industry average. Above average earnings are then utilized to estimate the value of intangible assets.
Example: Economic Value Added (EVATM)Calculated by adjusting the company’s
disclosed profit with charges to intangibles. Changes in EVA provide an indication of whether the firm’s intellectual capital is productive or not.
The various components of intangible assets or intellectual capital are identified as indicators and indices are generated and reported in scorecards or as graphs.
Measuring Intangible Assets4) Scorecard Methods (SC)
Balanced Scorecard Method
A way to systematically measure the alignment of company’s human, information and organization capital to the company’s strategy (by D. Norton and R. Kaplan)
Scandia Navigator
Developed by Scandia (1994) IA are divided into: human
capital, customer capital, process capital and innovation capital
Focuses on: the financial focus, the customer perspective (customer focus), the process perspective (process focus), the human perspective (human focus), and the renewal and development perspective (innovation focus)
200 indicators
Scandia Navigator
More suitable for service company – limited applicability for other industries
All measures are expressed in monetary terms, which is not always desirable for IA
Not clear as how the five perspectives in the Skandia Navigator relate to each other
Equation that sums tangible and intangible assets might be wrong as soon as there is no clear distinction between them
IC Index Approach
Splits IA into human capital and structural capital, separating “thinking” and “non-thinking” assets, then dividing them into subgroups
A company needs to identify key IA indicators
They need to be ranked according to their importance
Indicators chosen must be weighted and summarized into a single index
IC Index Approach
Allows organizations to measure how changes in the market or changes in other performance indicators correlate with the changes in the IC Index
BUT Using aggregates makes it difficult to identify the
key business drivers Weightings for each of the different measures is
done subjectively which can be dangerous if managers get it wrong
IA Monitor
Three categories are taken into account: 1. intangibles represented by competence of
employees 2. intangibles related to the internal structure of the
organization
3. those related to the external structure including brand names, image, and relationships with suppliers and most importantly relationships with customers
Three measurement groups: growth and
renewal, efficiency, stability
Summary No single method of evaluation is perfect. Company’s success depends not only on
what is measured but also how the measurements are used.
Presence of a great variety of approaches indicates professional and scholar communities’ dissatisfaction with the existing ones.
In the years to come the question of developing optimal techniques for intangible assets’ measurement will play a significant role in management science.
Practical approach: Brand Valuation PricewaterhouseCoopers(1)Develop key performance indicators
(KPI) to monitor the performance of the intangible
(2) Conduct a yearly assessment of the brand value
(3) Allocating a value to the brand on a regular basis and tracking it over time.
Practical approach: Brand Valuation PricewaterhouseCoopers
Year ended March 31 2003 2002 2001
PBIT 1 158.93
943.39 696.03
Less: non-brand income 89.65 59.77 53.43
Adjusted profit 1 069.28
883.62 642.60
Inflation compound factor at 6% 1.000 1.064 1.132
Present value of profits for the brand 1 069.28
940.02 727.25
Weightage factor 3 2 1
Three-year average weighted profits 969.19
Remuneration of capital (5% of average capital employed)
123.52
Brand-related profits 845.67
Tax at 36.75% 310.78
Brand earnings 534.88
Multiple-applied 14.00
Brand value 7 488.00
In Rs Crore
Practical approach: Brand Valuation PricewaterhouseCoopers
The methodology followed for valuing the brand is given below:(1) Determine brand earnings• Determine brand profits by elimination of non-brand profits from
the total profits of the company• Restate the historical profits at present-day values• Provide for the remuneration of capital to used for purposes
other than promotion of the brand• Adjust for taxes(2) Determine the brand-strength or brand-earnings multipleBrand-strength multiple is a function of a multitude of factors such
as leadership, stability, market, internationality, trend, support and
protection. These factors have been evaluated on a scale of 1 to 100 internally by the Infosys management, based on the information
available within the company.(3) Compute the brand value by multiplying the brand earnings
with the multiple derived in step 2 above.
Practical approach: Brand Valuation PricewaterhouseCoopersINFOSYS Brand value,
Rs Crore
Market capitalization,
Rs Crore%
2001 5 376 26 926 20%
2002 7 257 24 654 29%
2003 7 488 26 847 28%
… … … …
2006 22 915 82 154 28%
2007 31 617 115 307 27%
Practical approach: Brand Valuation PricewaterhouseCoopersList of KPIs being used for brand valuationby best practice companies
Number of customers and retention levels
Detailed customer satisfaction results
(often from external brand surveys) Number of complaints from
customers Customer delivery statistics (eg,
applications, errors, delays, etc) Sales trends by brand Products per customer Brand values Brand awareness Brand association Employee satisfaction (although the
workforce is not an identifiable intangible asset for accounting purposes)
New clients Success of new product Price premium paid Relative market share customer value Average revenue per customer Churn rate Frequency of purchase Expiry date Revenue derived from the
innovation Number of licences granted Royalty revenues