Mercury, Incorporated, produces cell phones at its plant in Texas. In recent years, the company’s market share has been eroded by stiff competition from overseas. Price and product quality are the two key areas in which companies compete in this market.   A year ago, the company’s cell phones had been ranked low in product quality in a consumer survey. Shocked by this result, Jorge Gomez, Mercury’s president, initiated an intense effort to improve product quality. Gomez set up a task force to implement a formal quality improvement program. Included on this task force were representatives from the Engineering, Marketing, Customer Service, Production, and Accounting departments. The broad representation was needed because Gomez believed that this was a companywide program and that all employees should share the responsibility for its success.   After the first meeting of the task force, Holly Elsoe, manager of the Marketing Department, asked John Tran, production manager, what he thought of the proposed program. Tran replied, “I have reservations. Quality is too abstract to be attaching costs to it and then to be holding you and me responsible for cost improvements. I like to work with goals that I can see and count! I’m nervous about having my annual bonus based on a decrease in quality costs; there are too many variables that we have no control over.”   Mercury’s quality improvement program has now been in operation for one year. The company’s most recent quality cost report is shown below.   Mercury, Incorporated Quality Cost Report (in thousands)   Last Year This Year Prevention costs:     Machine maintenance $ 360 $ 120 Training suppliers 8 20 Quality circles 22 80 Total prevention cost 390 220 Appraisal costs:     Incoming inspection 60 30 Final testing 180 86 Total appraisal cost 240 116 Internal failure costs:     Rework 150 68 Scrap 72 50 Total internal failure cost 222 118 External failure costs:     Warranty repairs 77 27 Customer returns 250 86 Total external failure cost 327 113 Total quality cost $ 1,179 $ 567 Total production cost $ 4,260 $ 4,660   As they were reviewing the report, Elsoe asked Tran what he now thought of the quality improvement program. Tran replied. “I’m relieved that the new quality improvement program hasn’t hurt our bonuses, but the program has increased the workload in the Production Department. It is true that customer returns are way down, but the cell phones that were returned by customers to retail outlets were rarely sent back to us for rework.”   Required: 1. Expand the company’s quality cost report by showing the costs in both years as percentages of both total production cost and total quality cost. (Round your percentage answers to 1 decimal place (i.e 0.1234 should be entered as 12.3).)

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Mercury, Incorporated, produces cell phones at its plant in Texas. In recent years, the company’s market share has been eroded by stiff competition from overseas. Price and product quality are the two key areas in which companies compete in this market.

 

A year ago, the company’s cell phones had been ranked low in product quality in a consumer survey. Shocked by this result, Jorge Gomez, Mercury’s president, initiated an intense effort to improve product quality. Gomez set up a task force to implement a formal quality improvement program. Included on this task force were representatives from the Engineering, Marketing, Customer Service, Production, and Accounting departments. The broad representation was needed because Gomez believed that this was a companywide program and that all employees should share the responsibility for its success.

 

After the first meeting of the task force, Holly Elsoe, manager of the Marketing Department, asked John Tran, production manager, what he thought of the proposed program. Tran replied, “I have reservations. Quality is too abstract to be attaching costs to it and then to be holding you and me responsible for cost improvements. I like to work with goals that I can see and count! I’m nervous about having my annual bonus based on a decrease in quality costs; there are too many variables that we have no control over.”

 

Mercury’s quality improvement program has now been in operation for one year. The company’s most recent quality cost report is shown below.

 

Mercury, Incorporated
Quality Cost Report
(in thousands)
  Last Year This Year
Prevention costs:    
Machine maintenance $ 360 $ 120
Training suppliers 8 20
Quality circles 22 80
Total prevention cost 390 220
Appraisal costs:    
Incoming inspection 60 30
Final testing 180 86
Total appraisal cost 240 116
Internal failure costs:    
Rework 150 68
Scrap 72 50
Total internal failure cost 222 118
External failure costs:    
Warranty repairs 77 27
Customer returns 250 86
Total external failure cost 327 113
Total quality cost $ 1,179 $ 567
Total production cost $ 4,260 $ 4,660

 

As they were reviewing the report, Elsoe asked Tran what he now thought of the quality improvement program. Tran replied. “I’m relieved that the new quality improvement program hasn’t hurt our bonuses, but the program has increased the workload in the Production Department. It is true that customer returns are way down, but the cell phones that were returned by customers to retail outlets were rarely sent back to us for rework.”

 

Required:

1. Expand the company’s quality cost report by showing the costs in both years as percentages of both total production cost and total quality cost. (Round your percentage answers to 1 decimal place (i.e 0.1234 should be entered as 12.3).)

 

 

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