TCO Assignment Student
TCO Assignment Student
ssThis assignment is made available to students at Lesson 4 and is due at the beginning of lesson 9
Background information
Total cost of ownership (TCO) is defined as the present value of all costs associated with a
product, service, or capital equipment that are incurred over its expected life.
• Purchase price
o Invoice amount paid to supplier
• Acquisition costs
o Costs of bringing product to buyer
• Usage costs
o Conversion and support costs
• End-of-life costs
o Net of amounts received/spent at salvage (such as disposal fees)
Building a TCO model requires input from all levels of an organization. There are six steps in
building a model:
Opportunity Costs is defined as the cost of the next best alternatives. Examples are lost sales,
lost productivity and downtime.
Present Value (PV) is a formula used in Finance that calculates the present day value of an amount that
is received at a future date. The premise of the equation is that there is "time value of money".
Time value of money is the concept that receiving something today is worth more than
receiving the same item at a future date. The presumption is that it is preferable to receive
$100 today than it is to receive the same amount one year from today, but what if the choice is
between $100 present day or $106 a year from today? A formula is needed to provide a
quantifiable comparison between an amount today and an amount at a future time, in terms of
its present day value.
In our example we wish to determine how much money we would need to put into the money
market account to have $3,450,420 one year from today if we are earning 8% interest on our
account, simple interest.
The $3,450,420 we would like one year from present day denotes the C1 portion of the formula,
8% would be r, and the number of periods would simply be 1.
When we solve for PV, we would need $3,194,833 today in order to reach $3,450,420 one year
from now at a rate of 8% simple interest.
In this example, Supply manager Kim Overburgh was considering the purchase of 1,000 new style
programmable Logic Controllers (PLCs) for her organization. The life cycle was three years, and the
organization's cost of capital was 8 percent. She collected the data required for the TCO calculations for
one of the purchase options as shown in the first spreadsheet. Using these elements, the total cost of
ownership is then calculated on the second spreadsheet.
Year 1
Cost elements Present (step5) Year 2 Year 3
Purchase price:
Equipment $1,350,000
Software license #1 $275,000
Software license #2 $110,000
Software license #3 $60,000
Acquisition Cost:
Sourcing $30,833
Administration $120 $420 $420 $420
Usage Cost:
Installation $900,000
Equipment support $1,620,000 $1,620,000 $1,620,000
Network support $1,080,000 $1,080,000 $1,080,000
Warranty $135,000
Opportunity cost-Lost productivity:
downtime $750,000 $750,000 $750,000
End of life costs:
Disposal fee -$42,000
TOTAL $2,860,953 $3,450,420 $3,450,420 $3,408,420
Present value @ 8% (step 6) $2,860,953 $3,194,833 $2,958,179 $2,705,739
On the basis of this model, she should explore the possibilities of reducing service costs such as
equipment support and network support— these appear to be the highest value, and contribute most to
costs. This is also typically the most profitable area for the supplier, as services are often not audited.
Total Cost of Ownership Assignment
Amy found that they will require 1,000 SMART TVs and got written quotes from three suppliers. She has
narrowed the choices to two finalists; Supplier A which is in her own city and Supplier B which is in a
different province. Amy had asked that each supplier quote on installation, removal, maintenance and
disposal of the old televisions. Amy found that delivery costs for Supplier A would cost her $45 per TV
and the out-of-town TVs from Supplier B would cost her $50 each to have them delivered to the hotels
as required.
Amy knew that two of her staff had each used two months to gather all of the quotes and data that she
needed to proceed. One of her staff earned $70,000.oo per year, and the other earned $85,000.00 per
year. For administrative costs she had incurred $95.00 to issue the PO and estimates further
administrative costs to be $360.00 per each year thereafter.
Dave Brenner, on behalf of Supplier A, was very keen on getting her business and quoted a base price of
$675 per television, mounting hardware would be extra at $65 ea. Dave offered an extended warranty
for three years at a cost of $135 ea. Supplier A would be “on call” with equipment support to handle
emergencies for a fee of $25/month/TV and would supply the network for these “smart” TVs at
$80/month/TV. Each TV would take one hour to install at a rate of $125/hour. Amy reviewed the
installation cost for supplier A and determined she would incur lost revenue of $125,000.00 as a result
of the installations of the 1,000 televisions.
Total Cost of Ownership Assignment
Amy wanted 100 extra remotes to ensure she can quickly replace those that are lost or damaged. Dave
says he can sell her 100 remotes at a cost of $20 each.
Dave says that his company would go to each hotel on a yearly basis to clean the vents etc. on each unit
and test it electronically for any problems. Amy has estimated the cost of this downtime to be $50/hour.
Since this is actually downtime on the units, he maintained that he could limit this downtime to 5
hours/TV/year. Amy has estimated the cost of this downtime to be $250,000.00 per year. Old
televisions would be disposed of for a fee of $42 per TV and would be done locally.
Julia Rawlings from Supplier B quoted a base price of $685 per television, mounting hardware would be
extra at only $55 ea and an extended warranty for three years would cost $130 ea. Julia says her
company would be available with equipment support to handle emergencies for a fee of $20/month/TV
and would supply the network for these “smart” TVs at $70/month/TV. Each TV would cost Newgreen
only $100 to have them installed as their crew is very proficient at installations. Amy reviewed the
installation cost for supplier B and determined she would incur lost revenue of $115,000.00 as a result
of the installations of the 1,000 televisions.
Since Amy wanted 100 extra remotes, Julia says she will give her 50 extra remotes at no extra cost, but
will have to charge Amy $20 each for the other 50.
Julia says that her company would not need to go to each hotel on a yearly basis to clean the vents etc.
She says that her company would limit Newgreen’s downtime to only 1 hour/TV/year by simply
“swapping” each unit annually with a pre-cleaned and tested unit. . Amy has estimated the cost of this
downtime to be $50,000.00 per year. Old televisions would be disposed of for a fee of $30 per TV and
would be done at a reputable recycling facility in her neighboring province.