True Product Costing
Why you sell at phantom profit and lose money and how ABC Costing reveals the truth
A question that decides any manufacturer’s survival: Do you really know what each product costs you to produce? The shocking answer per IMA’s 2026 study: 67% of mid-sized industrial companies use inaccurate cost systems, showing phantom profits on products that actually lose money, and phantom losses on products that are most profitable. The consequence: wrong pricing decisions, continued production of resource-draining items, and discontinuation of products that should have been scaled.
The problem starts with a simple but devastating idea: “Overhead is allocated uniformly across all products.” This worked in the 1960s when direct labor was 60% of cost. Today, direct labor is 10-15% at most, while technology, quality, storage, and delivery costs dominate. Allocating these uniformly is a catastrophic distortion of true profitability. This article reveals the truth, details the ABC (Activity-Based Costing) system, with a real calculation model and a Saudi case study.
Components of True Product Cost
True cost has three layers, most companies measure only the first accurately:
Layer 1: Direct Costs (DC)
Easiest to measure: raw materials going directly into the product, and direct labor wages working on it. Example: producing 100 liters of juice requires 80 kg of fruit (SAR 1,200) and 4 hours direct labor (SAR 320). Total direct cost: SAR 1,520 = SAR 15.20/liter. Most companies stop here and call this “the cost.”
Layer 2: Manufacturing Overhead (MOH)
Everything happening inside the factory but not entering the product directly:
- Factory rent and electricity: SAR 180,000/month.
- Equipment maintenance: SAR 45,000/month.
- Machine depreciation: SAR 90,000/month.
- Supervisor and quality salaries: SAR 120,000/month.
- Operating consumables (oils, cleaning): SAR 25,000.
- Raw material and finished goods storage: SAR 60,000.
Total: SAR 520,000/month. The critical question: How do we allocate this across different products? This is where the biggest distortion happens.
Layer 3: Non-Manufacturing Costs
Many companies entirely ignore this layer in product costing, despite it representing 25-40% of total:
- Sales and marketing: commissions, advertising, sales team salaries.
- Delivery and logistics: transportation, distribution warehousing, freight insurance.
- Customer service and after-sales: warranties, returns, complaints.
- General administration: leadership salaries, IT, HR.
- Financing: loan interest, bank fees, cash discounts.
⚠️ Common Mistake: Misleading “Gross Margin”
Many managers decide based on “gross margin,” which only computes price minus direct cost. A product priced SAR 100 with SAR 60 direct cost looks profitable at 40%. But adding SAR 25 manufacturing overhead and SAR 20 non-manufacturing costs flips it into a SAR 5 loss per unit. Right decisions need full contribution margin.
Why Traditional Costing Methods Fail
Traditional costing relies on a single cost driver to allocate all overhead — usually direct labor hours or production volume. Watch how it fails:
Imagine a factory producing two products:
- Product A: Simple, high-volume (10,000 units/month), consumes 1,000 direct labor hours, no complex setup.
- Product B: Complex and customized, low-volume (500 units/month), consumes 200 direct labor hours, but needs 15 machine setups and 30 quality checks.
Traditional method allocates overhead (SAR 520,000) by labor-hour ratio: Product A takes SAR 433,000, Product B takes only SAR 87,000. Result: Product B looks ultra-cheap and ultra-profitable, so the company expands it. Hidden truth: Product B consumes most of supervisor time, quality inspection, machine setup, and extra storage. Its true cost is much higher, and the company loses on every unit.
ABC Costing: The Solution That Reveals Truth
Activity-Based Costing fundamentally changes the equation: instead of one driver, each activity in the factory becomes its own cost center, allocated by its own logical driver. Five steps:
- Step 1 — Identify activities: Inventory every resource-consuming activity (machine setup, quality inspection, internal transport, storage, purchase orders, customer order processing, etc.).
- Step 2 — Assign costs to each activity: Determine monthly cost per activity (e.g., one machine setup = SAR 2,800).
- Step 3 — Define a cost driver per activity: Setups by setup count, quality by check count, transport by movement count, etc.
- Step 4 — Compute rate per activity: Total activity cost ÷ total driver units = unit cost.
- Step 5 — Allocate activity costs to products: Each product takes its cost based on actual consumption per activity.
Real Calculation Model: Methods Compared
| Item | Product A (Trad.) | Product A (ABC) | Product B (Trad.) | Product B (ABC) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Direct cost/unit | SAR 28 | SAR 28 | SAR 120 | SAR 120 |
| Overhead/unit | SAR 43 | SAR 22 | SAR 17 | SAR 198 |
| Total cost | SAR 71 | SAR 50 | SAR 137 | SAR 318 |
| Selling price | SAR 95 | SAR 95 | SAR 280 | SAR 280 |
| Profit / (Loss) | +SAR 24 | +SAR 45 | +SAR 143 | -SAR 38 |
The difference is shocking. Traditional method shows Product B as the “company star” at SAR 143/unit, so the company concentrates marketing and production effort on it. Hidden reality: every unit of B loses SAR 38. Product A, looking “ordinary,” is actually highest-profit (SAR 45/unit at 10,000 units = SAR 450,000/month profit).
ERP’s Role in Implementing ABC Costing
Manual ABC via Excel is theoretically possible but practically impossible above 50 SKUs. Modern ERP delivers:
- Hierarchical cost centers: Unlimited definition across multiple levels (department → machine → process → product).
- Auto activity tracking: System automatically logs every activity (setup, check, transport) and links to production order.
- Smart cost allocation: Editable allocation rules without coding, enabling scenario testing.
- SKU-level contribution margin analysis: Real-time reports showing profitability per product, customer, channel, region.
- Variance alerts: System alerts instantly when actual cost deviates from standard by a defined %.
Case Study: Food Manufacturer
Background: Mid-sized Saudi dairy and juice manufacturer, 47 SKUs, SAR 95M annual revenue, declared net profit 4.2%.
Problem: Management was puzzled — sales growing 18% annually, but profitability eroding. Traditional analysis didn’t reveal why.
Diagnosis after ABC Costing:
- • 19 SKUs (40%) sold at actual loss, despite appearing profitable in legacy system.
- • Total losses on these SKUs: SAR 2.4M annually.
- • Cause: “specialty” products (custom packaging, rare flavors) consumed 4-7× the setup and quality time, but priced as ordinary products.
- • Conversely, 12 SKUs were far more profitable than legacy system showed.
Actions taken:
- • Discontinued 8 unsalvageable loss-makers.
- • Raised prices on 11 loss-makers by 15-35% (lost 20% of customers, but profit rose).
- • Set minimum order quantity for custom orders to cover setup costs.
- • Reallocated marketing budget toward truly highest-profit SKUs.
Results after 12 months:
- ✓ Net profit rose from 4.2% to 11.7%.
- ✓ Net earnings improved by SAR 7.1M despite 4% sales drop.
- ✓ Reduced operational complexity and freed 22% of factory capacity.
- ✓ More confident pricing and product portfolio decisions.
Conclusion
True product cost isn’t an accounting figure — it’s a strategic compass. Every pricing, expansion, discontinuation, or market-entry decision depends on its accuracy. Companies using traditional costing in an era of escalating product complexity decide on broken information. The question every GM should lose sleep over: Do I really know which products earn me money and which drain me? Answering “yes” requires ABC Costing — nothing less.




