Introduction
HighStone collates Cost Allocation data from a number of sources and this information is used to manage the on-going costs incurred in the daily activities of general maintenance and implementation of schemes. HighStone also includes the capability to build up and define budgets and target costs for these costed activities thereby providing a direct means for comparing cost incurred against prepared budgets and target prices.
The creation of target budgets is a generic facility within HighStone and this can be configured to handle a wide range of cost headings. Also the budget definition can be applied to a number of different Object Classes within the contract definitions to give pricing and budget control across different management areas. These definitions may be run in parallel using different definitions of base pricing information and / or direct budget entry.
The typical definition for cost management is to look at the individual cost headings of Labour, Plant (Equipment), Materials, Sub-Contract costs and Overheads. HighStone offers a wider range of up to 16 separate cost headings that can be run against all budget activities. Typically these cost headings will be aligned to the Cost Capture definitions so that a direct comparison on Budget Price against Costs can be made.
Base budget information may be defined in two ways:
Budget management may be defined at a number of direct levels within HighStone, depending on the required configuration.
All HighStone budget / price functions are designed to complement the Cost Capture of works activities, and provide direct and on-going comparisons. Where costs are re-charged to an external client, these costs may be based on the actual incurred cost of the works, the original defined price, or a re-measure of the original price to pick up actual works incurred.
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