Operating cost savings is the leading Roi
Metric
By: Bernard
Tulsi
Return on investment (ROI) resides at the very foundation of
all commercial enterprises. It is unlikely that businesses will
be able to scale up, prosper or even survive absent an adequate
rate of return on the investments they make to produce goods or
provide services. The return rate itself is influenced by a
number of factors, including the kind of business, the industry
in which it operates and, perhaps most important, the
prevailing economic climate.
In the current global economic downturn, characterized by a
constricted flow of funding, particularly of credit, ROI
considerations have catapulted to the top of the priority
listand theLab Manager Magazine 2009 lab practices
survey, as well as follow-up discussions with a number of the
participants, suggest that it will remain there for some
time.
G&T Metallurgical Services (
Kamloops, BC, Canada) is an integrated
mineral process R&D facility that provides mineral process
testing and mineralogical and chemical analysis services, among
others, to all the major mining companies in the world. At
G&T, the expectation is that any piece of equipment
installed in the lab should pay for itself within one year,
according to Derek Blundell, analytical laboratory
manager.
Blundell says that G&T buys directly from suppliers and
vendors, adding, We have never acquired a piece of equipment
that did not pay for itself in a year. It took just eight days
for an atomic absorption spectrometer that we acquired to pay
for itself.
There was widespread agreement (about 85%) among the survey
participants that their organizations are always more receptive
to projects in the research labs if they have real business
value and show possible ROI. More than a third (35.4%) of the
participants completely agreed with this premise, while 49%
indicated that they were in agreement with it. Only about 16%
of the respondents disagreed.
Still, the mechanisms to conduct ROI assessments are not
readily available in many laboratories. In fact, 59.3% of the
participants indicated that the management of their
organizations did not require formal ROI studies of potential
investments against the opportunity and risk. Almost 41% of the
participants reported that their organizations do require just
such formal studies before making laboratory
investments.
When the survey questionnaire drilled deeper among participants
whose organizations did not require formal ROI studies, 78.5%
responded that they knew of no plans within their groups to
adopt procedures for formal ROI studies within the next 12
monthsonly 21.5% of them said that such plans were afoot in
their organizations.
To be sure, ROI is not a primary concern in a number of
organizations. John Bardzik, laboratory certification officer
at the Wall Experiment Station of the Massachusetts State
Facility for Environmental Test Research, says his organization
is involved in the certification of commercial and
environmental laboratories. He says that his laboratory is not
profit-driven and there is no formal ROI process. Still, we
have reasonable expectations about the efficiency and
durability of the equipment that we buy, he says, adding that
all vendors must submit to state processes, which include
bidding for larger items. The idea is to find the best value
based on different criteria: availability and quality of
service, parts, warranty and overall
reliability.
In organizations where formal ROI studies are required, almost
a quarter of the survey participants indicated that operating
cost savings is a specific metric employed to determine a
reasonable estimate of the value the laboratory is likely to
receive after the purchase. The relative importance of cost
savings and other important metrics, including staff
productivity,
To be sure, ROI calculations are not always clear-cut. Judy
Yen, a laboratory manager at the Whitehead Institute for
Biomedical Research at MIT, says, It is hard to put an exact
measure on ROI. We make sure we get our moneys worth, but it is
really hard to quantify.
The difficulty of measuring the economic benefit of technology
was identified by more than a quarter (26.3%) of the survey
participants as a barrier to measuring ROI. Eighteen percent of
participants also reported being unable to determine technology
returns.
Overall, there seems to be a solid sense among lab leaders that
they are getting value for the money they spend on new
technology, but putting exact numbers on the return can be
elusive. Melissa Porter, laboratory manager at the National
Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases
(Bethesda, Md.), says, ROI is measured in terms of the use we
are getting out of the equipment that we buy, how many users we
have on it, the projects it is involved with, how the equipment
will progress the science and, of course, its durabilitythat
is, how many years we will be able to get out of the
equipment.
Eric Buckstein, manager of validation at Sanofi Pasteur
(Swiftwater, Pa.), who runs a quality control (QC) laboratory
with about 200 workers, says, ROI is an important concern that
has gotten bigger in the past few years because of the tighter
economic conditions.
Like most other commercial enterprises, Buckstein says, We want
to ensure that the equipment we acquire makes its money back in
a relatively short time. As a result, we always do ROI
evaluations and justifications prior to purchasing
systems.
We are a GMP facility, so there is always the question of how
long it will take to get a system up and running, qualified and
validated. That has always been a deterrent for bringing in new
technology or replacing existing systems with better
equipment.
Like-for-like is a bit easier because validation, documentation
and qualification are already in placeit is more streamlined.
In general, it is easier to tweak and make incremental
additions than to replace or improve systems
entirely.
Still, the likelihood of a shorter payback period is always an
attractive prospect. Buckstein says that his QC facility is
currently looking to acquire a system that will reduce the
number of full-time people typically needed to run an
operation. In such a case, the ROI would probably be shorter,
he says.
From Technology and
Operations, Published:
11/4/2009
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