Funeral Business Productivity: What Is It And How Do I Measure It?
Productivity growth is frequently praised by governments, business community, and the media.
Both as proof of a healthy economy and as a solution to generally improving standards. Yet there is little agreement on what productivity actually is and means.
To accountants and economists, productivity is the efficiency of the economy in converting inputs, (the material, labor, and capital), into output, (the actual products and services sold). Productivity grows when output grows faster than inputs.
This results in making the existing productive inputs more efficient. Now, productivity does not measure the value we attach to the outputs. It only measures how efficiently we use our assets to produce the outputs.
Productivity at the company level.
- Technological progress and organizational change - firms adopt or develop new technologies, such as software, and/or organizational structures that are new to the firm.
- Improvements in technical efficiency - increases in output can be achieved, at a given level of input, from better and greater use of existing resources.
- Increasing returns of scale - as the size of the firm expands, its unit cost of input items and processes of production can fall as it becomes more advantageous to adopt existing technologies from outside of the firm's current assets. These would include such things as machines that have a higher capacity of production per hour then current machines or software that to hone more strategic and accurate movement.
Measuring productivity
- First calculate the average labor revenue per month.
The sum of all your YTD labor revenue ÷ # of months YTD = average labor revenue per month
(If you don’t keep track of your labor revenue separately in your accounting process, add up the labor billed each month and keep those numbers on a spreadsheet.)
You can use a second spreadsheet in the workbook to calculate these formulas - Then... Calculate your average labor Cost Hours per month
The sum of all your YTD labor costs, including any subcontractor labor ÷ # of months YTD ÷ Your average hourly wage = avg labor Cost Hours per month
(Using only the cost of Direct Labor Employees and the amount you pay your contractors for their labor, not materials or anything else. Your subcontractors should have separate line items or total for the labor they are billing. If not, get them to do so.) - And then… Calculate the number of Billable Employee Equivalents
Avg Cost Hours per month (#2 above) ÷ 173.33 (avg work hours for an employee in a month, [2080 a year ÷ 12]) = # of Billable (fulltime) Employee Equivalents (BEE’s) - Lastly… Calculate the average labor revenue per employee (our LP #)
Avg labor revenue per month (#1) ÷ # of BEEs (#3) = YTD Labor Productivity per Employee.
- Avg Labor Revenues per month YTD
Labor Revenue YTD # of Months YTD Avg Labor Revenue per Month
$341,505.00 ÷ 7 = $48,786.43 - Avg Labor Cost Hours per month YTD
Labor Costs YTD # of Months YTD Avg Hourly Wage Avg Labor Cost Hours
$118,397.09 ÷ 7 ÷ 14.00 = 1,208.13 - Number of Billable (fulltime) Employee Equivalents per month YTD
Avg Labor Cost Hours Avg Work Hours Billable Employee Equivalents per month (#2)
per Month (173.33) (BEEs)
1,208.13 ÷ 173.33 = 6.97 - Labor Revenue per Direct Labor Employee per month YTD
Avg Labor Revenue per Month (#1)BEE’s (#3)Avg Labor Revenue Per Employee
per month YTD
$48,786.43 ÷6.97 =6,999.358




