It is easy to define the value of a piece of machinery. It is the revenue generated by the machine, divided by the costs to generate that revenue.

Accounting with the benefit of hindsight is easy. It is not so easy when forecasting what the future value may be. Forecasting when the impact of the many relevant variables can only be estimated is an exercise in fortune telling. Quantifying these relative unknowns to allocate a numerical ‘value’ becomes a task with several parts.

  • Defining the factors that may impact the calculation
  • Allocating a relative weight to all the identified factors
  • Determining the ‘base’ figure from which to build the numbers that enable a calculation.
  • Repeating the above process for all the costs involved.

The calculation is then easier:

Value = weighted benefit 1 x weighted benefit 2 x weighted benefit 3:  divided by:

weighted cost 1 x weighted cost 2 x weighted cost 3.

It becomes way harder when setting out to value an intangible asset, such as the value of a brand. For example, a pair of sunglasses purchased in a general retailer for a fraction of the price of an almost identical pair, apart from a brand, sold through a specialist optical retailer. Too many, the more expensive branded glasses represent value for a range of emotional reasons, to others, they would be a rip-off.

At some point early on, and subjected to continuing evolution based on experience and research, you need to be able to identify the factors that add value to a target customer, and their relative contribution to the end result.

Always, the complicating factor is context.

I need a new computer, this one is getting a bit old, and while it still does the job well, at some point, something will reach the end of its life, and ‘poof’, gone. At that point the context changes, as does the value equation.

What was something needed but not urgent, that had a calculable value, suddenly becomes a whole new game, as I need the new computer: Now!

A whole different value equation!

The variables may be the same, but the relative weights have changed dramatically, determined by context.