Quite some time ago, a boarding school that had fallen on hard financial times was in search of a new head of school. One of the finalists was looked at with suspicion by much of the faculty. Though he had spent the first 12 years of his career at independent schools, he spent the next 10 in the for-profit sector. At a faculty town hall during his finalist visit he was asked/told, “You do understand this is a school and not a business?”
I think – I hope – we’ve come a long way since then and there is more appreciation that schools are businesses and their ability to sustain reasonable financial margins is what allows them to continue their impact. Yet, far too many schools have no idea what the margin is on any particular division, program, or activity. The reality is that the economics of schools are wrapped in a complex web of hidden cross subsidies.
As schools work on eliminating budget gaps, a common approach is to see if all divisions, programs, and activities can trim a bit or keep their budgets flat for the coming year. The challenge with this approach is that there are deeper investments that genuinely need to be made in some areas while other areas should be significantly cut or eliminated. This too often doesn’t happen because schools organize their finances around broad categories (instruction, administration, facilities) rather than specific activities or divisions.
This broad category approach creates blind spots:
Cost accounting is simply the process of tracking and analyzing all costs associated with running a particular activity, program, or division. Implementing proper cost accounting doesn't mean abandoning mission-driven programs. Rather, it provides transparency that allows for intentional decision-making:
Consider these scenarios that schools discovered through improved cost accounting:
Moving toward accurate cost accounting represents a significant cultural shift. Initially, there is a fair bit of work to set up the new model. People will need to really think about how they use their time and for what, something that isn’t closely tracked in schools. Many people in the community don’t understand overhead costs and those costs don’t make it into their thinking when planning new programmatic plans or assessing current work. It can be shocking when real costs are revealed. Here are some things to keep in mind as you move to getting a better handle on your school’s finances.
Improved cost accounting doesn't diminish a school's commitment to its mission—it strengthens it by ensuring financial sustainability. Not understanding the true economics of operations means schools cannot make informed choices about which programs to subsidize, which to adjust, and which might need reimagining. When a school chooses not to get a better handle on its financial operations – particularly a school with real financial challenges – it raises a serious question: Is the board delivering on its fiduciary responsibilities?
No doubt, boards may ask for some level of cost accounting from their heads of schools and CFOs only to be told that to provide such information is beyond the time available to undertake the work or the skills of the current business office team. If that is the case, this is when boards need to provide the support and resources necessary to take on such work. Many board members come from business backgrounds and can provide valuable guidance on implementing activity-based costing methods. Independent school financial consultants can be hired on a project basis to assist.
Making a switch to cost accounting can be a time consuming process, but the most mission-aligned schools are those that can maintain their values while ensuring long-term financial health. Cost accounting provides the clarity needed for both.