TCO Measure
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A TCO Measure is a financial performance measure that is a comprehensive cost measure (calculates total cost of ownership including acquisition, operation, and disposal costs).
- AKA: Total Cost of Ownership Measure.
- Context:
- It can typically aggregate TCO Components across TCO lifecycle phases.
- It can typically include TCO Hidden Costs beyond TCO purchase price.
- It can typically project TCO Future Costs through TCO predictive modeling.
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- It can often compare TCO Alternatives for TCO decision support.
- It can often optimize TCO Efficiency through TCO cost driver analysis.
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- It can range from being a Basic TCO Measure to being a Comprehensive TCO Measure, depending on its TCO scope coverage.
- It can range from being a Static TCO Measure to being a Dynamic TCO Measure, depending on its TCO update frequency.
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- It can integrate with TCO Financial System for TCO budget planning.
- It can connect to TCO Asset Management for TCO lifecycle tracking.
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- Example(s):
- TCO Technology Measures, such as:
- TCO Equipment Measures, such as:
- TCO Facility Measures, such as:
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- Counter-Example(s):
- Purchase Price Measure, which tracks only initial cost without lifecycle expenses.
- Operating Cost Measure, which excludes acquisition and disposal costs.
- ROI Measure, which includes benefits rather than just costs.
- See: Financial Performance Measure, Comprehensive Cost Measure, Lifecycle Cost Measure, Performance Measure.