P6 - Management Accounting Business Strategy: CIMA-CICPA Finance Leadership Programme Course and Examination Syllabus
P6 - Management Accounting Business Strategy: CIMA-CICPA Finance Leadership Programme Course and Examination Syllabus
P6 - Management Accounting Business Strategy: CIMA-CICPA Finance Leadership Programme Course and Examination Syllabus
Syllabus Outline
Learning Aims
Assessment Strategy
There will be a written examination paper of three hours, with the following sections.
Section A - 50 marks
A maximum of four compulsory questions, totalling 50 marks, all relating to a single scenario.
Section B – 50 marks
Two question, from a choice of four, each worth 25 marks. Short scenarios will be given, to which some or all
questions relate.
Learning Outcomes and Syllabus Content
Learning outcomes
Syllabus content
· PEST analysis.
· SWOT analysis.
· Interacting with stakeholders and the use of stakeholder mapping.
· Regulation in major markets (WTO, EU, NAFTA, Asia-Pacific).
· Country analysis and political risk.
· Porter’s Diamond and its use for assessing the competitive advantage of nations.
· Porter’s Five Forces model and its use for assessing the external environment.
· Qualitative approaches to competitive analysis.
· Competitor analysis and competitive strategies (both qualitative and quantitative tools of competitor analysis
will be used).
· Sources, availability and quality of data for environmental analysis.
Learning outcomes
· evaluate the impact and influence of the external environment on an organisation and its strategy;
· recommend pro-active and reactive approaches to business/government relations and to relations with civil
society;
· discuss how stakeholder groups work and how they affect the organisation;
· discuss how suppliers and customers influence the strategy process and recommend how to interact with
them;
· evaluate the impact of electronic commerce on the way business is conducted and recommend an appropriate
strategy;
· evaluate the strategic and competitive benefits of IS/IT and advise on the development of appropriate
strategies.
Syllabus content
· Derivatives of PEST such as STEEP (social, technological, environmental, economic and political factors) and
PESTEL (political, economic, socio-cultural, technological and legal factors)
· Approaches to business-government relations and with civil society (Braithwaite and Drahos).
· Stakeholder management (stakeholders to include government and regulatory agencies, non-governmental
organisations and civil society, industry associations, customers and suppliers).
· The customer portfolio: customer analysis and behaviour, including the marketing audit and customer
profitability analysis as well as customer retention and loyalty.
· Negotiating with customers and suppliers and managing these relationships.
· The impact of IT (including electronic commerce) on an industry (utilising frameworks such as Porter’s Five
Forces, the Value Chain) and how organisations can use IT (including the Internet) to enhance competitive
position.
· Competing through exploiting information (rather than technology), e.g. use of databases to identify potential
customers or market segments, and the management of data (warehousing and mining).
· The relationship between current and predicted strategic importance of IS/IT (the applications portfolio).
· Implications of these interactions for Chartered Management Accountants and the management accounting
system.
Learning outcomes
Learning outcomes
Syllabus content
· Assessing strategic performance (i.e. the use and development of appropriate measures that are sensitive to
industry characteristics and environmental factors).
· Non-financial measures and their interaction with financial ones. (Note: candidates will be expected to use
both qualitative and quantitative techniques.)
· Multidimensional models of performance (e.g. the balanced scorecard, the results and determinants
framework, the performance pyramid).
· Business unit performance and appraisal, including transfer pricing, reward systems and incentives, and
agency theory. (Note: Details of agency theory will not be tested.)
· Project management: monitoring the implementation of plans.
· The implementation of lean systems across an organisation.
· Change management in a strategic context.
· Marketing in a strategic context.
· The purpose and contents of IM, IS and IT strategies, and the need for strategy complementary to the
corporate and individual business strategies.
· The concept of knowledge management and its role as a key element in an organisation’s success.
· Critical success factors: links to performance indicators and corporate strategy, and their use as a basis for
defining an organisation’s information needs.
· The role of research and development in an organisation, particularly the need to integrate product and
process development.
For information about the programme including a study syllabus and training schedule and fee structure visit the
following site or call us.