Managerial Accounting
Managerial Accounting
Managerial Accounting
MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTING
Eighth Canadian Edition
GARRISON, CHESLEY, CARROLL, WEBB
Prepared by:
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Learning Objective 1
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Work of Management
Planning
Controlling
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Planning
Identify alternatives.
Select alternative that does the best job of furthering organizations objectives.
Develop budgets to guide progress toward the selected alternative.
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Directing and motivating involves managing dayto-day activities to keep the organization running smoothly.
Employee work assignments. Routine problem solving. Conflict resolution. Effective communications.
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Controlling
The control function ensures that plans are being followed. Feedback in the form of performance reports that compare actual results with the budget are an essential part of the control function.
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Begin
Decision Making
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Business Plans
New businesses typically formalize their strategic planning in the form of a business plan. A business plan consists of information about the companys basic product or service and about the steps to be taken to reach its potential market. The plan includes information about:
production methods competition management team, and details on how the business will be financed.
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Learning Objective 2
Identify the major differences and similarities between financial and managerial accounting.
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Learning Objective 3
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Organizational Structure
Decentralization is the delegation of decisionmaking authority throughout an organization.
Treasurer
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The Controller
A member of the top management team responsible for:
Providing timely and relevant data to support planning and control activities. Preparing financial statements for external users.
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Learning Objective 4
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Competence
Provide accurate, clear, concise, and timely decision support information.
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Confidentiality
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Mitigate conflicts of interest and advise others of potential conflicts. Refrain from conduct that would prejudice carrying out duties ethically.
Integrity
Abstain from activities that might discredit the profession.
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Credibility
Disclose all relevant information that could influence a users understanding of reports and recommendations.
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Discuss the conflict with immediate supervisor or next highest uninvolved manager.
If immediate supervisor is the CEO, consider the board of directors or the audit committee. Contact with levels above the immediate supervisor should only be initiated with the supervisors knowledge, assuming the supervisor is not involved.
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Without ethical standards in business, the economy, and all of us who depend on it for jobs, goods, and services, would suffer
Abandoning ethical standards in business would lead to a lower quality of life with less desirable goods and services at higher prices
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Corporate Governance
The system by which a company is directed and controlled.
Board of Directors
Top Management
To pursue objectives of
Stockholders
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Corporate Governance
An effective corporate governance system should also protect the interests of the companys other stakeholders.
Employees
Customers
Creditors
Suppliers
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Learning Objective 5
Explain the basic concepts of lean production, six sigma, computer technology and risk management.
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Process Management
A business process is a series of steps that are followed in order to carry out some task in a business.
R&D
Product Design
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Process Management
There are four approaches to improving business processes . . .
Six Sigma Computer Technology
Lean Production
Risk Management
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Forecast Sales
Order components
Store Inventory
Store Inventory
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Raw materials
Materials waiting to be processed.
Work in process
Finished goods
Completed products awaiting sale.
Partially completed products requiring more work before they are ready for sale.
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Lean Production
Identify value in specific products/services. Identify the business process that delivers value.
Exhibit 1-6
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Lean Production
The five step process results in a pull manufacturing system that reduces inventories, decreases defects, reduces wasted effort, and shortens customer response times.
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Lean Production
Lean thinking may be used to improve business processes that link companies together.
The term supply chain management refers to the coordination of business processes across companies to better serve end consumers.
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Six Sigma
A process improvement method relying on customer feedback and fact-based data gathering and analysis techniques to drive process improvement. Refers to a process that generates no more than 3.4 defects per million opportunities. Sometimes associated with the term zero defects.
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Six Sigma
Stage Define The Six Sigma DMAIC Framework Goals Establish the scope and purpose of the project. Diagram the flow of the current process. Establish the customer's requirements for the process. Gather baseline performance data related to the existing process. Narrow the scope of the project to the most important problems. Identify the root cause(s) of the problems identified in the Measure stage. Develop, evaluate, and implement solutions to the problems. Ensure that problems remain fixed. Seek to improve the new methods over time.
Exhibit 1-8
Measure Analyze
Improve Control
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E-Commerce
E-commerce refers to business conducted using the Internet. In addition to dot.com companies, traditional businesses, such as banks and retailers, continue to expand their Internet presence. The growth in e-commerce is occurring because the Internet has important advantages over more conventional marketplaces for many kinds of transactions.
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E-Commerce
In recent years, many dot.com businesses failed that might have benefited from the application of managerial accounting tools: Cost concepts (Chapter 2) Activity-based costing (Chapter 5) Cost estimation (Chapter 6) Cost-volume-profit (Chapter 7) Budgeting (Chapter 9) Decision-making (Chapter 12) Capital budgeting (Chapter 13)
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Enterprise Systems
A single software system that integrates data across an organization, thereby enabling all employees to have simultaneous access to a common set of data.
All data are recorded only once in the companys centralized database. The unique data elements contained within a database can be linked together.
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Once a company identifies its risks, perhaps the most common risk management tactic is to reduce risks by implementing specific controls.
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End of Chapter 1