THERE IS NO FRIGATE LIKE A BOOK By Emily Dickinson | | | |There is no frigate like a book |“frigate” a small‚ fast moving ships (simile is used) | |To take us lands away‚ |“lands” has the connotation of faraway places | |Nor any coursers like a page
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Job Evaluation Methods: Ranking • Ranking each job relative to all other jobs‚ usually based on some overall factor. • Steps in job ranking: 1. Obtain job information. 2. Select and group jobs. 3. Select compensable factors. 4. Rank jobs. 5. Combine ratings. © 2008 Prentice Hall‚ Inc. All rights reserved. 11–1 TABLE 11–3 Job Ranking by Olympia Health Care Ranking Order 1. Office manager Annual Pay Scale $43‚000 2. Chief nurse 42‚500 3. Bookkeeper 34‚000
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ASSIGNMENT 1 DETAILS OF METHODS OF GETTING INFORMATION FOR JOB ANALYSIS Job analysis may be defined as a methodical process of collecting information on the functionally relevant aspects of a job. It involves job description (determining the duties and skill requirements of a job) and job specification (determining the kind of person who should be hired for the job). The methods of Job Analysis are as follows: 1. INTERVIEW METHOD This tool is considered to be very useful to the analysis of jobs. It
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THE INNOVATION OF TIME-DRIVEN ACTIVITY-BASED COSTING Robert S Kaplan; Steven R Anderson Cost Management; Mar/Apr 2007; 21‚ 2; ABI/INFORM Global pg. 5 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. Reproduced with permission
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activity-based costing on banking industry performance Activity-based costing (ABC) gives a true cost for the bank compared to traditional costing‚ which allocates most of the expenses. Banking has become very competitive‚ and it has become imperative that banks like any other businesses allocate their resources to the most profitable areas. For banking industry‚ in particular‚ the potential benefits of activity-based costing (ABC) implementation can be numerous. These include the proper costing of transactions
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• What methods of secure custody do you use in your prison? In our prison secure custody is assigned to anyone placed in jail that is risk in the general population. This stops them from getting harmed by other inmates‚ inmates in addition can appeal this for their own safety if they feel threatened. Sex offenders and high profile inmates that appear into jail are automatically placed in secure custody. Secure custody is a way of life in prison. The point is that custody‚ in a prison‚ goes on
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Collaborative Writing Space for Project I THE OUTPUT PROCESS 1. The outputs of the order process are reports of credit holds‚ customer invoice when product is delivered and paid for‚ processing the product order‚ inventory check (product availability)‚ shipping instructions‚ and reports of back orders. The Diagram: The diagram starts off with one of the business processes called sales. A customer faxes‚ mails or calls in an order to the company. The order is taken down by a representative who manually
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Chapter 1 The Changing Role of Managerial Accounting in a Dynamic Business Environment 1-1 Chapter 2 Basic Cost Management Concepts 2-1 Chapter 3 Product Costing and Cost Accumulation in a Batch Production Environment 3-1 Chapter 4 Process Costing and Hybrid Product-Costing Systems 4-1 Chapter 5 Activity-Based Costing and Management 5-1 Chapter 6 Activity Analysis‚ Cost Behavior‚ and Cost Estimation 6-1 Chapter 7 Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis 7-1 Chapter 8 Variable Costing and the
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Journal of Accounting Research Vol. 40 No. 3 June 2002 Printed in U.S.A. The Association Between Activity-Based Costing and Manufacturing Performance C H R I S T O P H E R D . I T T N E R ‚∗ W I L L I A M N . L A N E N ‚† A N D D A V I D F . L A R C K E R∗ Received 20 May 1999; accepted 23 October 2001 ABSTRACT This study examines the association between activity-based costing and manufacturing performance. Results using a cross-sectional sample of manufacturing plants indicates that extensive
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up before lipids with carbohydrates being predominantly used at the 5min mark and lipids being mainly used at the 45min mark. This may be due to the fact that carbohydrates compared to fatty acids can be more readily converted since the metabolism process is much simpler. Carbohydrates do not have to be transported to the muscle cells since they are already present within the cells themselves while fatty acids are not. Fatty acids also require many additional processes for them to enter the mitochondrial
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