The Manager and Management Accounting Copyright © 2015 Pearson Education‚ Inc. All Rights Reserved 1. 2. 3. Distinguish financial accounting from management accounting Understand how management accountants help firms make strategic decisions Describe the set of business functions in the value chain and identify the dimensions of performance that customers are expecting of companies Copyright © 2015 Pearson Education‚ Inc. All Rights Reserved. 1-2 4. 5. 6. 7. Explain the five-step decision-making
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Textbook case: Managerial Accounting for Managers‚ 2nd edition Noreen‚ Brewer and Garrison (McGraw-Hill/Irwin‚ 2008). Case 4-33 Cost Structure; Target profit and Break-Even Analysis Contribution Income Statement for all three scenarios: 15% commission 20% commission Own sales force Sales $16‚000‚000 $16‚000‚000 $16‚000‚000 Variable manuf. cost $7‚200‚000 $7‚200‚000 $7‚200‚000 Commissions $2‚400‚000 $3‚200‚000 $1‚200‚000 -Tot. variable cost ($9‚600‚000)
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-]How Managerial Accounting Adds Value to the Organization (See related pages) | | | Managers need information for all of the managerial activities described in the preceding section. That information comes from a variety of sources‚ including economists‚ financial experts‚ marketing and production personnel‚ and the organization’s managerial accounting system.Objectives of Managerial Accounting Activity List and describe five objectives of managerial accounting activity. | Managerial accountants
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Introduction to Project Manager 2 Responsibilities of A Project Manager 3 Chapter-2: Project Manager & Arguments 4-6 As A Project Manager 4 Priorities Make Things Happen 5 Common ordered lists 6-8 Things Happen When One Say No 9 Keeping It Real 10 Know the Critical Path 11 Be Relentless 12 Be Savvy 13 Chapter-3: IS Manager & Answering 14-16
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Chapter 6 Cost-Volume-Profit Relationships Solutions to Questions 6-1 The contribution margin (CM) ratio is the ratio of the total contribution margin to total sales revenue. It can be used in a variety of ways. For example‚ the change in total contribution margin from a given change in total sales revenue can be estimated by multiplying the change in total sales revenue by the CM ratio. If fixed costs do not change‚ then a dollar increase in contribution margin will result in a dollar
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The Human Resource Management Concentration is designed to prepare students for a career in the HR field. Graduates of the program will possess the basic‚ technical‚ theoretical and application skills required for HR positions in industry‚ government and nonprofit organizations. What is Human Resource Management? • HRM includes all management decisions and practices that directly impact or influence the people who work for an organization. • HRM recognizes that employees enable an organization
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“All managers should be leaders‚ but not all leaders should be managers.” Do you agree or disagree with this statement? Support your position. Yes‚ I agree about that. Let’s talk about what is manager and what is leader first? Manager is someone who coordinates and oversees the work of other people so that organization goals can be accomplished. Leader is someone who can influence others and who has managerial authority. There is difference between leaders and managers. Managing is about efficiency
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THE MANAGER: OMNIPOTENT OR SYMBOLIC? How much affect does a manager inflict on an organization’s outcome? There exist two traditional views about this question. * OMNIPOTENT VEIW OF THE MANAGER: According to this view‚ the manager has the ultimate power. They are held responsible for the success or failures of the entire organization. * SYMBOLIC VEIW OF MANAGEMENT: As per this view‚ the outcomes of the organizations are basically influenced by the external factors‚ whereas the
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attract‚ retain and motivate high performing individuals‚ in order to fulfill its objective to make Factory A state-of-the-art factory. The process of introducing those changes is hampered by the flux in the Russian pay market and by the General Manager of Factory A‚ Wilton Winchester‚ who is rather short-sighted‚ uncooperative and is opposing the planned changes at the factory. Analysis Nadler and Tushman proposed four types of change situations: Tuning‚ Adaptation‚ Re-orientation‚ Re-creation
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Design/methodology/approach – The paper is based on research completed for CIPD by The Kingston Engagement Consortium drawing on both quantative and qualitative data collected from member companies over a six-year period of study. Findings – The paper argues that managers need a deeper understanding of how employees are engaging with their work to effectively leverage performance through engagement. It finds that despite much work on engagement‚ the issues of with what and at what level people are engaging is still
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