The Accountant's Role in The Organization
The Accountant's Role in The Organization
The Accountant's Role in The Organization
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Major Differences Between
Financial & Managerial Accounting
Managerial Accounting Financial Accounting
.
Strategy & Management Accounting
Strategy – specifies how an organization matches its
own capabilities with the opportunities in the
marketplace to accomplish its objectives
Strategic Cost Management – focuses specifically on
the cost dimension within a firm’s overall strategy
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Strategy & Management Accounting
Management accounting helps answer important
questions such as:
Who are our most important customers, and how do we
deliver value to them?
What substitute products exist in the marketplace, and
how do they differ from our own?
What is our critical capability?
Will we have enough cash to support our strategy or will
we need to seek additional sources?
Management Accounting and Value
Creating value is an important part of planning and
implementing strategy
Value is the usefulness a customer gains from a
company’s product or service
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Management Accounting and Value
Value Chain is the sequence of business functions
in which customer usefulness is added to products
or services
The Value-Chain consists of:
1. Research & Development
2. Design
3. Production
4. Marketing
5. Distribution
6. Customer Service
The Value Chain Illustrated
A Value Chain Implementation
Exercise 1-18
Value chain and classification of costs
Classify each of the cost items (a–h) as one of the business functions of the value chain
shown in Exhibit 1-2 (p. 7).
Burger King, a hamburger fast food restaurant, incurs the following costs:
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Planning & Control Systems
Planning selects goals, predicts results, decides how to
attain goals, and communicates this to the
organization
Budget – the most important planning tool
Control takes actions that implement the planning
decision, decides how to evaluate performance, and
provides feedback to the organization
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A Five-Step Decision Making Process in
Planning & Control
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A Typical Organizational Structure and the
Management Accountant
Professional Ethics
The four standards of ethical conduct for management accountants
as advanced by the Institute of Management Accountants:
Competence
Confidentiality
Integrity
Objectivity