This document contains summaries of multiple case studies:
1) Wong's Pharmacy, a family-run store experiencing declining sales and profits after a large chain opened nearby.
2) Leo's Four-Plex Theater, experiencing lower profits than expected. An accounting professor identified potential control issues like cash shortages and free passes.
3) Private Fitness, Inc., a small health club owned by Rosemary. She discovered her friend and manager Kate had been stealing cash payments and keeping a client's payments for herself. Rosemary must decide whether to fire Kate and how to improve operations without taking on more work herself.
This document contains summaries of multiple case studies:
1) Wong's Pharmacy, a family-run store experiencing declining sales and profits after a large chain opened nearby.
2) Leo's Four-Plex Theater, experiencing lower profits than expected. An accounting professor identified potential control issues like cash shortages and free passes.
3) Private Fitness, Inc., a small health club owned by Rosemary. She discovered her friend and manager Kate had been stealing cash payments and keeping a client's payments for herself. Rosemary must decide whether to fire Kate and how to improve operations without taking on more work herself.
This document contains summaries of multiple case studies:
1) Wong's Pharmacy, a family-run store experiencing declining sales and profits after a large chain opened nearby.
2) Leo's Four-Plex Theater, experiencing lower profits than expected. An accounting professor identified potential control issues like cash shortages and free passes.
3) Private Fitness, Inc., a small health club owned by Rosemary. She discovered her friend and manager Kate had been stealing cash payments and keeping a client's payments for herself. Rosemary must decide whether to fire Kate and how to improve operations without taking on more work herself.
This document contains summaries of multiple case studies:
1) Wong's Pharmacy, a family-run store experiencing declining sales and profits after a large chain opened nearby.
2) Leo's Four-Plex Theater, experiencing lower profits than expected. An accounting professor identified potential control issues like cash shortages and free passes.
3) Private Fitness, Inc., a small health club owned by Rosemary. She discovered her friend and manager Kate had been stealing cash payments and keeping a client's payments for herself. Rosemary must decide whether to fire Kate and how to improve operations without taking on more work herself.
Thomas Wong was the Owner/Manager of Wong’s Pharmacy, a small, single-location drugstore. The Store was founded by Thomas’s Father, and it had operated in the same location for 30 years. All of the employees who worked in the store were family Members. All were hard Workers, and Thomas had the utmost trust in all of Them. Although the Store Thrived in its early years, performance in the last few Years had not been good. Sales and Profits were Declining, and the problem was getting worse. The Performance problems seemed to have begun approximately at the time when a large drugstore chain opened a branch two Blocks away.
Case Study : Leo ‘S Four-Plex Theater
Leo’s Four-plex Theater was a single-Location, Fourscreen theater located in a small town in west Texas. Leo Antonelli bought the Theater a year ago and, hired Bill Reilly, his Nephew, to manage it. Leo was concerned, however, because the Theater was not as Profitable as he had thought it would be. He Suspected the Theater had some control Problems and asked Park Cockerill, an accounting Professor at a college in the adjacent town, to study the situation and Provide suggestions. Park found the Following : 1. Customers purchased their tickets at one of two ticket booths located at the front of the Theater. The Theater used general admission (not assigned) seating. The Tickets were color coded to indicate which movie the customer wanted to see. The Tickets were also dated and stamped “good on day of sale only” The Tickets at each Price (adult, child, matinee, evening) were prenumbered serially, so that the number of Tickets sold each day at each price for each movie could be determined by subtracting the number of the first ticket sold from the ending number.
2. The Amounts of cash collected were counted daily and
compared with the total value of tickets sold. The cash counts revealed, almost invariably, less cash than the amounts that should have been collected. The discrepancies were usually small, less than $10 per cashier. However, on one day two weeks before Park’s study, one cashier was short by almost $100.
3. Just Inside the theater’s front doors was a lobby with a
refreshment stand. Park observed the refreshment stand’s operations for a while. He noted that most of the stand’s attendants were young, probably of high school of college age. They seemed to know many of the customers, a majority of whom were of similar ages, which was not surprising given the theater’s small-town location. But the familiarity concerned Park because he had also observed several occasions where the stand’s attendants either failed to collect cash from the customers of failed to ring up the sale on the cash register.
4. Customers entered the screening rooms by passing
through a turnstile manned by an attendant who separated the ticket and placed part of it in a locked ‘stub box.’ Test counts of customers entering and leaving the Theater did not reconcile either with the number of ticket sales or the stub-counts. Park found evidence of two specific problems. First, he found a few tickets of the wrong color or with the wrong dates in the ticket stub boxes. And Second, he found a sometimes significant number of free theater passes with Bill Reilly’s signature on them. These problems did not account for all of the customer test count discrepancies, however. Park suspected that the ticket collectors might also be admitting friends who had not purchased tickets, although his observations provided not direct evidence of this. When his study was complete, Park sat down and wondered whether he could give Leo suggestions that would address all the actual and potential problems, yet not be too costly. Case Study : Private Fitness, Inc. “I don’t know how much money I might have lost because of Kate. She is a long-time Friend whom I thought I could trust, but I guess that trust was misplaced. Now I’ve got to decide Whether or not to fire her. And then I’ve got to Figure out a way to make my Business work effectively without my having to step in and do Everything myself.” Rosemary Worth was talking about the consequences of a theft that had recently occurred at the business she owned, Private Fitness, Inc. Private Fitness was a small health club located in Rancho Palos Verdes, California, an upscale community located in Los Angeles area. The club offered personal fitness training and Fitness classes of Various types, Including aerobics, spinning, body sculpting, air boxing, kickboxing, hip hop, step and pump, dynamic stretch, Pilates, and Yoga. Personal training clients paid $50 per hour of their instructor and use of the club during prime time. During slower times (between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.) the price was $35 per hour. The price per student for each hour-long fitness class was $12. Some quantity discounts were offered to clients who prepaid. Unlike the large health clubs, Private Fitness did not offer memberships for open access to Fitness equipment and classes. Prior to starting Private Fitness, Rosemary has been working as an aerobics instructor and fitness model. She had won many local fitness competitions and was a former finalist in the Ms. Fitness USA competition. She wanted to go into business for herself to Increase her standard of living by capitalizing on her reputation and knowledge in the growing fitness field and to have more time to spend with her two young children. Private Fitness has been operating for six months. To Open the club, Rosemary had to use almost all of her personal savings, plus she had to take out a bank loan. The building Rosemary rented, located in a convenient strip mall with ample parking, had formerly been operated as a fresh food market. Rosemary spent about $150,000 to renovate the facility and to buy the necessary fitness equipment. The club was comprised of five areas : an exercise room, a room containing aerobic equipment (e.g. treadmills, stair climbers, stationary bicycles, cross-country ski machines), a room containing weight machines and free weights, men’s and ladies’ locker rooms, and an office. Rosemary contracted with five instructors she knew to run the classes and training sessions. The Instructors were all capable of running personal training sessions, but they each tended to specialize in teaching one or two types of Fitness classes. Rosemary herself ran most of the spinning classes and some of the aerobics classes. The Instructors were paid on commission. The Commission, which ranged between 20% and 50% of revenue, varied depending on the Instructor’s experience and on whether the Instructor bought the Particular client to Private Fitness. As Manager of the Business, Rosemary Hired Kate Hoffman, one of the Instructors and a long-time friend. Kate’s primary tasks included marketing, facility upkeep, Scheduling of Appointments, and record keeping. Kate was paid a salary plus a commission based on gross revenues. During normal business hours when Kate was teaching a class, one of the other Instructors, or sometimes a part-time clerical employee, was asked to staff the front desk in return for an hourly wage. Private Fitness was open from 05.30 a.m. to 9.00 p.m., Monday through Friday. It was also open from 06.00 a.m. to noon on Saturday and noon to 3.00 p.m. on Sunday. Rosemary was still in the Process of Building the volume necessary to operate at a profit. Typically, one or two Privat Fitness clients were in the facility during the prime early morning and early evening hours. A few clients came in at other times. Classes were Scheduled throughout the times the club was open. Some of these classes were quite popular, but many of them had only one or two students, and some classes were cancelled for lack of any clients. However, Kate’s marketing efforts were Proving effective. The Number of clients was growing, and Rosemary hoped that by the end of the year the Business would be earning a Profit. As the quote cited above indicates, however, Rose Mary gradually realized that Kate Hoffman was stealing from the club. On One occasion when Rosemary came to the club she noticed $60 in the Cash Drawer, but she noticed when she was leaving that the drawer contained only $20. She asked Kate about it, and Kate denied that there had been $60 in the Drawer. Rosemary wondered if other cash amounts had disappeared before they had been deposited at the bank. While some clients paid by credit card or check, others, particularly those attending Fitness Classes, often paid cash. Rosemary became very alarmed when, during a casual conversation with one of the other Instructors, the instructors happened to mention to Rosemary some surprising “good news.” The good news was That Kate had brought in a new Private Fitness client who was working out in the 1.00-2.00 p.m. time period on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Kate was doing the training herself. However, Rosemary checked the records and no new revenues recorded because of this new client. She decided to come to the club during the period to see if this client was indeed working out. Since the client was there and no revenue entry had been made, she confronted Kate. After first explaining that she had not yet gotten around to making the bookkeeping entry, Kate finally admitted that his client had been writing her checks out to Kate directly, In exchange for a discount. Kate said that she was very sorry and that she would never be dishonest again. Rosemary realized she had two major Problems. First, she had to decide what to do with Kate. Kate was a valuable instructor and o longtime friend, but her honesty was now a question. Should she forgive Kate or fire her? Second, Rosemary also realized that she had an Operating problem. She did not want to step in and assume the Managerial role herself because she had significant family responsibilities to which she wanted to be able to continue to attend. But how could she ensure that her Business received all the revenues to which it was entitled without being on site at all times herself? Should she leave Kate, who promised not steal again, in the manager position? Or Should she hire one of the Other Instructor, or perhaps a non-instructor, to became a Manager? And in either case, were there some procedures or controls that she could use to Protect her Business’s assets?
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