Introduction
Budget Preparation Skills is a comprehensive program that focuses on the essential skills required to understand the processes of costing and budgeting within organizations. The program is designed to address all the relevant issues concerning cost analysis, budget preparation, and performance measurement. This course is a must for all professionals who need to master their budgetary skills by learning how costs behave so that realistic business plans can be produced.
The seminar enables participants to:
- Identify the key factors required to understand business processes
- Develop a proper system of cost analysis for budgeting purposes
- Master the budgeting and financial skills required for better decision-making
- Identify sources of financial and operational data to support the budgeting process
- Learn new best practices to manage organizational performance
Course Objectives of Budget Preparation Skills
- Learn costing and budgeting terminology used in business
- Understand the importance of a well-defined costing and budgeting process
- Determine the full costs of outputs for the goods and services provided
- Master traditional techniques and recent best practices
- Link finance and operation for budgeting purposes and strategy execution
- Learn how to build a comprehensive performance measurement system
Training Methodology of Budget Preparation Skills
The seminar will be conducted along with workshop principles with formal lectures, case studies and interactive worked examples. Relevant case studies will be provided to illustrate the application of each tool in an operations environment. Each learning point will be re-enforced with practical exercises. Difficult mathematical concepts are minimized and handled in a visual way that is easy to understand with examples demonstrated.
Organizational Impact of Budget Preparation Skills
- Cost and budgeting awareness will be enhanced
- Higher chances to select a budgetary system that works
- Broadened knowledge of performance management techniques
- A better attitude to link cost and budgeting to strategy and performance measurement
- A deeper understanding of cause and effect relationship for budgeting purposes
- Better awareness of non-financial implications of budgeting
Personal Impact of Budget Preparation Skills
- Delegates will understand the budgeting methods most useful to them
- They will understand how to construct a relevant and efficient budget
- They will learn to evaluate the usefulness of costing techniques in accurately calculating and ensuring profitability
- They will reinforce and expand their knowledge by linking budgeting to strategy and performance measurement
- They will broaden their understanding by linking financial and operational issues
Course Outlines of Budget Preparation Skills
DAY 1
Budgeting and Its Role Within the Management Process
- The role of budgeting within management accounting
- Linking costing and budgeting to strategy and performance measurement
- The process of value creation: implications for budgeting
- What is a budget and why costing is fundamental
- Budgets - the financial expression of the operating plan
- Linking financial and operational issues
- Behavioral implications of budgeting
- Case discussion and examples
DAY 2
The Framework for Budgeting
- Elements of the budgetary framework
- Key concepts and terminology
- Advantages and disadvantages: critical issues to be discussed
- Overview of the financial statements
- Balance sheet, Income statement and cash-flow statement
- Introducing cost analysis for decision making
- The importance of understanding full costs
- The importance of understanding full costs
- Case discussion and examples
DAY 3
Costs Analysis for Budgetary Purposes
- Costing for budgeting: Why?
- Cost terms and purposes
- Fixed and Variable costs
- Cost, profit and volume relationships
- The key concept of contribution margin
- Direct and indirect cost – the avocation problem
- Traditional methods vs. Activity-based costing
- Case discussion and examples
DAY 4
Flexible Budgets and Variance Analysis
- Budgeting for management control purposes
- Describe the difference between a static budget and a flexible budget
- Compute flexible-budget variances and sales-volume variances
- Explain why standard costs are often used in variance analysis
- How to interpret variance analysis
- Integrate continuous improvement into variance analysis
- Case discussion and examples
- Is budgeting enough?
DAY 5
Beyond Budgeting: Broadening Performance Measurement Systems
- Shortcomings of traditional approaches to budgeting and measurement
- Linking financial to operational issues
- The Balanced Scorecard and Six-sigma
- Linking Strategy execution to Performance Measurement
- Financial perspective, Customer perspective
- Internal Business Process perspective, Learning and growth perspective
- Developing and adapting the scorecard
- Case study illustration and discussion
About London
The UK capital of London is a city that combines the old and the new. It is as equally famous for the latest fashion and innovation as it is for its impressive heritage. London's attractions range from the Royal Palace to the DIY atmosphere of its markets. It is also a picturesque city of parks and of course, the majestic Thames River. The city extends for miles beyond its ancient core and each neighborhood has its own charming atmosphere for visitors to explore. London also wears its status as a world city proudly and the influence of different cultures is plain to see in the food and fashion of the capital.
Things to do and places to visit in London
With so many attractions in London, anyone can find something to delight them. Art lovers will enjoy the world-renowned museums and galleries, most of which are free. Sports fans are spoilt for choice by the city's array of football clubs. Theatre and music fans have a vast list of venues to visit, whilst shopaholics have Harrods, Oxford Street, Camden and much more to look forward to after arranging flights to London.
Some unmissable London attractions include:
- Seeing priceless masterpieces in the Tate Britain or the National Gallery.
- Watching the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace.
- Visiting Trafalgar Square's famous monument.
- Marveling at the Crown Jewels in the Tower of London.
- Getting a bird's eye view of the city from the London Eye.
- Tasting one of Brick Lane's famous curries.
- Browsing the exclusive shops of Knightsbridge.
- Visiting a market – Spitalfields for antiques, Camden for clothes or Borough Market for street food.
- Admiring design from around the world in the Victoria and Albert Museum.
- Looking for clues at the home of fiction's most famous detective, Sherlock Holmes.
- Strolling through one of the lovely parks, including Hyde Park, St James' Park or Kew Gardens.
- Eating Britain's most famous dish, fish and chips.
- Watching the street performers in Covent Garden.
- Enjoying the views at a South Bank cafe.