Business professionals need to understand the financial factors critical to business success. This interactive seminar will show how finance works in today’s fast-moving business environment. For any business, the key elements of profitability, liquidity, and financial structure are critical to continuing success and competitiveness. So these three elements are comprehensively explored and developed at all levels of business activity. You will learn about the accounting processes of recording and reporting business transactions and how these are summarised as periodic financial reports, in accordance with statutory requirements. You will also learn financial reports are analyzed and by a variety of user groups
The seminar also has an inward focus and will explain why management accounting is essential to business survival, and success. It will show how budgeting can control costs and improve profitability. It will also explain and develop tools and techniques for evaluating proposed new investment projects. The seminar will enable you to understand the business from both a financial and strategic perspective and how business decisions will impact on corporate profitability.
Highlights of the seminar:
The strategic and operational role of the Finance Function
The principles of accounting and financial reporting
How to understand and analyze financial reports
How management accounting helps to maintain control and improve efficiency
How we can ensure that investment returns meet the stockholder's expectations
Having completed this seminar you should be able to:
Explain the nature and role of financial statements and their interpretation
Use the language of accounting and finance to communicate effectively with financial professionals
Review the financial performance and financial position of an organization using the appropriate financial ratio and break-even analysis techniques
Use budgetary control to compare actual against planned performance and to identify corrective actions
Evaluate investment projects using DCF and other appraisal methods
Appreciate the important role of strategic accounting in business performance improvement
This interactive seminar will comprise a range of learning activities, including tutor presentations, with a question and answer opportunities, demonstration and practice of analytical techniques, group exercises, and discussions, using case studies and current company and market information sources. Whilst the theoretical background to financial management will be explained and justified, the main emphasis will be on putting these into a real-world context by providing a practical ‘toolkit’ of financial techniques.
What will your organization gain from sending employees to attend this seminar?
Greater awareness of the role of accounting and finance
Ability to understand the structure of accounting systems, and financial reports
Ability to make more effective and better-informed contributions to financial discussions
Ability to use tools and techniques for financial control and financial management
A greater understanding of the key drivers which ensure sustainable growth and competitiveness
Awareness of how business risks can be identified, analyzed, and managed
Participants will be able to further develop their personal management skills by being:
More knowledgeable about accounting and finance systems, and the meaning of financial reports
Better informed financially, to enable improved management decision-making.
Better able to contribute to financial discussion, and communicate in financial language
Better able to contribute to the effective financial management of their organization.
Able to evaluate alternative courses of action and identify the most effective choices with regard to the future improvement of their organization.
Able to liaise more effectively with other departments on financial matters.
DAY 1
A Strategic View of the Business Environment
The business environment
The uses and purpose of accounting
Users of accounting and financial information
Accounting terminology
Cash versus profit
Profit and profitability
The structure of the balance sheet
The income statement – financial performance
What is profit?
The structure of the income statement
The links between the income statement and the balance sheet
Accounting conventions
The published annual report
DAY 2
The Financial Statements and Financial Analysis
The cash flow statement
What is included in the cash flow statement?
Why is cash flow so important?
The structure of the cash flow statement
The links between the cash flow statement, profit and loss account, and balance sheet
Interpreting the annual report
The key elements of published reports and accounts
Ratio analysis: profitability; efficiency; liquidity; investment; cash flow; the Dupont system
Cash versus profit as a measure of performance, EBITDA and
Predicting business failure – the Altman Z-score
Sources of financial information
DAY 3
Budgeting and Break-even Analysis
Management accounting
Cost behavior
The overhead problem, traditional versus activity-based absorption
Cost/volume/profit (CVP)analysis
Break-even analysis
The impact of cost structure changes
Limitations of CVP analysis
Purposes of budgeting
The budget process, including activity-based budgeting
Uncertainty and risk – worst and best outcomes
Motivation and the behavioral aspects of budgeting
Problems in budgeting
DAY 4
Budgetary Control, DCF and Capital Investment Appraisal
Budgetary control
Standard costing
Flexed budgets and variance analysis
Types of variances and the reasons they occur
Planning and operational variances
Investment decisions
Time value of money
Appraisal techniques
The effect of inflation
Free cash flows
Capital rationing and control of capital investment projects
Risk and uncertainty and decision-making – sensitivity analysis
DAY 5
Financing the Business and Strategic Accounting
Financing the business
Financing principles, including short-term versus long-term, and debt versus equity (gearing)
Sources and types of finance
The cost of capital, cost of equity (Ke), and cost of debt (Kd)
The weighted average cost of capital (WACC)
Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
Strategic management accounting
The effect of competitive strategy, and how to gain competitive advantage
Competitor information and strategic positioning
Cost of debt and equity capital
The disadvantages of traditional cost analysis
The balanced scorecard and critical success factors
Economic value added
Benchmarking