17 - 21 Feb 2025
Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia)
Hotel : Royale Chulan Kuala Lumpur
Cost : 5775 € Euro
The conference
This seminar focuses on the essential role of the HR department in the planning and budgeting process of an organization. As sales and marketing professionals assess product forecasts and demand, HR evaluates its resource requirements in both the short and long term. The HR function is integral to budgeting costs across the organization and is responsible for preparing and managing its own departmental budget. The seminar aims to enhance financial awareness for HR practitioners, enabling them to understand and communicate accounting and financial information effectively. It also covers techniques for preparing detailed HR department budgets and managing actual performance against those budgets.
Company objectives and financial statements
Reading and interpreting financial statements
Discounted cash flow (DCF)
Costing
Decision-making
Budgeting
Cost/volume/profit (CVP) analysis
HR and the budget process
The HR budget
Measuring HR performance
Budgetary control
Capital investment appraisal
Capital budgeting
This seminar will be presented in a participative style, and the team-based exercises and case studies will encourage discussion of the issues raised. It will also provide the opportunity to discuss and compare the HR practices of other companies with that of your own company. Many of the practical examples, for example discounted cash flow (DCF), break-even analysis, financial analysis, and budgetary control are also illustrated using Excel© spreadsheet models. This seminar provides the theoretical background to the key areas of accounting and financial management, which are put into a real world context by providing many worked examples and case studies relating to each of the topics covered, which will help you learn how to:
Appreciate the significant importance of cash flow (rather than profit) and discounted cash flow (DCF) in creating value for optimal decision-making to maximise shareholder wealth.
Analyse the income statement (or profit and loss account), balance sheet, and cash flow statement, and use ratios to interpret the financial statements and be aware of their limitations.
Appreciate the key role played by the HR department in the organisation’s budget process and preparation of the master budget, and the use of techniques like activity based budgeting (ABB).
Use the techniques of break-even analysis, budgetary control, capital investment appraisal, capital budgeting, and variance analysis for budgetary control.
Identify each of the costs required to manage a modern HR department to be able to prepare its annual budget and manage its actual performance.
The Benefits
Use your financial knowledge for improved planning and management decision-making
Communicate with finance professionals, within and external to your organisation, to be able to become a more effective manager of the business
Liaise more effectively with other departments on financial matters
Share your financial knowledge within your own department and with other departments within your organisation
Identify and quantify each of the areas in your organisation’s budget for which the HR function has indirect responsibility
Identify and quantify each of the areas for which your HR function has direct responsibility to be able to prepare a comprehensive HR department budget
Measure HR performance
The Results
Read and interpret the financial statements of a business: cash flow statement; income statement (profit and loss account); balance sheet
Evaluate business performance using appropriate techniques of financial analysis
Identify the differences between fixed and variable costs and recognise the impact of changes in cost structure on the performance of the business
Use both the traditional techniques of budgeting and activity based budgeting (ABB)
Determine the break-even point of a business using cost/volume/profit (CVP) analysis
Recognise the importance of cash flow (as distinct from profit) as a measure of business performance
Use the technique of discounted cash flow (DCF)
Evaluate new capital investment using DCF and other methods
Provide the relevant information and budgeted costs for each of the human resource-related areas within your organisation’s budget, for which the HR function has indirect responsibility
Prepare a comprehensive HR department budget, which includes each of the areas for which the HR function has direct responsibility
Compare actual versus planned performance using budgetary control and the use of flexed budgets
The Core Competencies
Using appropriate financial analysis techniques to evaluate business performance
Appreciating the important differences between fixed and variable costs
Recognising the ways in which changes in cost structure impact on the performance of the business
Applying both the traditional techniques of budgeting and activity based budgeting (ABB)
Being able to calculate the break-even point of a business
Appreciating the importance of cash flow and discounted cash flow (DCF)
Considering new capital investment in terms of creation of shareholder value
Taking a proactive role in the development of your organisation’s budget for the areas in which the HR function has indirect responsibility
Being able to construct a detailed HR departmental budget, and being accountable for its achievement
Using the budgetary control techniques of flexed budgets and variance analysis to compare actual versus planned performance
The Conference Content
Measuring company performance
Value creation and the primary objective of maximisation of wealth
Income statement (profit and loss account)
Balance sheet
Cash flow statement
Reading and interpreting financial statements
Measurement of operating performance
Measures of financial performance and financial position
Risk measurement
Limitations of ratio analysis
Discounted cash flow (DCF)
The importance of the timing of cash flows
Future values
Present values
Discounted cash flow (DCF)
Costing
Fixed costs, variable costs, and overheads
Overhead allocation, absorption, and the use of activity based costing (ABC)
Expenses versus inventory (stock valuation)
Contribution compared with profit
Decision-making
Relevant costs
Shut-down versus continuation
Make versus buy
Product mix and limited resources
Decision trees
Budgeting
Purposes of budgeting
The budget process
Activity based budgeting (ABB)
Uncertainty and risk
Motivation and the behavioural aspects of budgeting
Problems in budgeting
Non-financial performance measures
Cost/volume/profit (CVP) analysis
Cost, volume, profit relationships
Break-even analysis
The impact of cost structure changes
Limitations of break-even analysis
HR and the budget process
Organisation charts
Manpower planning
The direct labour and indirect labour budget
Employee benefits
Employee records
Payroll administration
Redundancy costs
Health and safety
Employee appraisal
Succession planning
The HR budget
HR staff costs
HR overhead costs
HR overhead cost allocations
Employment or outsourcing
Training and employee development
Preparation of the HR budget
Your organisation’s HR budget
Measuring HR performance
Why we measure HR
How to measure hiring and staffing
How to measure training and development
How to measure employee relations and staff retention
Budgetary control
Organisational and accounting control systems
Standard costing
Flexed budgets
Variance analysis
Types of variances and the reasons they occur
Planning and operational variances
Controllable and uncontrollable costs
Responsibility for HR budget variances
Capital investment appraisal
Methods for evaluating capital projects
Payback
Net present value
Internal rate of return
Discounted payback
Capital budgeting
Capital rationing
Ranking of investment projects
Inflation and investment
Using expected values and standard deviations to make decisions