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According to the Ito report announced by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry in August 2014, it was pointed out that the issues of Japanese companies are not in asset turnover rates and financial leverage, but in terms of their ability to make earnings, compared to western companies. However, I believe that both accounts receivable turnover and inventory turnover are generally lower than those in Europe and the United States, among asset turnover rates, which is an issue for CCC (Cash Conversion Cycle) management. Inventory is an important management resource. Inventory is said to be a source of profit for business, at the same time, to cause loss. Especially in manufacturing, retail and wholesale business, management indicators are used to measure whether product inventory is being converted into sales efficiently. In general, the following two are used. 1. Inventory turnover rate Inventory turnover (times) = sales · cost of sales (annual) ÷ inventory amount The inventory turnover rate is mainly used by executives for presentations for investors or shareholders. 2. Inventory turnover period Inventory turnover period = inventory amount ÷ sales or cost of sales (monthly or daily) In fast-rotating industries such as foods, the daily sales are used for denominator and "days of stock days" is indicated. The inventory rotation period is practically used well. Annual average and month end stock are used for inventory, but the actual value for sales period / cost of sales is used for that period. It is enough to explain the past and current situation of inventory, but I think that it is inappropriate as an indicator for future decision-making internally. In other words, it is not inventory turnover as management accounting. I am convinced that inventory turnover days are an indicator that can assist decision-making to be shared by management, sales department in charge of operations, manufacturing, procurement, and logistics personnel as inventory-based management consultant. Table of contents Chapter 1 Now, why inventory turnover is paying attention? (1) Inventory is a scorecard of the corporation (2) Management efficiency (3) Weekly operation cycle (4) Management indicators related to inventory turnover Chapter 2 Management Accounting and Financial Accounting Chapter 3 CCC positioning and comparison between Japan and the United States, International comparison (1) Key financial indicators (2) Positioning of CCC (3) CCC comparison between Japan and US (4) Sporting goods industry (5) Six major chemical companies in Japan (6) Electronic components Industry in Japan (7) Electronic components Trading companies in Japan (8) MRO (Maintenance Repair and Operations) in Japan (9) International comparison by industry Chapter 4 Importance of information sharing on weekly performance results between management and operations sites (1) Month-end closing and next month-end payment (2) Monthly accounting system (3) Accounts Receivable (4) The case of Nidec Motor (5) The case of HP (6) Japanese companies pursuing Inventory freshness / time-axis management (7) Japanese companies pursuing weekly operation (8) Lehman shock (2008) through 2012 (after 311 Earthquake and Thai Flood) Chapter 5 Management Methods, Promotion Structure and Required Systems and its usage (1) Cash cycle and lead time (2) Stock out rate (3) Channel inventory turns (4) Inventory Dollar Control and Unit Control (5) Blind spots of accounts receivable management (6) Effective management methods (7) Effective system and its usage Chapter 6 Practices: Inventory Dollar Control and Unit Control (1) Inventory Diagnosis Clinic (2) PSI balance (3) Clinical records of products (4) Simplified asset management – Inventory Dollar Control and Unit Control (5) Inventory management: four-quadrant matrix method for inventory value and quality
Management accounting that creates change resilience and enhances financial strength and profitability It has been one year and three months since WHO recognized the new coronavirus as a pandemic on March 11, 2020. The infection of the new coronavirus has spread all over the world, and the social and economic conditions of the globalized world have been severely damaged, and its vulnerabilities have been highlighted. - Deterioration of break-even point due to decrease in sales - Expanding the gap between management and on-site awareness due to the impact of COVID-19 - Increasing number of internal frauds, fraudulent accounting of overseas subsidiaries, and inadequate internal control - Roadmap, goal setting and concrete measures for the realization of a carbon-free society Under these circumstances, what is most needed is the ability to respond to change by making use of hypotheses and verifications, in addition to the wisdom accumulated in the past, such as failure experiences and success experiences. In order to build a corporate structure that responds to change, it is necessary to manage change points by narrowing the pitch rather than managing goals. To that end, it is urgent to align the common operation cycle weekly, chain conventional management indicators (financial indicators and non-financial indicators), and manage the cockpit with the idea of ​​the Balanced Scorecard. As an inventory-centric management consultant, I advocate management accounting that can be used as an immediate force by connecting the management team and the field. In particular, as an evangelist of CCC (cash conversion cycle) and IFC (inventory freshness management) based on the latest case studies of more than 100 Japanese, American and European companies, we explain to executives, business managers, practitioners and students in an easy-to-understand manner in this book. In addition to the decarbonized society, this book also mentions food issues, marine plastic issues, and clothing disposal issues as non-financial information. Table of contents Chapter 1 Management Accounting and Corporate value creation index (1) Management Accounting and Financial Accounting (2) Fixed costs, Variable costs and Break-even point management (3) Corporate value management indicators, especially ROE, ROIC and case studies Chapter 2 Working capital and Cash Conversion Cycle (CCC) (1) Positioning of CCC (2) CCC comparison between Japan and U.S. and case studies (3) Inventory turnover days as key SCM management indicator (4) Change-responsive company under COVID-19 Chapter 3 The relation between Inventory and finance (1) What is inventory management? (2) Inventory from financial perspectives Profit and Loss statement and Inventory Balance sheet statement and Inventory Cash Flow statement and Inventory (3) Stock-out-rate, Appropriate inventory level and Inventory evaluation Chapter 4 Non-Financial Information (1) ESG and SDGs (2) Food problem, Ocean plastic problem (3) Paris Agreement (greenhouse gas emissions) (4) Decarbonized society: World trends and the position of the Japanese government (5) International organizations related to the environment (TCFD, SBT Initiative, RE100) Chapter 5 Reduction of accounting fraud risks (1) Increasing accounting fraud risks and countermeasures (2) Fraud triangle (opportunity, motivation, justification) (3) Toshiba's accounting fraud and Kanebo's accounting fraud (4) Accounting fraud of overseas subsidiaries (5) Prevention measures for accounting fraud Chapter 6 Effective Measures (1) PSI (production, sales and inventory) management (2) Freshness management of inventory and cash (inventory, accounts receivable, accounts payable) (3) Inventory dollar control and Inventory unit control (4) Weekly operation cycle (5) Measures to improve CCC (6) Physical inventory event involving management staffs (7) Inventory diagnosis clinic (8) Chain of visualization of management and visualization of autonomy Chapter 7 Effective management methods (1) Kyocera's Amoeba Management (2) IDC (Inventory Driven Costs) and RONA(Return on net assets) management (3) Balanced scorecard (4) Six Sigma method (5) ABC analysis (activity-based costing) and ABC (activity-based costing) (6) Effective IT solution and promotion system Chapter 8 Key issues in Japanese commercial practices and accounting system (1) Month-end closing and next month-end payment (2) Monthly accounting system
Cash is King After the unprecedented financial crisis Lehman shock on September 15, 2008 and the Great East Japan Earthquake on March 11, 2011, WHO has announced the new coronavirus was equivalent to a pandemic (a global epidemic) on March 11, 2020. The era of VUCA (since the 2010s) VUCA is an acronym made from Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity, Ambiguity, and represents the modern chaotic economic environment. In other words, it means "unpredictable state". In addition, global warming and environmental issues are the most important and urgent issues for ESG and SDSs. Under these circumstances, what is most needed is the ability to respond to change by making use of the wisdom from past failed experiences and successful experiences. In order to build a corporate structure that can respond to changes, it is necessary to manage the points of change with a narrower pitch than target management. To that end, it is an urgent task to align common operation cycles on a weekly basis, chain conventional management indicators (financial indicators and non-financial indicators), and carry out cockpit management with the idea of ​​a balanced scorecard. This book explains CCC by comparing it with Japan, the US, and Europe using the latest 3 yeras (12 quarters) financial results figures (end of March 2020) that can be grasped at the time of publication. This is a must-have book for business owners as a guide to improving asset efficiency. Chapter 1 Now, why cash management is paying attention? (1) Profit is an opinion, Cash is a fact (2) Increasing surplus bankruptcy (3) Increasing Accounting Fraud Chapter 2 Management Accounting and Financial Accounting Chapter 3 CCC positioning and comparison between Japan and the United States (1) Key financial indicators (2) Positioning of CCC (3) CCC comparison between Japan and US (4) Sporting goods industry in US, Europe and Japan (5) Six major chemical companies in Japan (6) Electronic components Industry in Japan (7) Pharmaceutical Industry in Japan (8) International comparison by industry Chapter 4 Relationship between PSI management and CCC (1) The basic knowledge of PSI (2) What is PSI management? (3) Correlation between PSI and CCC (cashing speed) (4) Notes on PSI management Chapter 5 Measures to Improve CCC (1) The case of Nidec Motor (2) The case of Shionogi (3) The case of HP, Inventory driven costs (IDC) (4) Japanese companies pursuing Inventory freshness / time-axis management (5) Japanese companies pursuing weekly operation (6) Lehman shock (2008) through 2012 (after 311 Earthquake and Thai Flood) Chapter 6 Management Methods, Promotion Structure and Required Systems and its usage (1) Cash cycle and lead time (2) Stock out rate (3) Channel inventory turns (4) Inventory responsibility, Inventory Dollar Control and Unit Control (5) Inventory Diagnosis Clinic (6) Blind spots of accounts receivable management (7) Effective management methods (8) Effective system and its usage Chapter 7 Key issues in Japanese commercial practices and accounting system (1) Month-end closing and next month-end payment (2) Monthly accounting system
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Cash is King Since the unprecedented financial crisis Lehman shock that occurred on 15th September 2008, the values of corporate management have been significantly changed from the profit and loss statement (P/L) to the balance sheet (B/S) and the cash flow (C/F). In order to cope with the increasing surplus bankruptcy and accounting fraud, strengthening cash management is an urgent issue. CCC (cash conversion cycle, cashing speed) is prevalent in Europe and the US, but in Japan it is not yet popular except some companies. Rather than handling CCC as a simple financial indicator, we need to know what kind of practical knowledge is necessary to create corporate value, as relation to other management indicators as management accounting, and to connect CCC effectively to improvement activities. In addition, this book will explain about the problems in Japanese commercial practice and accounting system while comparing the latest CCC data between Japan and the US. Chapter 1 Now, why cash management is paying attention? (1) Profit is an opinion, Cash is a fact (2) Increasing surplus bankruptcy (3) Increasing Accounting Fraud Chapter 2 Management Accounting and Financial Accounting Chapter 3 CCC positioning and comparison between Japan and the United States Chapter 4 Measures to Improve CCC Chapter 5 Management Methods, Promotion Structure and Required System Requirements and its usage Chapter 6 Key issues in Japanese commercial practices and accounting system (1) Month-end closing and next month-end payment (2) Monthly accounting system Chapter 1 Now, why cash management is paying attention? (1) Increasingly surging surplus bankruptcy (2) Increasing Accounting Fraud risks Chapter 2 Managerial Accounting and Financial Accounting Chapter 3 CCC positioning and comparison between Japan and the United States Chapter 4 Measures to Improve CCC Chapter 5 Promotion Structure and Required System Requirements Chapter 6 Challenges in Japanese Accounting System (1) month end closing and next month end payment (2) Monthly accounting system
This is the Study Guide to accompany Financial and Managerial Accounting, Volume 1. Financial and Managerial Accounting, by Weygandt, Kimmel, Kieso is a new introductory program for the two semester accounting sequence that presents equal coverage of both introductory financial and managerial accounting topics. The Team for Success authors of Jerry Weygandt, Paul Kimmel, and Don Kieso bring years of industry, academic, and writing experience to the development of this new title which gives students the tools they need to understand the accounting cycle and key financial accounting topics, while presenting the managerial topics in an easy-to-understand fashion in a decision-making framework. The Team for Success authors understand where students struggle in introductory accounting, and have developed a learning system that illustrates the accounting cycle and key transactions, while giving student the tools to apply their learning through sample exercises throughout the chapter. Weygandt Financial and Managerial Accounting relates accounting concepts to real-world experiences, is full relevant examples to students' lives, and provides IFRS coverage that will prepare students for the global economy.
This practical guide is a “must own” resource for every museum store office. The eight-chapter volume includes a wealth of advice on best practices compiled by the MSA to help members become more successful in every aspect of their business. Get guidance from experienced store manager pros to help you correctly evaluate your store’s performance and get on track to boost every aspect of performance. If you add just one educational resource to your library this year, this book should be it! The information it contains is that valuable. The revised and updated Fifth Edition of Museum Store: The Manager’s Guide includes invaluable new tools. Features include: Updated information on social media, online and mobile shopping to help you maximize the value of these important channels How-to’s for analyzing and measuring financial performance, visual merchandising, marketing, managing personnel and more BONUS: Forms found in the book that you can download from the MSA website New insights into unrelated business income tax (UBIT) and copyright issues
Praise for Management Accounting Best Practices "It doesn't matter where you start reading, even the most experienced accountant will find some useful ideas." —Alan H. Boycott, Chartered Accountant, Düsseldorf, Germany "This is one of the best books about new accounting practices in practical accounting. I highly recommend this book for accountants of all levels." —Andrei Ralko, Controller, International Center for Transitional Justice, New York, NY The only practices worth followingare the best practices... Destined to become an essential desktop tool in helping professionals make management decisions in accounting, Management Accounting Best Practices introduces over 100 best practices from accounting expert Steven Bragg for questions such as: How does the system of interlocking budgets work? What does a sample budget look like? What best practices can I apply to the budgeting process? How can I integrate the budget into the corporate control system? How do throughput concepts impact the budget? Now, when members of your management team come calling with questions, you'll have the answers at your fingertips, in Management Accounting Best Practices. It's the easy-to-use, daily reference manual for every accountant in a management position.
Discusses financial basics, introduces the language of finances, and describes decision making with data.