Title: Objectives
1Chapter 11
- Objectives
- Recognize the different types of direct marketing
and their pros and cons - Master using the Internet as a distribution
channel - Learn how to do non-direct distribution
- Differentiate the types of international
strategies - Identify the factors to consider in selecting
your business location - Set up your home-based business location
- Know what to look for in a potential site layout
- Understand the pros and cons of buying, building,
or leasing
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- Focus on Small Business Steve Niewulis and Tap
It! - Rosin bag attached to a wristband
- Stores were not interested preferred to buy from
companies with several products in their product
lines - Began attending trade shows set up a booth
- Met up with Baseball Express
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- Distribution
- Distribution process of getting your product to
your customers - Where are my customers?
- Where should I be?
- Direct marketing
- Can be simple and inexpensive
- Much more control over where your product or
service goes - Many forms
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- Typical Distribution Channels
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- Word-of-mouth
- Direct sales primary way of selling to
businesses - Salesperson contacts businesses likely to use
your product or service and arranges to meet with
the decision maker - Local fair, cultural event, flea market, craft
fair - Vending machines
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- Direct mail easy for part-time entrepreneurs
- Can take many forms postcards, catalogs, videos,
brochures, leaflets, CD-ROMs - Getting the addresses is a major hurdle
- PCS Mailing List Company (www.pcslist.com)
- Focus USA (www.focus-usa-1.com)
- Practical Marketing (www.practicalmarketing.net)
- Google Directory (www.google.com/dirhp)
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Question
- Which marketing style is a telephone call from a
salesperson? - a) telemarketing
- b) direct marketing
- c) guerilla marketing
- d) direct response advertising
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- Telemarketing telephone calls from salespeople
- Most expensive form of direct marketing
- Many states have adopted do-not-call lists
- Inbound telemarketing customer calls the
manufacturer or service provider
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- Direct response advertising you place an ad
somewhere - Wait for the orders to come in
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- Guerilla marketing unusual and nearly free
advertising - Placing flyers under windshield wipers of cars
- Waving signs at passing customers
- Business cards on bulletin boards
- Key is to catch the customers attention
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- Multichannel marketing using several outlets for
contacting your customers - Phone number
- Web site
- E-mail address
- Direct mail
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- Internet very cost-effective and efficient way
to contact your customers - Small businesses need to have a Web site
regardless of whether or not they use it for
actual sales - Multichannel marketing
- Web site listed on your business cards
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- eBay the megamall of e-malls
- Strongly suggest using the auction feature
- 12 million items available daily
- 2 million new postings a day
- 150 new items for sale listed every minute
- 69 million eBay users
- Spend 59 million a day
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- Tips for selling on eBay
- Use detailed descriptions
- A picture is worth a thousand words
- Watch out for misspellings and typos
- Be honest and factual
- Respond as soon as possible
- Be honest and up-front about shipping
- Customer service is very important
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- Other Internet options
- Amazon.com (www.amazon.com)
- Variety of selling options
- Elance (www.elanceonline.com)
- Offers service providers the opportunity to bid
on potential projects
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- Other Internet options cont.
- Contracted Work (www.contractedwork.com)
- www.freelancersdirect.com
- Business-to-business e-malls
- Business.com (www.business.com)
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- Distribution issues for direct marketing
- Youll need to know where to go to find the
information - The amount the seller pays
- Fulfillment center (www.clearcommerce.com/eguide)
- Nondirect distribution
- Middlemen provide the service of getting the
product to the end consumer - Functions such as inventory control, advertising,
and promotion
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- Nondirect distribution cont.
- Many distributors and wholesalers are not
interested in taking on a start-up product - Be able to prove that it sells well
- Showing your product at trade shows and gaining
sales and recognition - An e-tailer might be willing to take a chance
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- International strategies
- Born international new firm that opens a Web
site immediately, thus being exposed to customers
around the world - Exporting three questions
- Are we ready?
- Where should we go?
- Whom do we contact over there?
- A Basic Guide to Exporting
- http//www.unzco.com/guide.html
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Question
- Exporting using no middlemen is
- a) Indirect exporting
- b) Freight forwarding
- c) Express exporting
- d) Direct exporting
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- Direct Exporting exporting using no middlemen
- Indirect Exporting exporting using middlemen
such as agents, export management companies, or
export trading companies - Freight Forwarders firms specializing in
arranging international shipments packaging,
transportation, and paperwork
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- Exporting cont.
- Are you ready to export?
- Are you going to target one country, a region or
the whole world - Do you know what customers want
- Do you know what the import requirements are
- Are you ready for the costs and headaches of
exporting
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- Exporting cont.
- Where should we go?
- United Nations has 191 member countries
- Pick one or two as first markets
- Safest bets Canada, United Kingdom, Australia
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- Exporting cont.
- Whom do we contact over there?
- Government services you have already used can
provide lists of potential middlemen or end users - U.S. Commercial Services (www.export.gov)
- BuyUSA.com through U.S. Dept. of Commerce
- Participate in trade shows and trade missions
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- Exports cont.
- Next step is to export
- Pricing becomes complicated need to cover
transportation - Shipping documentation and other paperwork are
very specific to the product and the country - Variety of payment procedures available
- Financing and insurance become important
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Example
- How to Start an Import/Export Business
- Big guys make up only about 4 percent of all
exporters and the other 96 percent of exporters
are small outfits like yours - Trade channel - the means by which the
merchandise travels from manufacturer to end user
- Types of Import/Export businesses
- Export management company
- Export trading company
- Import/export merchant
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27Chapter 11
- Importing similar to exporting, but buyers and
sellers are reversed - Travel abroad look for products that are selling
well in the country youre visiting - Trade mission and domestic and international
trade shows are also good sources - Many of the paperwork and insurance details will
be your sources responsibility
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Question
- Entrepreneurs generally choose their hometown
for a location for all the following except - a) You know the local banker
- b) Zoning laws are strict
- c) Friends and Family will be customers
- d) Know the markets needs and wants
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- Location
- First choice for many entrepreneurs is their
hometown - Local banker knows you, more likely to loan money
- You understand markets needs and wants
- Friends and family are usually first customers
- Reasons to consider a different location
- Business laws in area (zoning laws)
- Certain types of businesses may be banned
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- Service firms
- Three types of locations
- At the clients location
- At a mutually accessible location
- At your firms location
- Marketing niches have been carved out
- Dry cleaning and restaurant dining are services
provided at a place accessible to both parties
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- At the clients location
- Services include such things as house or office
cleaning, pest control, remodeling, lawn and
gardening services, carpet cleaning, and similar
services which must be performed at the clients
house - As the firm grows, it may outgrow its home-based
headquarters
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- Mutually accessible location
- Too much specialized equipment to be readily
transported - A need for at least some client involvement
- Barbershops, dentist offices, video rental stores
restaurants
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- Remote locations
- Face-to-face meetings with the clients are
infrequent - Medical transcription, data processing,fulfillment
centers, and some consulting work - Ideal for home-based businesses
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- Site selection
- Once you have determined the general location of
your business, you need to determine the exact
location for your operation - Three categories to look for
- Home-based businesses
- High customer contact
- Low customer contact
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- High customer contact business
- Three critical site selection considerations
- Traffic
- Customer ease
- Competition
- Presence of traffic generators in the area
- Parking is also an issue
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- Low customer contact business
- Manufacturing business
- Commercial space might be appropriate
- Support businesses will be in or near the area
- Business incubator www.nbia.org
- 850 business incubators in the United States
sponsored by government, universities, or private
investment groups - Require a stake in your company
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- General comments on site selection
- Looking for for sale and for rent
- An experienced real estate broker will also be
able to assist you in your search - Level with them about what you can spend
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- Home-based businesses
- Check with the city for zoning restrictions
- Choose a work location inside your home that is
away from distractions - Youll need a comfortable, usable desk, and
adequate lighting - Tools typically include a telephone and
high-capacity Internet service - Separate business line with an answering machine
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- Layout particular to the type of business you
are in - Layout of a potential site must be considered
carefully - Consider the amenities that are already there
- Check the exterior
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- Typical Manufacturing Layout
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- Build, buy, or lease three choices available to
the business - Buying something already in existence shortens
the time and may be somewhat cheaper - Renting is an option with a considerably lower
initial cash outlay - Often the only feasible choice
- Rent expenses are deductible
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Example
- Relocate Your Business
- Buying requires more upfront capital investment,
but provides security and the opportunity for
capital appreciation - Costs less to get into leased space--and it's
easier to get out, too--but monthly payments may
be higher - Consider a lease with an option to own
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guides/article81406.html
44Chapter 12
- Objectives
- Understand the importance of a marketing plan
- Recognize the major methods of conducting market
research - Use sales forecasting methods
- Find or create a products differential advantage
- Identify the critical components of a marketing
plan
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- Focus on Small Business Kwok Kee Restaurant
- Friends raved about familys porridge recipe
- Business founded in 1968
- Kwok-Foon Lai needed a way to be different
- Decided to stay local for personal convenience
- Major street near a large complex of apartments
- Costs were much lower than the competitions
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- Marketing Plan
- Marketing plan a systematic written plan of all
phases of marketing for a business, including
information on the product, price, and
distribution and promotion strategy, as well as a
clear identification of the target market and
competition - Will help you articulate what it is that you are
going to do
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Question
- Secondary data is
- a) Information gathered to answer a specific
marketing question - b) Information that is extremely current
- c) Information already collected for some other
purpose than the current problem - d) Data gathered by observation
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- Marketing research
- Can verify the size of the potential market
- Show what the competitors are doing correctly
- Also, their weaknesses
- Reveal where potential customers are likely to
shop - Primary research gathered to answer a specific
marketing question
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- Secondary research research for some other
reason than your specific question - Secondary data information already collected for
some other purpose than the current problem - BizStats.com
- Economic Census census.gov
- Business Expenses Survey www.census.gov/csd/bes/
- Capital Expenditures Survey www.census.gov/csd/ac
e/
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- Primary data information is extremely current
- Take some more time and money to gather it
- Marketing research firms can do this for you
- Zoomerang (www.zoomerang.com)
- Vista (www.vanguardsw.com/vista)
- Web hotlinks
- SCORE (www.score.org)
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Question
- Data collection method using a questionnaire is
- a) Ethnographic research
- b) Scalar research
- c) Focus group
- d) Survey
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- Methods for gathering data
- Ethnographic research data gathered by simple
observation seeing what consumers do, rather
than asking them - Focus group form of data gathering from a small
group led by a moderator - 8-20 people
- Make sure questions are asked the right way
- Participants paid for their time
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- Survey data collection method using a
questionnaire - In person tends to be the most expensive
- Ask for clarification, or expand on the answer
- Mail is the least expensive
- Has the lowest return, and does not allow much
flexibility - Internet surveys are gaining in popularity
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- Question types
- Scalar questions answered by some sort of scale
- On a scale of 1 to 5, how do you like this
book? - Dichotomous questions only two possible choices
- Have you shopped here before?
- Categorical questions answered by selecting the
proper category - What is your ethnicity?
- Open-ended questions allows respondents to
express themselves
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- Sales Forecasting
- One of the most important pieces of marketing
plan - Knowing what your sales will be
- Companies often base sales forecasts on
historical sales, but new companies cannot do
that
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- Products or services are tied to others
- Estimate total market
- Calculate what percentage of that market you can
get - Other products and services are not tied as
neatly to others - Good situation for some marketing research
- Next step is to estimate average amount of sales
per customer
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- See what competitive products are going for in
the market - Search will find competitive products
- Price bots
- Froogle (www.froogle.com)
- Mysimon (www.mysimon.com)
- Elance (http//www.elanceonline.com/)
- Specialized in books (www.bestbookbuys.com)
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Example
- Creating a Sales Forecast
- Sales forecast sets the standard for expenses,
profits and growth - Should show sales by month for the next 12 then
by year for the following two to five years - Some tips to get you started
- Develop a unit sales projection
- Use past data if you have it
- Use factors for a new product
- Break the purchase down into factors
- Be sure to project prices
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60Chapter 12
Question
- Characteristics that separate one company from
another is called - a) Divisional Advantage
- b) Differential Advantage
- c) Competitive Advantage
- d) Diversity
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- Differential Advantage
- Differential advantage characteristic that
separates one company from another - Competitive advantage
- Create a differential advantage with one of the
parts of the marketing mix (Price, Product,
Place, Promotion)
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- The Marketing Plan
- Components
- Discuss your target market
- Explain your current situation (your competition)
- Marketing strategy and objectives
- 4 Ps Product, Promotion, Price, and Place
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- Target market
- Market segmentation process of dividing the
market into groups that have somewhat homogeneous
needs for a product or service - Geographic segmentation many business choose to
operate in one country - Service industries have no choice but to segment
geographically
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- Target market cont.
- Demographic segmentation income, ethnicity, sex,
education level, marital status, etc - Life cycle position
- Benefit segmentation benefits they seek (speed,
safety, capacity, and the like) - Good value versus those more interested in
reputation
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- Target market cont.
- Three targeting strategies
- Undifferentiated uses no segmentation assumes
that all consumers have virtually identical needs
and can be reached by the same marketing mix
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- Target market cont.
- Three targeting strategies cont.
- Differentiated market selects two or more
distinct groups of consumers and design specific
marketing mixes to meet their needs - Concentrated marketer selects one specific group
of consumers and designs a marketing mix
specifically for that group
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- Target market cont.
- Why bother with targeting?
- Dont waste a lot of effort and money
- Determine purchasing behavior
- Identifying the best ways of reaching these
potential clients - Also pays to think about secondary target markets
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- Current situation what you have done over the
past year and how effective these actions were - Reflect on the political, economic, cultural, and
other external environments - SWOT analysis
- What things do you do very well and what things
do you do less well
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- Current situation cont.
- Key component is considering your competition
- Direct competition other companies that make a
similar product or provide a similar service - Direct competition for Coca-Cola includes all
other soft-drink providers
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- Current situation cont.
- Key component is considering your competition
- Indirect competition companies that provide
alternates that are dissimilar to your
product/service that consumers might choose to
meet a similar need - Indirect competition for Coca-Cola includes any
other company providing items to quench thirst
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- The 4 Ps Product, Promote, Price, Place
- When defining your product, describe all the
details - Features, options, sizes, service elements
- What improvements or changes do you foresee
- Price determined by cost structure
- How does it compare to that of the competition
and industry?
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- What advertising tools will you use?
- Flyers, Internet, print ads, television, radio,
banners, and posters - Schedule
- Distribution system
- Mail order
- Boxes to local post office or UPS
- Daily or weekly
- Cost to ship, packing materials
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- Written plan specific details about your target
market - Present and near-future situation, including
competitors - Identify differential advantage
- May include financial projections
- Include budget
- Major overall goals
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- Written plan cont.
- What should the written plan look like?
- Software packages that help you work through the
plan step-by-step - Marketing Plan Pro www.marketingplanpro.com
- Consideration of whether the marketing plan is to
be part of a business plan, or whether it is to
stand alone - See Table 12.2
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Example
- Market Planning Checklist
- Use this list to develop your marketing plan
- Have you analyzed the total market for your
product or service? (features of your product?) - Have you described how your product or service
will benefit your clients? - Have you prepared a pricing schedule?
- Have you prepared a sales forecast?
- How will you distribute your product?
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76Chapter 12
- Whats Next?
- Successful businesses are constantly tweaking
their marketing plan - Decide what you want to accomplish next
- Revise your marketing plan to reflect this next
step - Low-cost help
- www.sba.org
- www.score.org
- www.entrepreneur.com
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77Chapter 13
- Objectives
- Review the basic concepts of accounting
- Understand the requirements for a small business
accounting system - Be comfortable with the content and format of
common financial statements - Understand how accounting information can help
you manage your business effectively - Learn how to craft budgets for your business
- Gain understanding of how people make decisions
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- Focus on Small Business Acropolis Computers
- After three years of hard work, they were not
making much money - Sales were growing with 600-700 customers
- High rate of referrals
- Did not understand costs, revenues, and profits
- Lost minutes in labor resulted in 40,000 annual
loss - Success has come directly from understanding
Revenue, Gross Margin, Overhead, and Burdened
Labor
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- Why Accounting Matters
- Proves what your business did financially
- Shows how much your business is worth
- Banks, creditors, development agencies, and
investors require it - Provides easy-to-understand plans for business
operations - You cant know how your business is doing without
it
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Question
- All of the following are types of accounting
except - a) Financial accounting
- b) Tax accounting
- c) Expense accounting
- d) Managerial accounting
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- Three types of accounting
- Managerial accounting used by managers for
planning and control - Tax accounting used for calculating and
reporting taxes - Financial accounting used by banks and outside
investors
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- Basic Concepts
- Business entity concept a business has an
existence separate from that of its owners - Going concern business is expected to continue
in existence for the foreseeable future - Accounting equation assets liabilities
owners equity
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- What is a cost? What is an expense?
- Costs real changes in what you own
- Expenses entries made in your accounting system
to record your use of goods and services - Managerial accounting is focused on predicting
the future, so it uses expenses only for
budgeting and planning purpose
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- Information usefulness must be accurate and
relevant - Only two reasons to do accounting
- To produce information that is useful to you for
managing your business - To meet legal or contractual requirements
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- Computerized accounting most commonly used
(QuickBooks, Peachtree) - Systems should easily accomplish
- Easy-to-understand user interface
- Context-sensitive help function
- Income statements
- Classified balance sheet
- Development of a cash budget
- Produce financial statements
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Example
- Which Accounting Software is Best for You?
- Two main types of accounting software
- industry specific and generic
- Consider the following for choosing a package
- The size of your business
- The industry you're in
- The components you need
- Available support
- Financial resources
- Professional recommendations
- Ease of use
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- Setting Up an Accounting System
- Accounting functions
- Accounts payable
- Payroll
- Fixed asset
- Inventory
- Credit card sales
- Accounts receivable
- Insurance register
- Investments
- Leasehold records
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- Financial Reports
- Five common financial statements
- Income statement
- Statement of retained earnings
- Statement of owners equity
- Balance sheet
- Cash flow statement
- Important thing is that the information flows all
the way from the income statement to the balance
sheet
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- Income statement primary source of information
about a business profitability - Revenues Expenses Net income
- Difficulties in understanding the income
statement - Disagreements about what exactly should be
reported as revenue - Disputes over when to recognize revenues
- Most small business do not have problems with
these sales are cash, or the same as cash
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- Balance sheet Statement of Financial Position
- Snapshot of financial holdings and liabilities at
the close of business on a specified date - Minimum detail is to report assets and
liabilities in two categories Current and
Long-term - Used to determine the liquidity, financial
flexibility, and financial strength of the
business
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- Balance sheet cont.
- Limitations
- All values listed are historical values
- Value recorded in the accounting records can be
widely different from the assets current value - Balance sheet might not completely reflect the
business - Certain assets and liabilities are omitted from
the balance sheet
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- Cash flow statement sources and uses of cash by
the business - Cash flows from operating activities
- Cash flows from investing activities
- Cash flows from financing activities
- Net effect of foreign exchange rates
- Net change in cash balance during the period
- Non-cash investing and financing activities
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Example
- Building a Financial Budget
- Business budgeting is one of the most powerful
financial tools available - Most effective financial budget includes both a
short-range month-to-month plan for at least a
calendar year and a quarter-to-quarter long-range
plan you use for financial statement reporting - It is important to budget both the income
statement and balance sheet
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94Chapter 13
- Financing activities actions taken by management
to finance the operations of the business - Net effect of foreign exchange rates rates often
vary rapidly - Net change in cash balance reconciles the net
increase and decrease with the beginning balance - Non-cash investing and financing exchange of
value other than cash takes place
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- Financial accounting can be a highly valuable aid
in decision making - Reporting to outsiders
- Record keeping
- Taxation
- Control of receivables
- Analysis of business operations
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- Managerial accounting techniques will make you a
better small business manager - More accurate at forecasting profits, planning
operations, and conserving scarce resources - Managerial functions
- Planning, organizing, staffing, directing, and
controlling
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- Cost-Volume-Profit analysis technique which
looks at the fixed and variable costs of a
business to arrive at a number of unit sales
(volume) to maximize profits - Variable Costs costs that change with each unit
produced - Raw materials
- Fixed Costs costs that remain constant
regardless of quantity of output - rent
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98Chapter 13
Question
- The point at which total costs equal total sales
is called the - a) Breakeven Point
- b) Equalization Point
- c) Neutral Point
- d) Variable Point
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- Breakeven Point point at which total costs
equal total sales
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100Chapter 13
- Business Plan and the Budget
- Business plan specifies the amounts and types of
inputs required to achieve a set of desired
outcomes - Based on assumptions
- How risks can be controlled
- What opportunities can be taken
- Budgets have the advantage of being comprised of
a series of small schedules
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- Planning / budgeting process through which
strategy is mapped into a series of tactical and
operational actions - Budget becomes a standard against which
performance can be measured - Basis for controlling activities and the use of
resources - Few small business owners consistently budget
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- Sales budget projected future level of sales in
units multiplied by the sales price per unit
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- Purchases budget number of units that are
expected to be acquired during the budget period
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- Cost of Goods Sold Budget predicted cost of
product actually sold during accounting period - Labor budget amount and cost of labor needed to
meet required production - Assume that labor can easily be increased or
decreased - Can easily be modeled as a fixed cost
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- Manufacturing overhead budget usually treated as
fixed costs - Becoming more common for managers to use
activity-based cost estimates for overhead
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- Selling, general, and administrative budget
SGA, contains both costs that change with
production and costs that do not - Advertising and freight are variable costs in
respect to sales
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- Budgeted income statement budgets that have been
completed to this point are combined into pro
forma financial statements - Common to create the statement in only a fiscal
year format
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- Completing a comprehensive budget
- Final processes to be accomplished to produce a
complete master budget - Budgeted cash receipts
- Budgeted cash payments
- Cash budget
- From these statements, prepare
- Pro Forma projected balance sheet
- Pro Forma projected cash flow statement
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- Controlling
- Managerial accounting provides information that
allows managers to determine how well the
business is doing in attaining its goals - Variances should be evaluated to determine the
significance they occur due to one of these
events - Prices are different from what was estimated
- Quantities are different from what was estimated
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- Decision Making
- To make good decisions, you need
- Good information
- Efficient ways to condense information
- Methods to help compare alternatives
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Question
- A source of information and a methodology to
reduce the complexity of information is - a) Financial accounting
- b) Cost accounting
- c) Tax accounting
- d) Managerial accounting
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113Chapter 13
- Managerial accounting is both a source of
information and a methodology to reduce the
complexity of the information - Accounting is useful for
- Managers of small businesses
- Record keeping
- Reporting to absentee owners
- Substantiating assertions made to regulators and
taxing agencies
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