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Title: Chapters 1-3 Review


1
Chapters 1-3 Review
  • New Venture Development

2
You will know
  • 5 basic functions of a manager
  • Difference between strategic plans and functional
    plans
  • 3 factors that must be addressed when
    establishing goals
  • Financial goals of a for-profit company
  • 3-step process to take when using control
  • How to compare and contrast different forms of
    business ownership
  • The basic components of SWOT analysis
  • What goes into a business plan

3
5 functions of managing
  1. Planning
  2. Organizing
  3. Staffing
  4. Directing
  5. Controlling operations

4
Planning
  • A systematic process that takes from a current
    state to some future desired state
  • Strategic planning is development of long-term (gt
    1 year) plans for the business
  • Functional planning relates to the different
    functional areas that are driven by the strategic
    plan
  • Financial planning is determining monetary
    requirements
  • Goal setting forces you to identify measurable
    objectives that are achievable and have timelines

5
Organizing
  • Defining structures, responsibilities, and lines
    of communication
  • This comes from the functional plan
  • Who will do what?
  • What skills they need?
  • When do we have to accomplish specific tasks?
  • How do we accomplish them?

6
Staffing
  • Obtaining the most capable personnel to implement
    the business plans
  • Each functional plan involves people assigned to
    specific jobs you will have to write the job
    requirements (education, personal skills,
    training) and the job description

7
Directing
  • Providing proper guidance and direction to others
    who will accomplish the organizational mission
  • Good managers and employers have good long-term,
    loyal employees
  • Directing in the financial arena is done through
    the budgeting process

8
Controlling
  • A three-step process that involves
  • Establishing a standard of measurement
  • Measuring actual performance against the standard
  • Taking corrective action when actual performance
    deviates from established standard

9
Starting a business
  • One of the first decisions is legal formation (no
    business until owners establish it)
  • Owner must determine how much money is needed to
    start the business (owners equity, outside
    financing)
  • SWOT analysis

10
SWOT analysis
  • Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats
  • Strengths the core competencies of your business
    succeed because you do these better than
    competitors
  • Weaknesses areas where your business needs
    improvement (old equipment, untrained workers, no
    )

11
SWOT analysis
  • Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats
  • Opportunities factors that exist in the business
    environment that will help the business grow
  • Threats factorsthat will impede the business

12
SWOT analysis
  • Note opportunities and threats are also shaped
    by your own strengths and weaknesses
  • Given my superior ability to write apps for
    iPhones, I can take advantage of the growing base
    of iPhone owners who use apps

13
The business plan
  • Tend to cover a common format to make it easier
    for investors to read
  • The executive summary is everything. It is the
    first thing readers will see, but you should
    write it last
  • You must convince your audience in two pages or
    less that they need to read the rest of your plan
  • Autoshop example on wiki space

14
Stages of business growth
  • Seed/start-up the initial stage the company has
    a concept and is normally lt 18 months old
  • Early less than 3 years old, product or service
    is commercially available
  • Expansion older than 3 years old and has high
    revenue growth, but may not show a profit
  • Later product or service is widely available
    generates revenue and has positive cash flow

15
Sources of financing
  • Personal assets savings, investments, credit
    cards, home-equity loans
  • Equity financing company-retained earnings and
    fixed assets of company as collateral
  • Bank loans
  • Angel investors provide seed money for start-up
    and early-stage companies
  • Venture capitalists provide financing at
    expansion and later stages of business development

16
Differentiating types of costs
  • Variable costs are directly related to the volume
    of product flow the cost you incur for each
    sale of a unit of product
  • Variable costs X units sold total revenues
  • Fixed costs are the operating costs associated
    with running the business but not directly
    related to revenues

17
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18
Income Statement Business
  • Basic Format
  • Sales, revenues, income from doing business
  • Less cost of goods sold
  • Gross profit
  • Less operating expenses
  • Operating income
  • Less interest
  • Net income (explain)

19
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20
Statement of Cash Flows
  • Statement of cash flows shows how the companys
    working capital flows into and out of the
    business during the year.
  • Statement of cash flows includes
  • Cash flows from operating activities is the
    difference between all of the cash received by
    the business and all of the cash paid out by the
    business in conducting its day-to-day operations.
  • Cash Flows from Investing Activities
  • Acquisition or sale of Plant Assets
  • Cash Flows from Financing Activities
  • Proceeds from issuance or sale of stock
    (preferred common), bonds. Purchase of stock or
    the payment of long-term debt.

21
Statement of Cash Flows (continued)
  • Examples of operating cash flow
  • Receipts All cash received from sales, changes
    in accounts receivable, changes in inventory.
  • NOTE An increase in accounts receivable or
    inventory represents a negative cash flow. A
    reduction in receivables or inventory is a
    positive cash flow.
  • Payments All payments made by the company to all
    accounts (suppliers, employees, rent, utilities,
    etc.).
  • Net increase (decrease) in cash plus the cash
    balance, previous year equals cash balance,
    current year.

22
  • Types of activities
  • Operating
  • Investing
  • Financing

Corporation
23
Balance Sheet (Statement of Financial Position)
  • Total assets
  • Current assets
  • Cash, accounts receivable, inventory, treasuries
  • Anything in your possession that can be
    reasonably be expected to turn into cash in 90
    days
  • Fixed assets
  • Land
  • Building equipment (less accumulated
    depreciation)
  • Net building equipment

24
Balance Sheet (Statement of Financial Position)
  • Total liabilities
  • Current liabilities
  • Accounts payable, notes payable, taxes payable
  • Long-term liabilities (debt)
  • Total equity
  • Preferred stock
  • Common stock par value
  • Paid-in capital in excess of par (common)
  • Retained earnings

25
Balance Sheet
  • Basic Accounting Equation
  • Individual
  • Sole Proprietorship
  • Partnership
  • Corporation

26
Family
27
Balance sheet Partners equity
28
  • Assets
  • Current assets
  • Fixed assets
  • Liabilities and SE Equity
  • Current liabilities
  • Long-term liabilities
  • Shareholders equity
  • Preferred stock
  • Common stock
  • Retained earnings

Corporation
29
Whats accumulated depreciation?
Corporation
30
Depreciation
  • The wearing out of a business asset during its
    useful life
  • The IRS establishes schedules that businesses use
    to determine the appropriate method of
    depreciation
  • Land never depreciates, but equipment does,
    usually over 10-year period
  • Break down depreciation schedules for each piece
    of equipment
  • When a fixed asset is sold or disposed of, both
    its cost and accumulated depreciation go off the
    balance sheet

31
Accumulated depreciation on the balance sheet
32
Pro forma financials
  1. Do revenues worksheet and costs worksheet
  2. These assumptions feed into your income statement
  3. Use the revenues and expenses from your income
    statement for your statement of cash flows
  4. Use the new cash-on-hand value to adjust the
    balance sheet

33
Pez Phone Financials
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