|
Books > Business & Economics > Business & management > Management of specific areas > Budgeting & financial management
Practical Construction Accounting and Financial Management provides
instructions, training, exercises, and examples of the fundamentals
that successful construction contractors must master: the ability
to capture, summarize, analyze, and forecast operation data to be
better informed when making project and business decisions.
Typically, a project manager is not involved with data entry but is
a source of data collection. Often the project manager's lack of
understanding of accounting systems creates a situation where the
project manager's role in the data retrieval and entry is
compromised. This compromise results in poor decisions being made
by the project and company managers due to inaccurate and untimely
data. This book provides current and future construction
professionals with an awareness of fundamental accounting concepts
and financial principles to successfully manage the finances of
construction companies, including accurately pricing projects based
on actual overhead and profit recovery needs, successfully
controlling the cost to operate a construction company through the
comparison between company budgets and actual financial statements,
and proactively forecasting cash needs before falling into a
potential cash trap that could force the company into bankruptcy.
Driving Your Company's Value: Strategic Benchmarking for Value is a
step-by-step book presenting a valuation-oriented methodology that
helps companies maximize shareholder value. It offers clear,
concise, and concrete methods for management to create and preserve
value, complete with case study applications. In an easy-to-read
format, it brings together the aspects of the Financial Accounting
Standards Boards' new performance measurements, the balanced
scorecard, and the new guidelines on fraud detection and Extensible
Business Reporting Language (XBRL).
* Identifies the critical decisions that most effectuate growth and
value.
* Covers the easy and reliable ways to monitor value of an
entity.
* Demonstrates how management can apportion and allocate resources
to achieve the highest value.
Throughout the text of this introduction to benefit cost analysis, emphasis is on applications, and a worked case study is progressively undertaken as an illustration of the analytical principles in operation. The first part covers basic theory and procedures. Part Two advances to material on internationally tradeable goods and projects that affect market prices, and part Three introduces special topics such as the treatment of risk and uncertainty, income distributional effects and the valuation of non-marketed goods. Instructors' resource web site: http://www.uq.edu.au/economics/bca
Valuable guidance for staying one step ahead of financial statement
fraud
Financial statement fraud is one of the most costly types of
fraud and can have a direct financial impact on businesses and
individuals, as well as harm investor confidence in the markets.
While publications exist on financial statement fraud and roles and
responsibilities within companies, there is a need for a practical
guide on the different schemes that are used and detection guidance
for these schemes. "Financial Statement Fraud: Strategies for
Detection and Investigation" fills that need.Describes every major
and emerging type of financial statement fraud, using real-life
cases to illustrate the schemesExplains the underlying accounting
principles, citing both U.S. GAAP and IFRS that are violated when
fraud is perpetratedProvides numerous ratios, red flags, and other
techniques useful in detecting financial statement fraud
schemesAccompanying website provides full-text copies of documents
filed in connection with the cases that are cited as examples in
the book, allowing the reader to explore details of each case
further
Straightforward and insightful, "Financial Statement Fraud"
provides comprehensive coverage on the different ways financial
statement fraud is perpetrated, including those that capitalize on
the most recent accounting standards developments, such as fair
value issues.
|
|