BEC 6 - Planning, Control, Analysis, & Risk Management Flashcards
Strategic Planning
Setting long term overall goals and policies which help guide the overall goals and policies
Tactical Planning
short term objectives and temporary techniques
Strategic Plannings Steps
- Mission Statement 2. ID Goals and Objectives 3. Performance Measures 4. Tactics
Master Budget
a static budget for the company as a whole to summarize individual budgets 2 Major Budgets: 1. Operating Budget 2. Financing Budget
Operating Budget
projected income statement with various supporting schedules
Financing Budget
projected CAPITAL budget, CASH budget, Balance Sheet, & Statement of Cash Flows - usually for 1 year but could be a rolling budget as well
Static Budget
serve to analyze conditions for a SPECIFIC LEVEL of activity - do not change each time some volume changes - set up for extended period of time
Kaizen Budgeting
- managers make cost projections that incorporate their expectations for future improvements - if those improvements are not met, budget (goals) cannot be met
Kaizen Approach
focus on continually identifying and implementing small improvements, instead of focusing on major breakthroughs or large structural changes “anti-hollistic”
Preparing A Master Budget Steps
- Estimate Sales Volume 2. Estimate Revenues (based on Sales Volume) 3. Estimate Collections (based on Revenues) 4. Estimate COGS based on # of units sold 5. Estimate # of units to be manufactured (based on finished goods inventory, budgeted ending inventory, & COGS) 6. Estimate Material Needs, Labor costs, & OH costs (based on #5) 7. Budget Purchases (based on material needs, current raw materials inventory, & budgeted ending inventory) 8. Estimate Payments (based on purchase terms) 9. Analyze expense & payment patterns to complete operating and CF budgets
Budgeting Material Purchases & Payments (STEPS)
- Units to be Manufactured 2. Units of Raw Material required for Production 3. Budgeted Raw Materials Purchases 4. Budgeted Payments for Raw Materials
Units to Be Manufactured Formula
B: Units Sold A: +Budgeted Increase in Finished Goods S: - Budgeted Decrease in Fin. Goods E: = Units to be Manufactured (1)
Units of Raw Material required for Production Formula
Units to be Manufactured x Units of RM per unit of Fin. Goods = Units of RM required for Production (2)
Budgeted Raw Material Purchases Formula
B: Units of RM required for Production A: +Budgeted Increase in RM S: - E: = Budgeted RM Purchases (3)
Budgeted Payments for Raw Material Formula
B: Budgeted RM Purchases A: +Budgeted DECREASE in AP S: - E: = Budgeted Payments for RM (4)
Production Budget Formula
S: Budgeted Sales E: + Desired End. Inventory of Finished Goods = Total Needs B: - A: = # of Units to be Produced
Order of Budget Preparation
- Sales Budget 2. Production Budget 3. Direct/Raw Materials Purchases Budget 4. Cash Disbursement Budget
Flexible Budgeting
may be adjusted for changes in VOLUMES - use direct costing method
“b” Variable in Flexible Costing
Variable Costs / Sales = Variable Rate
Advantage of Flexible Budgeting
Can readily adapt to changes in VC that result from changes in Sales Level (independent variable)
Correlation Coefficient (“p” or Rho)
- closer to -1 or +1 is a stronger relationship - +1 = Direct Relationship (upwards slope) - 0 = No Relationship - -1 = Indirect Relationship
Regression Analysis
- provides streamlined approach to test which independent variable is the best predictor (or more) for 1 dependent variable
What are 3 measures to compare model specifications in Regression Analysis?
- Coefficient of Determination (R2) - F-statistic - t-statistic
Coefficient of Determination
- goodness of fit - “R2” - the percentage of variation in the dependent variable explained by the variation in the independent variable - commonly expressed with values ranging between (0-1)