Course Description
INTRODUCTION
Business professionals need to understand the financial factors critical to business success. This interactive Financial Management for Non-Financial Professionals training seminar will show how finance works in today’s fast-moving business environment. For any business the key elements of profitability, liquidity and financial structure are critical to continuing success and competitiveness. So these three elements are comprehensively explored and developed at all levels of business activity.
You will learn about the accounting processes of recording and reporting business transactions, and how these are summarised as periodic financial reports in accordance with statutory requirements. You will also learn how these financial reports are analysed by a variety of user groups.
Course objectives:
Explain the nature and role of financial statements and their interpretation
Use the language of accounting and finance to communicate effectively with financial professionals
Review the financial performance and financial position of an organisation using the appropriate financial ratio and break-even analysis techniques
Use budgetary control to compare actual against planned performance and to identify corrective actions.
The benefit of this course:
Greater awareness of the role of accounting and finance
Ability to understand the structure of accounting systems, and financial reports
Ability to make more effective and better informed contributions to financial discussions
Ability to use tools and techniques for financial control and financial management
Greater understanding of the key drivers which ensure sustainable growth and competitiveness.
Explain the nature and role of financial statements and their interpretation
Use the language of accounting and finance to communicate effectively with financial professionals
Review the financial performance and financial position of an organisation using the appropriate financial ratio and break-even analysis techniques
Use budgetary control to compare actual against planned performance and to identify corrective actions.
Better able to contribute to the effective financial management of their organisation
Able to evaluate alternative courses of action and identify the most effective choices with regard to the future improvement of their organisation
Able to liaise more effectively with other departments on financial matters.
Course Outline
DAY 1
The Business Environment and the Role of Accounting
The Business Environment
The Uses and Purpose of Accounting
Users of Accounting and Financial Information
Accounting Terminology
The Dual Entry Accounting System
The Income Statement – financial performance
The Balance Sheet – financial position
Cash Flow vs. Profit
The Cash Flow Statement - Where the cash comes from and where it goes to?
The Links between the Cash Flow Statement, Income Statement and Balance Sheet
DAY 2
The Financial Statements and Financial Analysis
Accounting Conventions and Accounting Standards (IFRS)
The Key Elements of Published Annual Financial Reports (AFR)
Techniques for Interpreting the Financial Statements - Common-Size Analysis and Ratio Analysis
Financial Statements analysis – Case Study
Cash Flow Ratios – A different perspective
Predicting Business Failure with Ratios and other Key Indicators
Publicly Available Sources of Corporate Financial Information
DAY 3
Budgeting and Break-even Analysis
Management Accounting – The Internal Perspective
The Importance of Cost Analysis – materials, labour and overheads
Understanding Overheads, and How they should be treated in internal analysis and decision-making
Cost / Volume / Profit (CVP) Analysis and The Break-even Point
Using CVP Analysis to make Profitable Decisions
The Purpose and Importance of Budgeting
Preparing and Implementing Your Budget
Different Budgeting Models – Are they relevant for your business?
Is budgeting an effective management technique?
Issues of Risk, Uncertainty, Motivation and Asymmetric Behaviour
DAY 4
Budgetary Control and Capital Investment Appraisal
Budgetary Control with Monthly Management Reports
Standard Costing and Variance Analysis
Case Study on Calculating and Interpreting Variances
Internal Growth Strategies – Types of Capital Investment
Basic Appraisal Techniques as a Filtering Process – ARR and Payback
Why you should consider the time value of money?
Discounted Cash Flow Appraisal Techniques – NPV and IRR
Practical Issues to consider in NPV Appraisal - inflation, capital rationing, risk and uncertainty
Investment Appraisal Exercises using Spreadsheets
DAY 5
Financing the Business and Re-organisation Strategies
Financing the Business – Why and When
Financing Principles, Short-term vs. Long-term, Debt vs. Equity
Sources and Types of Finance
Determining the Cost of Long-term Finance - The cost of Capital Models:
Cost of Equity (Ke) – Dividend Valuation Model
Cost of Equity (Ke) - Capital Asset Pricing Model
Cost of Debt (Kd)
Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC)
Review of External Growth Strategies:
Mergers, Acquisitions and Joint Ventures.