MANAGERIAL
PowerPoint Presentation by ACCOUNTING
Gail B. Wright
Professor Emeritus of Accounting 8TH EDITION
Bryant University
BY
© Copyright 2007 Thomson South-Western, a part of The
Thomson Corporation. Thomson, the Star Logo, and
South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.
HANSEN & MOWEN
1 INTRODUCTION
1
LEARNING
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
OBJECTIVES
LEARNING GOALS
After studying this
chapter, you should be
able to:
2
LEARNING
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
OBJECTIVES
1. Discuss the need for management
accounting information.
2. Differentiate between management
accounting & financial accounting.
3. Provide a brief historical description of
management accounting.
Continued
3
LEARNING
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
OBJECTIVES
4. Identify the current focus of management
accounting.
5. Describe role of management accountants in
an organization.
6. Explain importance of ethical behavior for
managers, management accountants.
7. List 3 forms of certification available to
management accountants.
Click the button to skip
Questions to Think About
4
QUESTIONS TO THINK ABOUT:
Scenarios
Who uses management
accounting information?
5
QUESTIONS TO THINK ABOUT:
Scenarios
For what purposes is
management accounting
information used?
6
QUESTIONS TO THINK ABOUT:
Scenarios
Should management
accounting information
provide both financial &
nonfinancial information?
7
QUESTIONS TO THINK ABOUT:
Scenarios
What organizations need a
management accounting
information system?
8
LEARNING
LEARNING OBJECTIVE
OBJECTIVE
1
Discuss the need for
management accounting
information.
9
LO 1
MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING:
Objectives
Costing services, products, other
objectives of interest to management;
Planning, controlling, evaluating, &
continuous improvement;
Decision making.
10
LO 1
INFORMATION NEEDS:
Costing & Decision Making
Special Reports, Product
Collecting, Costs, Customer Costs,
Measuring, Storing, Budgets, Performance
Analyzing, Reporting, Reports, Personal
Economic Events Managing Communication
INPUTS
INPUTS PROCESSES
PROCESSES OUTPUTS
OUTPUTS
USERS
USERS
EXHIBIT 1-1
11
LO 1
INFORMATION NEEDS:
The Management Process
Planning
Detailed actions to achieve a particular end
Controlling
Monitoring plan implementation & employing
corrective action when necessary
Decision making
Choosing among competing alternatives
12
LEARNING
LEARNING OBJECTIVE
OBJECTIVE
2
Differentiate between
management accounting
& financial accounting.
13
LO 2
Financial accounting is for
external users and follows
restrictive rules and
regulations.
Managerial accounting is for
internal users (managers) who
plan, control, and make
decisions.
14
LO 2
A COMPARISON:
Management vs. Financial Accounting
EXHIBIT 1-2
15
LEARNING
LEARNING OBJECTIVE
OBJECTIVE
3
Provide a brief historical
description of
management accounting.
16
LO 3
Do you know when
accounting for
managerial decision
making began?
17
LO 3
MANAGERIAL
MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTING
ACCOUNTING
HISTORY
HISTORY
Beginnings between 1880 and 1925
Pre-1915, management accounting focused on
product costing, that is, what products provided
best profit
1925 to 1950, emphasis on inventory costing
systems
Improvements to inventory costing in 1950s and
1960s
1980s recognized need for improvements in
management accounting
18
LEARNING
LEARNING OBJECTIVE
OBJECTIVE
4
Identify the current
focus of management
accounting.
19
LO 4
Do you know what the
current focus for
managerial accounting
is?
20
LO 4
CURRENT FOCUS
Need for innovation and relevant produces:
Activity based management
ABC Improves accuracy of assigning costs
Customer orientation
Strategic positioning to maintain competitive advantage
Value chain framework to focus on customer value
Cross functional perspective
Understand importance of value chain from manufacturing to
marketing to distribution to customer service
Continued
21
LO 4
CURRENT FOCUS
Need for innovation and relevant produces
(cont.)
Total quality management emphasized continuous
improvement
Time becomes a competitive advantage for the
firm who an compress the value chain
Improving efficiency for profit performance
E-business for cost reduction
22
LO 4
What does a value chain
look like?
How does it work?
23
LO 4
INDUSTRIAL VALUE CHAIN
A value chain
combines the output
of several firms
sequentially to meet
customer needs.
EXHIBIT 1-3
24
LO 4
Industrial value chain is critical
for strategic cost management. It
links value-creating activities
from raw materials to disposal of
final product by end-use
customers.
25
LEARNING
LEARNING OBJECTIVE
OBJECTIVE
5
Describe the role of the
management
accountant.
26
LO 5
SARBANES-OXLEY
Enhanced the role of the management
accountant by
Tightening regulation of corporate
governance
Establishing controls over management
Raising importance of management’s
assessment of internal controls
27
LO 5
How many roles for a
management
accountant can you
name?
28
LO 5
ORGANIZATIONAL CHART (Partial)
EXHIBIT 1-4
29
LEARNING
LEARNING OBJECTIVE
OBJECTIVE
Explain importance of
6 ethical behavior for
managers & management
accountants.
30
LO 6
MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING:
Designed for Profit Maximization
“The objective of profit
maximization should be
constrained by the requirement
that profits be achieved through
legal and ethical means.”1
1
Hansen & Mowen, 2007, p. 17
31
LO 6
SUPPORT FOR ETHICAL
BEHAVIOR
Company codes of conduct
Sarbanes-Oxley requirements
IMA standards of conduct for management
accountants ensure that management accountants
maintain
Competence
Confidentiality
Integrity
Objectivity
Ability for conflict resolution
32
LEARNING
LEARNING OBJECTIVE
OBJECTIVE
List 3 forms of
7 certification available to
management
accountants.
33
LO 7
What does “certification” mean for
an accountant?
What certifications are available to
management accountants?
34
LO 7
CERTIFICATION
Signifies the accountant has met
requirements for
Education
Experience
Signifies the accountant has passed a
qualifying examination
35
LO 7
3 CERTIFICATIONS
CMA (Certified Management Accountant)
Meets needs for knowledge of economics,
financial & managerial accounting, decision
analysis & information systems
CPA (Certified Public Accountant)
Meets needs for knowledge of external auditor
CIA (Certified Internal Auditor)
Meets specialized needs in internal auditing yet
similar to knowledge of management accountant
36
CHAPTER 1
THE
THE END
END
37