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Cost accounting is one of the most important skills in business, and its popularity as a course in undergraduate and graduate business and management programs speaks to its usefulness. But if you've ever felt intimidated by the subject's jargon or concepts, you can stop worrying. Cost accounting is for everyone!
In Cost Accounting For Dummies, you'll be taken step-by-step through the basic and advanced topics found in a typical cost accounting class, from how to define costs and how to allocate them to products or services. You'll learn how to determine if a capital expenditure is worth it and how to design a budget model that forecasts changes in costs based on activity levels.
Whether you're a student in your first cost accounting course or a professional trying to get a grip on your books, you'll benefit from:
* Simple methods to evaluate business risks and rewards
* Explanations of how to manage and control costs during periods of business change and pivots
* Descriptions of how to use cost accounting to price IT projects
Cost Accounting For Dummies is the gold standard in getting a firm grasp on the challenging and rewarding world of cost accounting.
Cost accounting is one of the most important skills in business, and its popularity as a course in undergraduate and graduate business and management programs speaks to its usefulness. But if you've ever felt intimidated by the subject's jargon or concepts, you can stop worrying. Cost accounting is for everyone!
In Cost Accounting For Dummies, you'll be taken step-by-step through the basic and advanced topics found in a typical cost accounting class, from how to define costs and how to allocate them to products or services. You'll learn how to determine if a capital expenditure is worth it and how to design a budget model that forecasts changes in costs based on activity levels.
Whether you're a student in your first cost accounting course or a professional trying to get a grip on your books, you'll benefit from:
* Simple methods to evaluate business risks and rewards
* Explanations of how to manage and control costs during periods of business change and pivots
* Descriptions of how to use cost accounting to price IT projects
Cost Accounting For Dummies is the gold standard in getting a firm grasp on the challenging and rewarding world of cost accounting.
Ken Boyd is Co-Founder of [...] and owns St. Louis Test Preparation. He tutors and coaches people on the principles of accounting and prepares them for challenging accounting licensing exams by making accounting interesting and fun.
Introduction 1
About This Book 1
Foolish Assumptions 2
Icons Used in This Book 2
Beyond the Book 3
Where to Go from Here 3
Part 1: Understanding the Fundamentals of Costs 5
Chapter 1: So You Want to Know about Cost Accounting 7
Comparing Accounting Methods 8
Considering your shareholders 8
Mulling over creditors 9
Addressing concerns of regulators 9
Using management accounting 9
Fitting in cost accounting 10
Using Cost Accounting to Your Advantage 11
Starting with cost-benefit analysis 11
Planning your work: Budgeting 12
Controlling your costs 12
Setting a price 13
Improving going forward 14
Chapter 2: Brushing Up on Cost Accounting Basics 17
Understanding the Big Four Terms 17
Comparing direct and indirect costs 18
Mulling over fixed and variable costs 20
Fitting the costs together 21
Covering Costs in Different Industries 22
Reviewing manufacturing costs 22
Considering costs for retailers 23
Adding up costs for e-commerce firms 23
Finding costs most companies incur 24
Why Are You Spending? Cost Drivers 25
Pushing equipment too hard and relevant range 25
Previewing inventoriable costs 26
Following the Rules of the Cost Accounting Road 27
Understanding generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) 27
Deciding on accrual basis or cash basis 29
Finishing with conservatism 30
Chapter 3: Using Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis to Plan Your Business Results 31
Understanding How Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis Works 32
Calculating the breakeven point 32
Financial losses: The crash of your cash 34
Contribution margin: Covering fixed costs 35
Lowering the breakeven point to reach profitability sooner 36
Target net income: Setting the profit goal 37
Using operating leverage 38
Assessing e-commerce businesses 40
Timing is everything when it comes to costs 41
Using Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis to Make Savvy Business Decisions 42
Deciding to advertise 43
Lowering your price without losing your profit 44
Combining the results of two products 45
Costing and pricing a new product 48
The Tax Man Cometh, the Profits Goeth 51
Understanding pre-tax dollars 51
Adjusting target net income for income taxes 52
Chapter 4: Estimating Costs with Job Costing 53
Understanding How Job Costing Works 54
Cost objects: The sponges that absorb money 55
Charging customers for direct and indirect costs 56
Implementing job costing in manufacturing: An example 57
Deciding on costing for IT consulting projects 61
Taking a Closer Look at Indirect Costs using Normal Costing 64
Budgeting for indirect costs 65
Following a normal job costing system 66
Following the Flow of Costs through a Manufacturing System 67
Control starts with control accounts 67
Explaining the debit and credit process 68
Walking through a manufacturing cost example 70
Applying the methodology to other control accounts 73
Chapter 5: More Activity, More Cost: Activity-Based Costing 75
Avoiding the Slippery Peanut Butter Costing Slope 76
Recognizing a single indirect cost allocation 77
A fly in the peanut butter: Dealing with different levels of client activity 77
Missing the mark: Undercosting and overcosting 79
Designing an Activity-Based Costing System 81
Refining your approach 81
Grouping costs using a cost hierarchy 82
Testing your ABC design 83
Using Activity-Based Costing to Compute Total Cost, Profit, and Sale Price 87
Allocating indirect costs evenly by product 88
Analyzing and reallocating cost activities 88
Changing allocations to cost pools 89
Changing prices after ABC 90
Implementing ABC Costing for a Business Pivot 91
Deciding whether to pivot 92
Mulling over a pivot example 93
Using ABC Costing for a New Business Model 94
Considering sunk costs 94
Reviewing food and labor costs 95
Allocating new overhead costs 95
Applying ABC costing to overhead costs 96
Evaluating your results 98
Part 2: Planning and Control 99
Chapter 6: What's the Plan, Stan? Budgeting for a Better Bottom Line 101
Brushing Up on Budgeting Basics 102
Seeing the master budget and its component parts 102
Why budgeting is important 103
Considering the costs and benefits of data collection 104
Leveraging AI and data analytics for effective budgeting 106
Planning strategically 107
Planning How to Plan: Factors That Impact Your Budgeting Process 108
Experience counts 109
Timing is everything 109
People get you headed in the right direction 110
Sales projections pay off 111
The Nuts and Bolts (and Washers) of Budgeting 112
Understanding the budgeting financials 113
Reviewing revenue and production budgets 116
Budgeting with Cash Accounting or Accrual Accounting 119
Cash basis accounting: Using your checkbook to budget 119
I accrue, you accrue, we all accrue with accrual accounting 121
Budgeting to Produce the Income Statement and Balance Sheet 122
The well-balanced balance sheet 122
The incredible income statement 123
Chapter 7: Constant Change: Variance Analysis 125
Variance Analysis and Budgeting 126
Using management by exception to recognize large variances 126
Seeing the problem in using a static budget 127
Opting for a flexible budget 131
Investigating budget variances 134
Analyzing in Material Price and Efficiency Variances 135
Applying price variances to direct materials 136
Applying efficiency variances to direct materials 137
Implementing price variances for direct labor 139
Sizing up efficiency variances for direct labor 139
Using Your Findings to Make Decisions 140
Following up on variances 141
Judging the effectiveness of your employees 143
Tying supply chain concepts to variance analysis 145
Attaching ABC costing concepts to variance analysis 145
Chapter 8: Focusing on Overhead Costs 149
Using Cost Allocation to Minimize Overhead 150
Paying for the Security Guard: Fixed Overhead Costs 151
Planning fixed overhead costs 151
Allocating fixed overhead costs 152
Assessing potential causes of fixed overhead variances 155
Those Vexing Variable Manufacturing Costs 156
Working with variable overhead costs 156
Implementing variance analysis 159
Finding the reasons for a variable overhead variance 161
Chapter 9: What's on the Shelf? Inventory Costing 163
Working with Inventoriable Costs 164
Using the matching principle to calculate profit on sale 164
Erring on the conservative side 166
Costing Methods for Inventory 166
Using the first-in, first-out (FIFO) method 168
Accounting with the last-in, first-out (LIFO) method 169
Weighing the merits of weighted-average cost 170
Considering specific identification method 171
Analyzing profit using FIFO and LIFO 171
Using Variable and Absorption Costing to Allocate Fixed Manufacturing Costs 173
Defining period costs and product costs 174
Applying variable and absorption costing 175
Relating Capacity Issues to Inventory 177
Reviewing theoretical and practical capacity 178
Understanding capacity issues for e-commerce firms 179
Using normal and master-budget capacity 181
Choosing a capacity level 182
Part 3: Making Decisions 185
Chapter 10: Cost Drivers and Cost Estimation Methods 187
Working with Cost Behavior 188
Understanding linear and nonlinear cost functions 188
Discovering how cost drivers determine total costs 189
Considering Cost Estimation Methods 190
Walking through the industrial engineering method 190
Agreeing on the conference method 191
Reviewing the account analysis method 191
Checking out the quantitative analysis method 192
Choosing a cost estimation method 196
Exploring Nonlinear Cost Functions 197
Changing cost functions and slope co-efficients 198
Understanding the impact of quantity discounts 198
Assessing the Impact of Learning Curves 198
Considering how AI and Data Analytics Impact Learning Curves 200
Reviewing AI and data analytics 200
Throwing in the learning curve 200
Simplifying a procedure 201
Finding and using better data 201
Chapter 11: Making Smart Business Decisions with Relevant Information 203
Navigating the Geography of Relevance 204
Introducing the decision model 205
Applying a model to an equipment decision 206
Understanding IT purchasing issues 208
Considering relevant qualitative factors in decision-making 210
Special Orders Don't Upset Us, Do They? 211
Deciding between Outsourcing and In-house Production 213
Weighing opportunity costs 217
Contemplating the carrying cost of inventory 218
Maximizing Profit When Capacity Is Limited 220
Managing capacity and product mix 220
Analyzing customer profit and capacity 222
Chapter 12: Making Smart Pricing Decisions: Figuring Total Costs 227
Understanding Influences on Prices...
Erscheinungsjahr: | 2022 |
---|---|
Fachbereich: | Betriebswirtschaft |
Genre: | Wirtschaft |
Rubrik: | Recht & Wirtschaft |
Medium: | Taschenbuch |
Inhalt: | 448 S. |
ISBN-13: | 9781119856023 |
ISBN-10: | 1119856027 |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Einband: | Kartoniert / Broschiert |
Autor: | Boyd, Kenneth W. |
Hersteller: | John Wiley & Sons Inc |
Maße: | 232 x 185 x 30 mm |
Von/Mit: | Kenneth W. Boyd |
Erscheinungsdatum: | 04.04.2022 |
Gewicht: | 0,732 kg |
Ken Boyd is Co-Founder of [...] and owns St. Louis Test Preparation. He tutors and coaches people on the principles of accounting and prepares them for challenging accounting licensing exams by making accounting interesting and fun.
Introduction 1
About This Book 1
Foolish Assumptions 2
Icons Used in This Book 2
Beyond the Book 3
Where to Go from Here 3
Part 1: Understanding the Fundamentals of Costs 5
Chapter 1: So You Want to Know about Cost Accounting 7
Comparing Accounting Methods 8
Considering your shareholders 8
Mulling over creditors 9
Addressing concerns of regulators 9
Using management accounting 9
Fitting in cost accounting 10
Using Cost Accounting to Your Advantage 11
Starting with cost-benefit analysis 11
Planning your work: Budgeting 12
Controlling your costs 12
Setting a price 13
Improving going forward 14
Chapter 2: Brushing Up on Cost Accounting Basics 17
Understanding the Big Four Terms 17
Comparing direct and indirect costs 18
Mulling over fixed and variable costs 20
Fitting the costs together 21
Covering Costs in Different Industries 22
Reviewing manufacturing costs 22
Considering costs for retailers 23
Adding up costs for e-commerce firms 23
Finding costs most companies incur 24
Why Are You Spending? Cost Drivers 25
Pushing equipment too hard and relevant range 25
Previewing inventoriable costs 26
Following the Rules of the Cost Accounting Road 27
Understanding generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) 27
Deciding on accrual basis or cash basis 29
Finishing with conservatism 30
Chapter 3: Using Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis to Plan Your Business Results 31
Understanding How Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis Works 32
Calculating the breakeven point 32
Financial losses: The crash of your cash 34
Contribution margin: Covering fixed costs 35
Lowering the breakeven point to reach profitability sooner 36
Target net income: Setting the profit goal 37
Using operating leverage 38
Assessing e-commerce businesses 40
Timing is everything when it comes to costs 41
Using Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis to Make Savvy Business Decisions 42
Deciding to advertise 43
Lowering your price without losing your profit 44
Combining the results of two products 45
Costing and pricing a new product 48
The Tax Man Cometh, the Profits Goeth 51
Understanding pre-tax dollars 51
Adjusting target net income for income taxes 52
Chapter 4: Estimating Costs with Job Costing 53
Understanding How Job Costing Works 54
Cost objects: The sponges that absorb money 55
Charging customers for direct and indirect costs 56
Implementing job costing in manufacturing: An example 57
Deciding on costing for IT consulting projects 61
Taking a Closer Look at Indirect Costs using Normal Costing 64
Budgeting for indirect costs 65
Following a normal job costing system 66
Following the Flow of Costs through a Manufacturing System 67
Control starts with control accounts 67
Explaining the debit and credit process 68
Walking through a manufacturing cost example 70
Applying the methodology to other control accounts 73
Chapter 5: More Activity, More Cost: Activity-Based Costing 75
Avoiding the Slippery Peanut Butter Costing Slope 76
Recognizing a single indirect cost allocation 77
A fly in the peanut butter: Dealing with different levels of client activity 77
Missing the mark: Undercosting and overcosting 79
Designing an Activity-Based Costing System 81
Refining your approach 81
Grouping costs using a cost hierarchy 82
Testing your ABC design 83
Using Activity-Based Costing to Compute Total Cost, Profit, and Sale Price 87
Allocating indirect costs evenly by product 88
Analyzing and reallocating cost activities 88
Changing allocations to cost pools 89
Changing prices after ABC 90
Implementing ABC Costing for a Business Pivot 91
Deciding whether to pivot 92
Mulling over a pivot example 93
Using ABC Costing for a New Business Model 94
Considering sunk costs 94
Reviewing food and labor costs 95
Allocating new overhead costs 95
Applying ABC costing to overhead costs 96
Evaluating your results 98
Part 2: Planning and Control 99
Chapter 6: What's the Plan, Stan? Budgeting for a Better Bottom Line 101
Brushing Up on Budgeting Basics 102
Seeing the master budget and its component parts 102
Why budgeting is important 103
Considering the costs and benefits of data collection 104
Leveraging AI and data analytics for effective budgeting 106
Planning strategically 107
Planning How to Plan: Factors That Impact Your Budgeting Process 108
Experience counts 109
Timing is everything 109
People get you headed in the right direction 110
Sales projections pay off 111
The Nuts and Bolts (and Washers) of Budgeting 112
Understanding the budgeting financials 113
Reviewing revenue and production budgets 116
Budgeting with Cash Accounting or Accrual Accounting 119
Cash basis accounting: Using your checkbook to budget 119
I accrue, you accrue, we all accrue with accrual accounting 121
Budgeting to Produce the Income Statement and Balance Sheet 122
The well-balanced balance sheet 122
The incredible income statement 123
Chapter 7: Constant Change: Variance Analysis 125
Variance Analysis and Budgeting 126
Using management by exception to recognize large variances 126
Seeing the problem in using a static budget 127
Opting for a flexible budget 131
Investigating budget variances 134
Analyzing in Material Price and Efficiency Variances 135
Applying price variances to direct materials 136
Applying efficiency variances to direct materials 137
Implementing price variances for direct labor 139
Sizing up efficiency variances for direct labor 139
Using Your Findings to Make Decisions 140
Following up on variances 141
Judging the effectiveness of your employees 143
Tying supply chain concepts to variance analysis 145
Attaching ABC costing concepts to variance analysis 145
Chapter 8: Focusing on Overhead Costs 149
Using Cost Allocation to Minimize Overhead 150
Paying for the Security Guard: Fixed Overhead Costs 151
Planning fixed overhead costs 151
Allocating fixed overhead costs 152
Assessing potential causes of fixed overhead variances 155
Those Vexing Variable Manufacturing Costs 156
Working with variable overhead costs 156
Implementing variance analysis 159
Finding the reasons for a variable overhead variance 161
Chapter 9: What's on the Shelf? Inventory Costing 163
Working with Inventoriable Costs 164
Using the matching principle to calculate profit on sale 164
Erring on the conservative side 166
Costing Methods for Inventory 166
Using the first-in, first-out (FIFO) method 168
Accounting with the last-in, first-out (LIFO) method 169
Weighing the merits of weighted-average cost 170
Considering specific identification method 171
Analyzing profit using FIFO and LIFO 171
Using Variable and Absorption Costing to Allocate Fixed Manufacturing Costs 173
Defining period costs and product costs 174
Applying variable and absorption costing 175
Relating Capacity Issues to Inventory 177
Reviewing theoretical and practical capacity 178
Understanding capacity issues for e-commerce firms 179
Using normal and master-budget capacity 181
Choosing a capacity level 182
Part 3: Making Decisions 185
Chapter 10: Cost Drivers and Cost Estimation Methods 187
Working with Cost Behavior 188
Understanding linear and nonlinear cost functions 188
Discovering how cost drivers determine total costs 189
Considering Cost Estimation Methods 190
Walking through the industrial engineering method 190
Agreeing on the conference method 191
Reviewing the account analysis method 191
Checking out the quantitative analysis method 192
Choosing a cost estimation method 196
Exploring Nonlinear Cost Functions 197
Changing cost functions and slope co-efficients 198
Understanding the impact of quantity discounts 198
Assessing the Impact of Learning Curves 198
Considering how AI and Data Analytics Impact Learning Curves 200
Reviewing AI and data analytics 200
Throwing in the learning curve 200
Simplifying a procedure 201
Finding and using better data 201
Chapter 11: Making Smart Business Decisions with Relevant Information 203
Navigating the Geography of Relevance 204
Introducing the decision model 205
Applying a model to an equipment decision 206
Understanding IT purchasing issues 208
Considering relevant qualitative factors in decision-making 210
Special Orders Don't Upset Us, Do They? 211
Deciding between Outsourcing and In-house Production 213
Weighing opportunity costs 217
Contemplating the carrying cost of inventory 218
Maximizing Profit When Capacity Is Limited 220
Managing capacity and product mix 220
Analyzing customer profit and capacity 222
Chapter 12: Making Smart Pricing Decisions: Figuring Total Costs 227
Understanding Influences on Prices...
Erscheinungsjahr: | 2022 |
---|---|
Fachbereich: | Betriebswirtschaft |
Genre: | Wirtschaft |
Rubrik: | Recht & Wirtschaft |
Medium: | Taschenbuch |
Inhalt: | 448 S. |
ISBN-13: | 9781119856023 |
ISBN-10: | 1119856027 |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Einband: | Kartoniert / Broschiert |
Autor: | Boyd, Kenneth W. |
Hersteller: | John Wiley & Sons Inc |
Maße: | 232 x 185 x 30 mm |
Von/Mit: | Kenneth W. Boyd |
Erscheinungsdatum: | 04.04.2022 |
Gewicht: | 0,732 kg |