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Accounting

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Accounting is an information sys. tht records, aggregates, and reports transactions (econ events

Institution
Collin County Community College
Course
ACCT 2301











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Institution
Collin County Community College
Course
ACCT 2301

Document information

Uploaded on
May 20, 2025
Number of pages
71
Written in
2020/2021
Type
Class notes
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All classes

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[ Class One ]

★​ Accounting is an information sys. tht records, aggregates, and reports transactions (econ
events)
★​ Earnings manipulation: companies have a lot of incentive to inflate #’s
★​ Branches of Accounting
○​ Financial Accounting (external) → public transactions by firm, focused on past
○​ Managerial Accounting (internal) → decision making & control
○​ Tax - personal & corporate tax
○​ Audit - independent accountant that assures a companies financials are accurate
★​ Financial Acc.
○​ Obj: provide decision useful info to outsiders
○​ 4 main financial statements - balance sheet, income statement, statement of
cash flows, statement of stockholder’s equity (retained earnings)
★​ Balance Sheet:
○​ Tells current state of company @ point in time
○​ “Snapshot”
○​ Reports assets, liabilities, & equities
★​ Income Statement
○​ Over period of time (usually ¼ or yr)
○​ Reports revenues & expenses

Revenues - Cost = Profits / Losses

★​ Asset → resource own w a high likelihood & expect future benefit
○​ EX: cash, accounts receivable (credit, we owe company, future econ benefit),
inventory (raw materials, working process, finished goods )
★​ Liability → future sacrifice
○​ EX: accounts payable (credit, company owes money), long term debt
★​ Revenue (top line) → inc. net assets by sales ovr period of time
○​ EX: sales
★​ Expense → asset reduction in hope of generative rev
○​ EX: research & development, advertising, Cost of Goods Sold (COGS), Selling
General & Administrative Expenses (SG&A)
★​ Inventory → specific asset on balance sheet, rolls over
★​ Gross Margin / Gross Profit → shows firm’s ability to make money
○​ GP = Sales - Cost of Goods Sold
○​ GP = Revenue - COGS
○​ Ratio will show for evry dollar on revenue, how much rev. u generate
★​ Net Income (bottom line) [revenue - expenses]
○​ Links Income Statement & Balance Sheet
★​ Accounting Equation: What you Own = What you Owe + Rest
★​ Assets = Liabilities + Owners’ Equity (A = L + E)

, ★​ Managerial Accounting / Cost Accounting → process of identifying, measuring,
analyzing, interpreting, and communicating info info
○​ How does ^ add value? - by planning, implementing, and controlling → leads to
bttr decisions
○​ Links resources to people



[ Class Two ]

★​ How does Managerial Accounting add value?
○​ Planning: establish goals, objectives, and way to achieve the goals
■​ Budget → plan in monetary terms
■​ Who is my target customer? What resources do I need?
○​ Implementing: plan into action
■​ How many employees to hire? How should I pay them?
○​ Controlling: keep track and if need action to achieve objectives
■​ How to measure performance? Which measures matter?

★​ Managerial vs. Financial Accounting
○​ Diff. user groups
■​ M - internal decision making
■​ F - company’s performance to external parties
○​ Time period
■​ M - project future operations
■​ F - report past operations
○​ Guiding standards
■​ M not bound by external rules (subjective depending on company)
■​ F bound by GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles) (objective)

1.​ Which of the following statements best describes the difference between financial
accounting and managerial accounting?
a.​ Managerial accounting targets external stakeholders while financial accounting
targets individuals within the company
b.​ Financial accounting relies more on subjective, future-oriented information than
managerial accounting does
c.​ A major focus of managerial accounting is the preparation of the income
statement, while a major focus of financial accounting is the preparation of the
budget.
d.​ Managerial accounting tends to focus on relevant, subjective, and future-oriented
information while financial accounting relies primarily on objective, reliable, and
historical information

2.​ Which of the following statement(s) regarding the key management functions is true?

, a.​ Planning involves setting long-term objectives and the short-term tactics
necessary to achieve those objectives
b.​ Implementing involves comparing actual results to planned objectives and
making adjustments as necessary
c.​ Controlling includes all of the operational decisions made to implement the plan
d.​ All the statements are true

★​ Summary (Managerial Accounting Studies)
○​ Help make bttr decisions (centralized)
○​ Help others make bttr decisions (decentralized)
■​ “Goal congruence”
■​ Incentives

★​ Target Audience
○​ Consultants
○​ General managers
○​ Accountants
○​ Private equity / Investor (Mark Cuban)
○​ Analysts / Investment bankers: understand operations

★​ Careers in Accounting
○​ Public (portfolio of clients) / Private (work for company)
○​ EX of private roles: controller, treasurer, internal auditor
○​ EX of private activities: evaluate outsourcing decision, analyze customer
profitability

★​ Key Managerial Accounting Concepts
○​ Types of businesses models
■​ Service - simpler & easier to account for
■​ Merchandising
■​ Manufacturing - easier to visualize costs & activities

★​ Manufacturing = convert materias to a finished product through machinery & labor
★​ Merchandising = purchase finished products from a manufacturer
★​ Service = not make / sell tangible product

★​ Cost Terminology
○​ Direct / Indirect
■​ D: can be traced back to unit of product (cost of materials or labor)
■​ I: cannot be easily traced (advertising, cost of utilities)
○​ Variable / Fixed
■​ V: change in direct proportion to changes in activity
■​ Variable cost goes up, than becomes constant

, ■​
■​ F: do not change in total regardless of activity, avg / per unit vary
inversely w/ # of units produced
■​ Total fixed cost goes straight unless more production and unit fixed cost
goes down




■​
○​ Manufacturing / Non-Manufacturing
■​ M: all costs incurred to produce product
●​ Direct materials - major material inputs that can b phys &
conveniently trace back to final product (EX: dough 4 pizza)
●​ Direct Labor - “hands-on” cost of labor of people who touch
product (EX: pizza makers)
●​ Manufacturing Overhead (indirect costs / overhead costs / factory
costs) - all costs other than direct materials/labor (EX:
maintenance, insurance, property tax)
●​ MC = DM + DL + MO
●​ Prime Cost “Primary Costs” = DM + DL
●​ Conversion Cost = DL + Manufacturing Overhead
■​ NM
●​ Marketing / Selling costs - to get order & deliver product
●​ General & Administrative costs - executive, organizational, clerical
costs
○​ Product / Period
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