For
Accounting
Information Systems
N1 N1
15th Edition N1
Marshall B. Romney N1 N1
N1 Paul John N1
Steinbart Scott L.
N1 N1 N1
N1 Summers David A. N1 N1
N1 Wood
All Chapters Solutions Manual Supplement files download
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link at the end of this file.
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, CHAPTER 1 N1
ACCOUNTING INFORMATION SYSTEMS: AN OVERVIEW N1 N1 N1 N1
SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO DISCUSSION QUESTIONS N1 N1 N1 N1
1.1 The value of information is the difference between the benefits realized from using
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that information and the costs of producing it. Would you, or any organization,
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ever produce information if its expected costs exceeded its benefits? If so, provide
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some examples. If not, why?
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Most organizations produce information only if its value exceeds its cost. However, there are
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two situations where information may be produced even if its cost exceeds its value.
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a. It is often difficult to estimate accurately the value of information and the cost of
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producing it. Therefore, organizations may produce information that they expect
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will produce benefits in excess of its costs, only to be disappointed after the fact.
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b. Production of the information may be mandated by either a government agency or
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a private organization. Examples include the tax reports required by the IRS and
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disclosure requirements for financial reporting.
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1.2 Can the characteristics of useful information listed in Table 1-1 be met
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simultaneously? Or does achieving one mean sacrificing another?
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Several of the criteria in Table 1.1 can be met simultaneously. For example, more
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timely information is also likely to be more relevant. Verifiable information is likely to
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be more accurate.
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However, achieving one objective may require sacrificing another. For example,
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ensuring that information is more complete may reduce its timeliness. Similarly,
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increased verifiability and accuracy may reduce its timeliness.
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The decision maker must decide which trade-offs are warranted in each situation.
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1-1
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,Ch. 1: Accounting Information Systems: An
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Overview
1.3 You and a few of your classmates decided to become entrepreneurs. You came up
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with a great idea for a new mobile phone application that you think will make
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lots of money. Your business plan won second place in a local competition, and
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you are using the $10,000 prize to support yourselves as you start your company.
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a. Identify the key decisions you need to make to be successful entrepreneurs, the
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information you need to make them, and the business processes you will need
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to engage in.
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b. Your company will need to exchange information with various external parties.
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Identify the external parties, and specify the information received from and
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sent to each of them.
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The author turns this question into an in-class group activity.
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groups, told to close their books, and given 15 minutes to:
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a. Think through the business processes, key decisions, and information needs issues
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in their group.
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b. Identify the external users of information and specify the information received from
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and sent to each of them.
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One group is selected to present their answers to the class. The other groups are told
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to challenge the group‘s answers, provide alternative answers, and chip in with additional
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answers not provided by the selected group. Since the group that presents is not
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selected until after the time has expired, students are motivated to do a good job, as
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they will be presenting to their peers.
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The value of this activity is not in arriving at a ―right answer‖ as there are many right
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answers and student answers will vary. Instead, it is in thinking through the issues
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presented in Table 1-2 (business processes, key decisions, and information needs) and
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Figure 1-1 (interactions with external parties). Student answers should contain many of
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the things in Table 1-2 and Figure 1-1 as well as others not shown, as a retail operation
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differs from an application development enterprise.
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The author concludes the exercise by having the students turn to Table 1-2 and Figure 1-
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1 while he emphasizes the need for owners, managers, and employees of organizations to
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identify the information needed to make key decisions in the company‘s business
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processes and the key information interchanges with external parties. All the data
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needed to produce this information must be entered into the AIS, processed, stored,
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protected, and made available to the appropriate users.
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While this active learning activity takes more time than a lecture does, it drives the point
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home much better than a lecture would. It also keeps the students more engaged in
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the material.
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1-2
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, Accounting Information N1
Systems
1.4 How do an organization’s business processes and lines of business affect the
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design of its AIS? Give several examples of how differences among organizations
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are reflected in their AIS.
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An organization‘s AIS must reflect its business processes and its line of business.
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example:
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Manufacturing companies will need a set of procedures and documents for the
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production cycle; non-manufacturing companies do not.
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Government agencies need procedures to track separately all inflows and outflows
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from various funds, to ensure that legal requirements about the use of specific
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funds are followed.
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Financial institutions do not need extensive inventory control systems.
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Passenger service companies (e.g., airlines, bus, and trains) generally receive
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payments in advance of providing services. Therefore, extensive billing and
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accounts receivable procedures are not needed; instead, they must develop
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procedures to account for prepaid revenue.
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Construction firms typically receive payments at regular intervals, based on the
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percentage of work completed. Thus, their revenue cycles must be designed to
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track carefully all work performed and the amount of work remaining to be done.
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Service companies (e.g., public accounting and law firms) do not sell physical goods
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and, therefore, do not need inventory control systems. They must develop and
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maintain detailed records of the work performed for each customer to provide
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backup for the amounts billed. Tracking individual employee time is especially
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important for these firms because labor is the major cost component.
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1.5 Figure 1-5 shows that organizational culture and the design of an AIS influence one
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another. What does this imply about the degree to which an innovative system
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developed by one company can be transferred to another company?
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Since people are one of the basic components of any system, it will always be difficult
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to transfer successfully a specific information systems design intact to another
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organization. Considering in advance how aspects of the new organizational culture are
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likely to affect acceptance of the system can increase the chances for successful transfer.
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Doing so may enable the organization to take steps to mitigate likely causes of
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resistance. The design of an AIS, however, itself can influence and change an
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organization‘s culture and philosophy. Therefore, with adequate top management support,
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implementation of a new AIS can be used as a vehicle to change an organization. The
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reciprocal effects of technology and organizational culture on one another, however, mean
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that it is unrealistic to expect that the introduction of a new AIS will produce the same
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results observed in another organization.
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1-3
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