The Financial times essential guide to budgeting and forecasting how to deliver accurate numbers

Gain the knowledge and confidence you need to build and manage budgets and forecast financial information. This book demystifies budgets and forecasts, providing simple explanations and clear examples. It includes integrated checklists, goals and milestones, to ensure you are on target to achieve th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wyatt, Nigel
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Harlow, England Pearson Education 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: O'Reilly - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
Table of Contents:
  • Includes bibliographical references and index
  • Note continued: Are budgets bad for business?
  • Implementing beyond budgeting
  • Achieving objectives obliquely
  • obliquity
  • Conclusion
  • pt. 3 Reviewing your budgeting and forecasting performance
  • 12. What lessons have you learned?
  • Take action and responsibility
  • Personal action plans
  • Templates to review your learning and construct an action plan
  • Beyond action plans: how do you know you have been successful?
  • Note continued: Quantitative forecasting using Microsoft Excel
  • Useful Excel tools
  • Forecast frequency and automation
  • Measuring and improving forecast accuracy
  • Forecast financial statements
  • New product sales forecasting
  • Other factors to consider in sales forecasts
  • 3. Essential background financial skills for budgeting
  • Cheaper is not always better: cost and value in budgeting
  • Accruals, cash and commitment accounting and budgeting
  • Understanding profit and loss account figures
  • Review of accruals accounting
  • Direct and indirect methods of producing cash flow statements
  • The balance sheet
  • The master budget
  • Costs
  • Value analysis and value engineering
  • Activity based costing (ABC)
  • The breakeven model
  • Cost structure
  • Capital expenditure planning
  • 4. How should the budget be built?
  • Introduction
  • Building budgets
  • Incremental budgeting
  • Zero based budgeting
  • Activity based budgeting
  • Machine generated contents note: pt. 1 Preparing your budgets
  • 1. What is the budget for?
  • Introduction
  • The role of budgets
  • why do we have them?
  • 1. Meeting the organisation's objectives
  • 2. Planning
  • 3. Monitoring and controlling
  • 4. Co-ordinating
  • 5. Evaluating performance
  • 6. Improving performance
  • 7. Motivating managers
  • 8. Management contract
  • 9.Communicating
  • 10. Providing a basis for authorising expenditure and delegating responsibility
  • 11. Identifying scarce resources
  • 12. Allocating resources
  • 13. Demonstrating and delivering good corporate governance
  • Linking budgets to strategy and policy
  • Budgets for special purposes
  • Planning periods
  • 2. What is a forecast and how does it differ from a budget?
  • What is the difference between a budget and a forecast?
  • Benefits of forecasting 'beyond the wall'
  • Forecasts, projects and contracts
  • Forecasting tools and techniques
  • Sales forecasting
  • Note continued: Should budgets be top-down or bottom-up?
  • Fixed v flexible budgets
  • External comparison driven budgets
  • VFM, outcome orientated and evidence based budgets
  • The power of evidence in protecting budgets
  • Good budgeting practice and ideas for constructing a budget
  • Setting budgets for contingencies
  • The challenge process
  • Building budgets and performance measurement
  • The budget game
  • Presenting budgets
  • 5. How should cash be budgeted and controlled?
  • Planning systems and cash flow forecasting
  • Managing working capital
  • cash and risk
  • Managing trade debtors (accounts receivable)
  • Managing stock (inventory)
  • Managing trade creditors (accounts payable)
  • Cash flow in a business
  • 6. How should capital expenditure be budgeted for?
  • What is capital expenditure?
  • The payback rule
  • NPV and DCF
  • Capital rationing: profitability index
  • Strategic fit and 'roadmaps'
  • Sensitivity analysis
  • Risk
  • Note continued: Post-investment appraisal
  • Long-term cash flow planning
  • Asset replacement and enhancement
  • Investment in working capital
  • pt. 2 Managing your budget and delivering performance
  • 7. Back to basics: living within your means and delivering VFM
  • Budget feedback mechanism
  • Ratios and budgets
  • Managing budgets
  • The VFM model for managing and planning budgets
  • 8. Making sense of standard costing and variances
  • Making sense of variances
  • Standard costing
  • Breakdown of variances
  • Practical variance analysis without standard costing
  • 9. Risks, forecasts, balanced scorecards and KPIs
  • The balanced scorecard and strategy maps
  • KPIs and budgets
  • Values, mission and vision statements
  • and budgets
  • Risks and budgets
  • 10. Delegating budgets to others
  • Why delegate?
  • Devolved or delegated budgets
  • McGregor's theory X and theory Y
  • The key to successful delegation
  • 11. Beyond budgeting
  • Introduction