Cost Accounting, R.I.P.: Cost Accounting Is Opinion, Cash Flow Is Fact 2024
4.00 Credits
Member Price $159
Non-Member Price $209
Overview
Organizations often focus on cost accounting data but don’t look at all the factors that influence that data. As a result, vast sums are spent to allocate costs that have nothing to do with cash. Instead, start with value, determine price, and then justify costs that can incur profits. Since you can calculate different costs using the same data, it’s evident that costs do not represent cash. Cost accounting confuses metrics with measurements. Cost accounting is a bad practice because you create and force math and relationships that do not exist. By doing this, you lose touch with your operations. You make meaningless numbers that people consider as gospel when, in reality, they are nothing but opinions. A company needs to start with value and then determine price, which justifies the costs that can be profitably incurred to produce a good or service. It seems obvious to constrain a company with a final price before you incur any costs, yet this practice has yet to be widely followed despite its proven successes. Costs are undoubtedly essential, but the crucial distinction is when they are viewed and what measures to use.
Highlights
- Modeling cash flow and capacity
- Adaptive Capacity Model
- Segall's Law
Prerequisites
None
Designed For
Accounting and financial professionals.
Objectives
- Identify why modeling cash flow and capacity is superior to cost accounting
- Recognize the Adaptive Capacity Model
- Determine the difference between metrics and measurements
- Recognize Segall's Law: A person with one watch knows what time it is; a person with two watches is never quite sure
Preparation
None
Leader(s):
Leader Bios
Ronald Baker, CPA Crossings, LLC Two Commerce Square
Ronald J. Baker started his career in 1984 with KPMG’s Private Business Advisory Services in San Francisco. Today, he is the founder of VeraSage Institute, the leading think tank dedicated to improving the profession for posterity. Ron has been appointed to the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants Group of One Hundred, a group of leaders to address the future of the profession and named on Accounting Today’s 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2011, and 2012 Top 100 Most Influential People in the profession. His book, The Firm of the Future: A Guide for Accountants, Lawyers, and Other Professional Services, co-authored with Paul Dunn, was published in April 2003 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., and was the 2003 Book of the Year on SmartPros.com and is in its sixth printing.
Non-Member Price $209
Member Price $159