Best of
Accounting

2014

Warren Buffett Accounting Book: Reading Financial Statements for Value Investing (Warren Buffett's 3 Favorite Books)


Stig Brodersen - 2014
    

Accounting for the Numberphobic: A Survival Guide for Small Business Owners


Dawn Fotopulos - 2014
    As a small-business owner, financial statements are your most important tools--and if you don't know how to read them and understand their implications, you cannot possibly steer your business successfully. Accounting for the Numberphobic demystifies your company's financial dashboard: the Net Income Statement, Cash Flow Statement, and Balance Sheet. The book explains in plain English how each measurement reflects the overall health of your business--and impacts your decisions. You will discover: * How your Net Income Statement is the key to growing your profits * How to identify the break-even point that means your business is self-sustaining * Real-world advice on measuring and increasing cash flow * What the Balance Sheet reveals about your company's worth * And more Illustrated with case studies and packed with practical action steps, this indispensable guide will put your business on the path to profitability in no time.

The Intentional Accountant: Your Roadmap For Building a Next Generation Accounting Firm


M. Darren Root - 2014
    M. Darren Root, one of the accounting profession’s most highly esteemed thought leaders, co-author of The E-Myth Accountant, and former executive editor of CPA Practice Advisor magazine, maps out a vision for independent accountants to go beyond merely working at a job and start assembling the machinery to build a true enterprise. His newest book is a practical, end-to-end roadmap of the strategic process and organizational methods that have changed the lives and personal fortunes of thousands of practitioners and shareholders in accounting firms nationwide.

The Comprehensive Guide on How to Read a Financial Report: Wringing Vital Signs Out of the Numbers


John A. Tracy - 2014
    Yet, the financial statements in a financial report seem to be written in a foreign language that only accountants can understand. This comprehensive version of "How to Read a Financial Report" breaks through that language barrier, clears away the fog, and offers a plain-English user's guide to financial reports. The book features new information on the move toward separate financial and accounting reporting standards for private companies, the emergence of websites offering financial information, pending changes in the auditor's report language and what this means to investors, and requirements for XBRL tagging in reporting to the SEC, among other topics.Makes it easy to understand what financial reports "really" sayUpdated to include the latest information financial reporting standards and regulatory changesWritten by an author team with a combined 50-plus years of experience in financial accountingThis comprehensive edition includes an ancillary website containing valuable additional resourcesWith this comprehensive version of "How to Read a Financial Report," investors will find everything they need to fully understand the profit, cash flow, and financial condition of any business.

Tax Structures 101: A Guide to Asset Planning for Property and Business Owners in New Zealand


Matthew Gilligan - 2014
    Try asking two lawyers and two accountants ‘How should I own my property and business assets?’ You will likely get four different answers. They all seem adamant and fixed in their views, so which professional is right? What is best for your individual circumstances is very difficult to judge, even for seasoned professionals. If you get your taxation and legal structures wrong, at the very least you will have to pay to fix them. But much worse, you could potentially lose all of your assets in the event of financial disaster. You might pay more tax than is lawfully required, You may lose half your pre-marital assets to a spouse, through divorce. You might die with poor estate planning, leaving a mess for your relatives to clean up Or you may pay tax on property tax that catch rookie investors and traders. The list goes on, there are so many issues to consider. This book answers many frequently asked questions about taxation and legal structures.

Financial Modeling for Business Owners and Entrepreneurs: Developing Excel Models to Raise Capital, Increase Cash Flow, Improve Operations, Plan Projects, and Make Decisions


Tom Sawyer - 2014
    It combines logical business principles and strategies with a step-by-step methodology for planning and modeling a company and solving specific business problems. You'll learn to create operational and financial models in Excel that describe the workings of your company in quantitative terms and that make it far more likely you will avoid the traps and dead ends many businesses fall into.Serial entrepreneur and financial expert Tom Y. Sawyer shows how to break your company down into basic functional and operational components that can be modeled. The result is a financial model that, for example, you can literally take to the bank or bring to local angel investors to receive the funding you need to launch your business or a new product. Or it might be a model that shows with startling clarity that your new product development effort is a likely winner--or loser. Even better, you'll learn to create models that will serve as guideposts for ongoing operations. You'll always know just where you are financially, and where you need to be. The models you will learn to build in Financial Modeling for Business Owners and Entrepreneurs can be used to:Raise capital for startup or any stage of growthPlan projects and new initiativesMake astute business decisions, including go/no-go assessmentsAnalyze ROI on your product development and marketing expendituresStreamline operations, manage budgets, improve efficiency, and reduce costsValue the business when it is time to cash out or mergeIn addition to many valuable exercises and tips for using Excel to model your business, this book contains a combination of practical advice born of hard-won lessons, advanced strategic thought, and the insightful use of hard skills. With a basic knowledge of Excel assumed, it will help you learn to think like an experienced business person who expects to make money on the products or services offered to the public. You'll discover that the financial model is a key management tool that, if built correctly, provides invaluable assistance every step of the entrepreneurial journey.Tom Y. Sawyer has used the principles this book contains to create financial models of numerous startup and early-stage companies, assisting them in planning for and raising the capital that they needed to grow their businesses and ultimately exit with multiples of their initial investment. Financial Modeling for Business Owners and Entrepreneurs, a mini-MBA in entrepreneurship and finance, will show you how you can do the same.Note: This book is an updated version of Sawyer's 2009 title, Pro Excel Financial Modeling.

The Little Book of Local Government Fraud Prevention


Charles B. Hall - 2014
    

Taxation for Australian Busine


Rod Caldwell - 2014
    Bookkeeping may be done by a professional outside the company, but more often falls to an employee or the business owner, who may or may not be well-schooled in the intricacies of tax law and business regulations. Tax time can end up costing small businesses a fortune in either professional fees or missed deductions every year. What if you could simplify the process and save money?Taxation for Australian Businesses: Understanding Australian Business Taxation Concessions is the ultimate guide to tax for the small business owner. Author Rod Caldwell, 20-year veteran of the Australian Taxation Office, leads you through the process of managing your books and keeping more straightforward records to simplify the process of filing tax. The introduction of the GST and the new tax system involves a lot of new work for business owners, but Taxation for Australian Businesses eases the way by explaining the intricacies of applicable tax law, fully updated to parallel the May 2014 budget. Topics include:Business structures, accounting systems, and cash accounting FBT, private versus domestic use, and when to record a payment Motor vehicles, the GST, and depreciation Owners salary, end of period processing, and how to account for stock trading The book explains everything you need to know and ties it all together to show you how to put the information into practice. No jargon, no textbooks, just common sense and reason. If you would like to get your bookkeeping straightened out and get back to your business, Taxation for Australian Businesses: Understanding Australian Business Taxation Concessions is the one guide that will get you there quickly.