The Busy Consultant’s Mini-MBA
This summary distills key business disciplines for consultants, offering concise insights for practical application. Learn core principles of accounting, finance, strategy, and more, all in one book.
Expected Outcomes: Make sound financial decisions. Develop effective business strategies. Communicate effectively with stakeholders.
Core Content:
1. Fundamental Accounting Principles & The Accounting Equation:
- Accrual Principle: Recognize revenues and expenses when earned/incurred, not just when cash changes hands.
- Going Concern: Assume the business will continue operating in the foreseeable future.
- Consistency: Use the same accounting methods from period to period.
- Materiality: Only report significant transactions in detail.
- Double-Entry Bookkeeping: Every transaction affects at least two accounts.
2. Reading and Interpreting the Three Primary Financial Statements:
- Income Statement: Shows revenue, expenses, and profit/loss over a period. Revenues - Cost of Goods Sold = Gross Profit. Operating income = Earnings Before Interest and Taxes.
- Balance Sheet: A snapshot of assets, liabilities, and equity at a specific time.
- Statement of Cash Flows: Breaks down cash inflows and outflows into operating, investing, and financing activities.
- Connect across statements to deepen understanding and flag inconsistencies.
3. Revenue Recognition and Expense Matching:
- Revenue Recognition: Recognize it when performance obligations are satisfied and it's measurable and realizable.
- Expense Matching: Record costs (expenses) in the same period as the revenues they help generate.
4. Accrual vs. Cash Accounting:
- Accrual: Revenues when earned, expenses when incurred. Accurate but complex, monitor cash flows.
- Cash: Revenues when cash received, expenses when paid. Simple but can distort profit/loss.
5. Key Financial Ratios and Their Interpretations:
- Liquidity Ratios: Measure ability to meet short-term obligations like current ratio and quick ratio.
- Profitability Ratios: Assess how effectively a company generates earnings like gross margin, operating margin, net profit margin, and return on equity.
- Leverage Ratios: Show debt levels like debt to equity and debt to assets.
- Efficiency Ratios: Evaluate how well assets/liabilities generate revenue like inventory turnover, receivables turnover, and asset turnover.
6. Red Flags and Common Misconceptions:
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Unusual revenue trends, frequent restatements, changes in accounting policies, discrepancies between net income and cash flow.
Action suggestion: Compare multiple periods, examine key ratios and seek independent views.
7. Cost Classifications and Behavior (Fixed vs. Variable):
- Fixed Costs: Remain constant regardless of activity level.
Suggestion: Manage risk by carefully planning capacity.
- Variable Costs: Change in direct proportion to activity level.
Suggestion: Understand what your variable costs are so that you can have pricing flexibility.
8. Break-Even Analysis and Contribution Margin:
- Calculated by subtracting variable cost per unit from the sales price per unit. Break-even units=Total Fixed Costs/Contribution Margin per Unit.
Note: Good for pricing, capacity planning, evaluating financial viability of projects.
9. Budgeting and Forecasting:
- Budgets: Project revenues, expenses, and metrics over a period.
- Forecast: Adjust projections based on real-time data.
Types of Budgets include operating, capital, cash, and zero-based budgeting.
- Suggestion: Use rolling forecasts to continuously update estimates and adapt to market shifts. *
10. Activity-Based Costing and Cost Allocation:
- Improves accuracy by applying overhead costs to the activities and cost drivers that consume resources, then allocates those costs to individual products or services.
- Action suggestion: Identify key activities and cost drivers.
11. Performance Measurement:
- Key Performance Indicators (KPIs): Quantifiable metrics aligned with organizational goals.
Suggestion: Track KPIs over time to spot trends.
- Balanced Scorecard: Framework balancing financial & non-financial measures. With a holistic approach to metrics linked to customer satisfaction it fosters continuous improvements with better strategic alignment. *
12. Relevant Costs for Decision-Making:
Relevant costs influence and effect decisions, that are future oriented and can vary between alternatives (incremental costs, avoidable costs, and opportunity costs).
Note: Be careful because sunk costs are not relevant.*
13. Time Value of Money Essentials
Concepts:
PV = What a future sum of money is worth in today’s terms.
FV = Projects how much a current sum of money will grow.
Discount Rate: Converts future cash flows into present value.
Formulas:
Present Value: PV=FV / (1+r)^n
Future Value: FV = PV * (1+r)^n
Great for investment and financing decisions. *
14. Capital Structure: Debt vs. Equity:
Debt Financing: Borrow funds (tax benefit, retain ownership, can be cheaper)
Disadvantages: fixed obligation, credit constraints, increased risk.
Equity Financing: Issue shares (no fixed repayment. shares risk, flexability)
Disadvantages: owner dilutent, higher cost capital, market perception. *
15. Valuation Fundamentals:
Tools: Net Present Value (NPV), Internal Rate of Return (IRR), Discounted Cash Flow (DCF).*
Q&A
Q: How does accrual accounting differ from cash accounting?
A: Accrual accounting recognizes revenues and expenses when they are earned or incurred, while cash accounting records them only when cash changes hands. Accrual accounting gives a more accurate picture of financial performance, but cash accounting is simpler.
Q: What are some typical red flags in Financial Statements?
A: Unusual revenue spikes, frequent restatements, discrepancies between profits and cash flow, and surging receivables/inventory are all signs to watch.
Q: What is breakeven analysis, and why does it matter?
A: Breakeven analysis determines the sales level where total revenue equals total costs. It helps guide pricing, capacity, and product viability.
Q: What are relevant costs, and why do they matter for decision-making?
A: Relevant costs are future cash flows that differ among alternatives. They exclude sunk costs and allocated fixed costs. Focusing on these can lead to the soundest economic decisions.