The Accountant'S Role in The Organization: Learning Objectives
The Accountant'S Role in The Organization: Learning Objectives
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
1. Describe how cost accounting supports management accounting and financial accounting
CHAPTER OVERVIEW
Chapter 1 is an important foundation chapter. The theme of the text, Cost Accounting: A Managerial
Emphasis, 11/E, is the major role that accounting plays in management decision making. Accounting provides
information managers need when making decisions. Financial accounting provides information to external
managers while modern cost accounting yields insights into what managers and accountants do within an
organization. Management accountants provide financial and nonfinancial information to help managers
decide how best to deal with challenges and opportunities.
Management accounting is successful when it provides information that improves managers strategic,
planning, and control decisions. The use of accounting in the planning and control process is introduced and
highlighted in the text example.
An introduction and discussion of professional ethics including standards of ethical conduct for management
accountants is presented.
CHAPTER OUTLINE
Learning Objective 1:
Describe how cost accounting supports management accounting and financial accounting
I. Accounting systems: processing information from economic events into useful information for managers
and others
1. Identifying and measuring financial and other information related to the acquisition or consumption
of an organizations resources
2. Providing users of economic information (managers) useful reports and access to needed
information
B. Cost accounting: provides information relating to cost of acquiring and utilizing resources for both
management and financial accounting
2. Financial accounting: focus on external reporting for decision making of those outside the
organization
3. Cost management
Learning Objective 2:
Understand how management accountants affect strategic decisions
II. Strategic decisions and management accounting: key to a companys success in creating value for
customers while differentiating itself from its competitors
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1. Strategy: how an organization uses what it has to get what it wants within the marketplace
1. Strategic analysis: matching knowledge of marketplace opportunities and threats with companys
resources and capabilities
a. Current resources
i. Cash adequacy
b. Long-term productive assets: important strategic decisions for the right investments
iii. Identify financial and nonfinancial costs and benefits associated with alternative choices
c. Intangible assets
Learning Objective 3:
Distinguish between the planning and control decisions of managers
A. Implementing strategy: managers taking action by using planning and control systems to help the
collective decisions of an organization
1. Planning
a. Thinking process
2. Control
TEACHING TIP: The decision-making process is akin to the thinking process. Individuals as well as groups
of all types and sizes employ common elements in making decisions. The key for the use of accounting in the
process is usually in determining relevant information but may be used in each stage. Chapter 11 expands
upon this process. An interesting reading on group decision making is from Fortune, October 5, 1992, How
Public Opinion Really Works, pages 102108, written by Daniel Yankelovich.
Feedback is an interesting aspect to explore as it highlights the ongoing nature of decision making. One can
give numerous examples to prove the adage that in solving one problem, several more problems are created.
Learning Objective 4:
Distinguish among the problem-solving, scorekeeping, and attention-directing roles of management accountants
B. Supporting managers by providing information to improve strategic, planning, and control decisions
Do multiple choice 4 and 5. Assign Problems 1-26 and Exercise 1-17 or 1-18.
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Learning Objective 5:
Identify four themes managers need to consider for attaining success
C. Enhancing the value of management accounting systems by guiding managers to focus on challenges
[Concepts in Action]
Learning Objective 6:
Describe the set of business functions in the value chain
iii. Production
iv. Marketing
v. Distribution
b. Quality
c. Time
d. Innovation
Learning Objective 7:
Describe three ways management accountants support managers
Learning Objective 8:
Understand how management accounting fits into an organizations structure
Learning Objective 9:
Understand what professional ethics mean to management accountants
A. Guidelines
a. Competence
b. Confidentiality
c. Integrity
d. Objectivity
Do multiple choice 10. Assign Exercise 1-23 and Problems 1-28 and 1-29.
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CHAPTER QUIZ
1. Why do most companies adhere to GAAP for their basic internal financial statements?
7. Four themes are common to many managers. The critical theme for all of these is
9. ________ management exists to provide advice and assistance to those responsible for attaining the
objectives of the organization.
a. Line
b. Functional
c. Staff
d. Risk
10. Which of the following is not one of the ethical responsibilities of a management accountant?
a. Compliance
b. Confidentiality
c. Integrity
d. Objectivity
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WRITING/DISCUSSION EXERCISES
1. Describe how cost accounting supports management accounting and financial accounting
What are some basic characteristics of accounting that all accountants use whether in
financial or managerial accounting? The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) describes
a hierarchy of accounting qualities in its second Statement of Financial Accounting Concepts. The
characteristics deemed important for financial accounting are the same as those described throughout the
text as those of managerial accounting. The Concepts describe the users of accounting information as
decision makers with the constraints of cost/benefit and materiality. The qualities of accounting
information are given as understandability, decision usefulness, relevance, and reliability. Relevance is
further described by the terms predictive value, feedback value, and timeliness. Reliability is
characterized by verifiability, neutrality, and representational faithfulness. The additional quality of
comparability, including consistency, belongs to the descriptors of decision usefulness. These qualities
apply to all accounting information, financial or managerial, in processing any economic transaction that
have occurred into information useful for making decisions.
The definition given for accounting by the 1941 Committee on Terminology of the American Institute of
Accountants is . . . the art of recording, classifying, and summarizing in a significant manner and in terms
of money, transactions, and events which are in part, at least, of a financial character, and interpreting the
results thereof. This definition was before the study of cost accounting as an academic subject, but note
the statement from the current text about accounting systemsProcessing any economic transactions
entails collecting, categorizing, summarizing, and analyzing. Some basic characteristics define
accounting.
From FASB Statement of Financial Accounting Concepts No. 2 (Stamford, CT: FASB, 1980)
Explain how routine reports to managers not only provide information but also influence
behavior regarding the planning and controlling of operations. Throughout the text, the
behavior or performance of people is noted in response to goals set, structure of bonus calculations, choice
of financial reporting (absorption versus variable costing and the build up of inventory), designation as cost
center versus profit or investment center, etc. The information provided will be acted upon based upon the
users understanding and individual goals. Goal congruence as a concept is introduced at a later point but
has pertinence here. People will work to achieve their own goals within the companys structure. They will
look to the measurement being used to further their own goals. Managers must be careful in designing
measures of performance to insure the measures work to attain the companys strategic goals.
Describe the steps in a decision-making or thinking process. Exhibit 1-1 can be used as an
example. Students may be given a situation or asked to use a recent decision they have made. Any goal-
setting situation can be an example. Perhaps the student selects the goal of making good grades for the
semester to gain a good student discount for car insurance purposes. Knowing what is expected for the
discount and for earning specific grades in each class assists in predicting results under various alternative
ways of achieving the goal. Keeping a log of how time was spent would measure action taken. Comparing
the log of how the time was spent to the planned usage of time comprises control. Evaluating the results of
time spent and grades earned are an example of feedback.
Students could provide other examples of the use of problem solving, scorekeeping, and attention directing,
especially in the area of sports.
List some activities a management accountant could do to keep up to date with or ahead
of changes in the field of management. Active membership in professional organizations is one
way to keep current. One of the points made in the IMA Standards of Ethical Conduct for Management
Accountants is to maintain an appropriate level of professional competence by ongoing development of
their knowledge and skills. (Competence section) Keeping up on the news by reading current periodicals,
listening to programs on current business practices, or attending seminars sponsored by professional
organizations are all helpful.
Describe how managers in all areas of the value chain are customers of accounting
information. Include a definition of value as it applies to the value chain along with
the meaning of success for management accounting. The section in the text describing the
value chain notes that usefulness added to the products or services of a company result in value to the
customer. Throughout the section, Enhancing the Value of Management Accounting Systems, runs the
theme of integration of functions and information for improved decision making by managers, a definition
of success for management accounting. This is a focus of modern cost accountingdecision support.
Explain the cost-benefit approach guideline (a) when considered within the confines of
an individual company and (b) when considered as interplay between society and the
individual company. The explanation given in the section of the text Cost-Benefit Approach is useful
for using within the company situation. The interplay between society and company can have a different
meaning of cost-benefit: the company must bear the cost of additional processing or information for the
benefit of society to have a cleaner environment, for example, or to make better decisions about investing or
lending, a typical financial accounting function.
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Describe the knowledge, skills, and abilities required of a management accountant
following the different costs for different purposes theme. The section in the text, Surveys of
Company PracticesA Day in the Life, can be helpful for this exercise. The IMA has also published the
results of a survey on the KSAs (knowledge, skills, abilities) needed for management accounting. Check
the Web site of IMA (http://www.imanet.org) for additional information.
The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) in its Vision Project has identified
characteristics of leaders or persons who stand out among their peers. The term pathfinders has been
applied to those who display the traits necessary. The characteristics can be obtained through the AICPA
Web site (http://www.cpavision.org ).
From the perspective of (a) a stockholder, (b) a company manager, (c) an employee
other than a manager, and (d) a customer, explain why a code of ethics is important for
the accountants within a company. Consider the functions performed, the measures
employed, and the concept of professional status. The section in the text, Surveys of Company
PracticeCommon Ethical Dilemmas, can be helpful in addressing this exercise as well as the section on
professional ethics. Accountants consider themselves to be professionals. A code of ethics is usually
regarded as a necessary aspect of a professional class. In the explanation of management accounting
functions, the function of scorekeeping receives particular attention as one in which accountants are
responsible for the reliability of the reported information and act as watchdogs for top management.
Brooks, L., Business and Professional Ethics for Accountants (2000) South-Western College Publishing,
Cincinnati OH.
Cisco, S. & Strong, K., The Value Added Information Chain, Information Management Journal
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Frost, P., Why Compassion Counts! Journal of Management Inquiry (June 1999) p.127 [7p].
Guilding, C., Cravens, K. & Tayles, M., An International Comparison of Strategic Management
Accounting Practices, Management Accounting Research (March 2000) p.113 [23p].
Halal, W., Corporate Community: A Theory of the Firm Uniting Profitability and Responsibility,
Strategy and Leadership (January 2000) p. 10 [7p].
Howard, R., Values Make the Company: An Interview with Robert Haas, Harvard Business Review
(September-October 1990) p.134 [11p].
Litman, J., Genuine Assets: Building Blocks of Strategy and Sustainable Competitive Advantage,
Strategic Finance (November 2000) p.37 [6p].
Martinson, O. and Ziegenfuss, D., Looking at What Influences Ethical Perception and Judgment,
Management Accounting Quarterly (Fall 2000) p.41 [7p].
Michlitsch, J., High-Performing, Loyal Employees: The Real Way to Implement Strategy, Strategy and
Leadership (January 2000) p.28 [6p].
Moriarity, S., Trends in Ethical Sanctions within the Accounting Profession, Accounting Horizons
(December 2000) p.427 [13p].
Moye, J. and Upton, D., Data Warehousing 101, Strategic Finance (February 2001) p.34 [5p].
Thorne, L., The Development of Two Measures to Assess Accountants Prescriptive and Deliberate Moral
Reasoning, Behavioral Research in Accounting (Vol. 122000) p.139 [31p].
Weber, J. & Wasieleski, D., Investigating Influences on Managers Moral Reasoning, Business and
Society (March 2001) p.79 [33p].
West III, G.P. & DeCastro, J., The Achilles Heel of Firm Strategy: Resource Weaknesses and Distinctive
Inadequacies, Journal of Management Studies (May 2001).
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