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   Book Info

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Bookkeepers' Boot Camp: Get a Grip on Accounting Basics  
Author:
ISBN: 1551804492
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

Book Description
Bookkeepers' Boot Camp teaches you how to sort through your masses of information and paperwork, how to record what is important for your business, and how to use that information to grow your business for success! It will give you a greater understanding of the purpose and process of record keeping and a deeper understanding of your business and how it works. Topics discussed include: Managing the paper flow Understanding the balance sheet Income statements and cash flow statements Recording the sales cycle Inventory control Loans, bonuses, dividends, and company payments

From the Publisher
Mohr believes strongly in planning the entrepreneur's business and personal life holistically. Her approach helps business owners to understand their business better and to run personally satisfying lives and immensely lucrative businesses.

From the Back Cover
Bookkeepers’ Boot Camp is the first book in the Numbers 101 series. It will show you the essentials of record keeping for a small business and why it's necessary to track information. The book will give you a greater understanding of the purpose and process of record keeping and a deeper understanding of your business and how it works. This book teaches you how to sort through the masses of information and paperwork, how to record what is important for your business, and how to use that information to grow your business for success! This book includes a self-test to help you understand and reinforce what you have learned. The following topics are discussed in this book: - Managing the paper flow - Understanding the balance sheet: defining what your business owns and what it owes - Learning the basics regarding the income statement and cash flow statement - Recording the sales cycle - Learning how to account for inventory - Monitoring your budget and cash flow to ensure that future cash requirements will be met - Understanding the transactions between the company and its owners: loans, bonuses, dividends, payments made personally, and company payments of personal bills

About the Author
Angie Mohr is a chartered accountant and certified management accountant. She is the managing director of Mohr & Company Chartered Accountants and Business Consultants. Mohr can be heard on the radio with Small-Business Survival Tips, is a business columnist for a large daily newspaper, and has written many articles for business magazines.

Excerpted from Bookkeepers' Boot Camp: Get a Grip on Accounting Basics by Angie Mohr. Copyright © 2003. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
GETTING STARTED The statistics are mind numbing. In North America, 80 percent of all small businesses started this year will be gone in five years. Of the lucky 20 percent to have survived, another 80 percent will be gone in ten years. That’s a whopping 96 percent failure rate over ten years. Would you start a small business if you were told that you have a 96 percent chance of failure? Not many people would. But every day, hundreds of people think they will beat the odds. They may be former employees, students, housewives, or others who have never had any business training but are sure that their product or service is so fantastic, so completely unique, that they are destined to succeed. These are the people who walk through the doors of my accounting and consulting practice every day. They want to know how to make a lot of money, how to leverage their businesses, how to go public. I begin to talk to them about their plans for bookkeeping for the business ("Oh, my wife will sort all that out"), what is in their business plan ("Oh, I’ll pull one of those together if the bank is looking for one"), and what their break-even point is ("We don’t have to worry about any of that; this product is going to sell millions!"). They want to fly before they’ve learned to crawl. They do not understand that business management is a separate skill from doing whatever it is that their business does. For example, hairdressers think that because they are good at cutting hair, they can own and manage a salon. Lawyers think that because they are good at putting together a brief, they can run a ten-lawyer law practice. Does it sound like I’m being hard on small business? Not at all. Small business is the engine of the world economy. Even Microsoft and Ford started in someone’s basement or garage. However, people all over the world have an idealized and unrealistic view of how to operate a business, and most discount the importance of the basics. With the advent of bookkeeping software such as Simply Accounting and QuickBooks, many entrepreneurs have come to believe that these programs will magically do their bookkeeping for them. Because these people lack basic accounting skills, they are unable to analyze their business results and have no idea what’s working and what’s not. It’s like driving a car in a foreign country where they can’t understand what the road signs are telling them. The Numbers 101 for Small Business Series Over the years, my clients have asked me to recommend good books on small-business management and accounting. I have always found it difficult to do so, as most books on the subject are either dry textbooks or too general to be of any use. This problem was the genesis of the Numbers 101 For Small Business series of books. The series functions as an easy-to-understand reference for small-business owners, and covers such topics as bookkeeping, analyzing and tracking financial information, as well as the complexities of starting, growing, and exiting a business. The series is distilled from the workshops, radio broadcasts, and one-to-one training sessions I have conducted in my accounting firm over the years. You, the small-business owner, will find within this series everything you need to base your business on sound financial and management principles. Throughout the series, you will meet Joe and his wife, Becky. Joe owns a small business called (appropriately) Joe’s Plumbing. Becky does the back-office work for the business: answering phones, invoicing, bookkeeping, and banking. You will learn how Joe worked with his accountant to strengthen his business and make it more profitable and risk proof. You will find samples of financial documents and other useful tools that you can customize to your business needs.Bookkeepers’ Boot Camp Bookkeepers’ Boot Camp, the book you are reading now, is the first book in the Numbers 101 for Small Business series. It deals with the essentials of record keeping for a small business and will show you why it’s necessary for you to track financial information. By the end of this book, you will have a greater understanding of the purpose and process of record keeping and a deeper understanding of your business and how it works.




Bookkeepers' Boot Camp: Get a Grip on Accounting Basics

     



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