Why this is required reading for CFO's, finance & accounting:
This book is written by 2 CFO's and will assist senior executives,particularly the CEO and CFO in understanding financial impacts of Lean,and how it can be applied to accounting.
Accountants will benefit from the many ways they can provide a higher level of service identified here.
Lean Leaders will be better prepared to communicate with finance personnel and help them learn to see.
Thoselooking to better understand `the numbers' will have a renewedunderstanding of them, the actual impact of traditional accountingmethods rooted in our businesses, and the obstructions we've rooted ininternal policy and culture, which are often treated as external.
Some of what's covered includes:
- how accounting can provide significantly more value to the business, and vastly improve how they support decision making
- open book management, which firms can leverage to promote trust and a sense of personal ownership in the business
-the 'reasons' some people will struggle in the process to provide morerelevant info, and what the CFO needs to understand to move past this
- compliance with materiality, GAAP, etc.
- performance measurement, and how metrics drive behaviour
- how management by objective sub-optimizes and damages a business
- avoiding unintended consequences from metrics that aren't meaningful, and examples to determine if these exist in a firm
-details how it is far less important to know the cost of making anindividual product than to manage the costs of a business as a whole
- how using traditional allocation methods leads to potentially significant distortion in calculating product cost
-closing the books, and methods for firms to have real time financialresults available as soon as the month ends, and the impact when theyare not timely and arrive after
- cost planning and target costing
- impacts of variance analysis, capacity variance, and activity based costing most firms are not aware of
-financial statements that communicate nothing vs. what is reallyhappening in the operation, how to present the same financial datainternally in a usable format, and easily introducing the relevantformat to the organization so financial information is useful toeveryone
- the product of an accountant
- allocation costs, and how managers may be tempted to make operating results look good by changing allocation methods
- how clarity in metrics ensures a firm's offering is what a customer wants, not what creates the most absorption hours
- the correct way to evaluate capital requests which accounting courses don't teach (yet)
This book is loaded; I suggest it be read twice.