Managerial Accounting
The accounting that most of us are familiar with is financial accounting, what we see when we look at a company’s balance sheets. However, managerial accounting isn’t set in place to be scrutinized by the public and other outside inquirers, but for the managers of the company to be able to make better decisions on how to run their business. Therefore managerial accounting is largely done internally and is not based on General Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP).
There are three objectives in managerial accounting:
- To provide information for costing out services, products, and other objects of interest to management.
- To provide information for planning to do something, controlling growth, evaluation, and continuous improvement (better, faster, cheaper, greater). As far as improvement goes it is important to remember that quality is based on what the customer perceives as value.
- To provide information for decision making.
No Comments »
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI
