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Project Management Accounting: Budgeting, Tracking, and Reporting Costs and Profitability
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Project Management Accounting: Budgeting, Tracking, and Reporting Costs and Profitability

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Praise for Project Management Accounting: Budgeting, Tracking, and Reporting Costs and Profitability

"You don't need to be a Six Sigma Black Belt or a CPA to understand the principles and the practical tools presented by Callahan, Stetz, and Brooks in Project Management Accounting. Their approach focuses on sound financial practices that will improve the ROI of your project whether it is your first or your hundred-and-first experience."
—Barry Van Dyck, PhD
Director of Degree Programs, Executive Education, Mendoza College of Business, University of Notre Dame

"Project Management Accounting serves as a solid resource for the project manager seeking to leverage the tools of accounting and finance to maximize the quality of project outcomes."
—Jeffrey J. Lampe, CFA
Vice President, Hopewell Ventures

"Project Management Accounting clearly communicates fundamental accounting principles and applies them skillfully to the field of project management . . . even seasoned accounting managers will likely benefit from the application to project management. Talented project managers will find enough finance and accounting tools to transition toward profit and loss responsibility. This book will serve as a handy reference."
—Warren Davidson
CEO, Global Source Mfg.

"This is a must-read for everyone in business, whether you have made a career in project management, operations, facilities, or anywhere else. Project Management Accounting provides the framework to understand not only how to manage any project, but how the project interacts with the different functions of the company for the overall good. When applied, [this book] will improve the profitability of the company through an understanding of the costs and benefits of each project."
—Michael Alte
Management Director, ArvinMeritor

Today's project managers need to understand finance and accounting concepts in order to make both informed decisions and a greater contribution to their organization. Written for readers with limited business backgrounds, Project Management Accounting is an invaluable guide to successfully performing projects using sound finance and accounting concepts.

With the collected insights of authors and respected industry experts Kevin Callahan, Gary Stetz, and Lynne Brooks, Project Management Accounting offers guidance that project managers can use right away to know how to budget appropriately. Brief in presentation and rich in content, Project Management Accounting equips the leaders of today and tomorrow to hit the ground running with a profound business perspective in their current work and in future projects.

 
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Product Details
Author:Kevin R. Callahan
Hardcover:192 pages
Publisher:Wiley
Publication Date:April 06, 2007
ISBN:0470044691
Package Length:9.3 inches
Package Width:6.2 inches
Package Height:0.9 inches
Package Weight:0.9 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 1 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:5.0
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

5 of 5 found the following review helpful:

5Project Management Accounting - Clear and To the Point  May 15, 2007
As a CIO and an explorer of ways to drive business performance, I highly recommend this book. Unlike many accounting textbooks that contain hundreds of pages of formulas and such, Project Management Accounting is concise and easy to read, but contains powerful information that can be applied immediately in most business contexts. Not only will this book be useful to project managers, but many business managers will find the chapters on the relationship between project management and business practice useful as well.

There are 7 chapters in the book, and each chapter can stand on its own as a summary of the topic covered, but taken in sequence, the book presents a comprehensive overview of the interaction between business accounting and finance and project management.

The first chapter sets the stage by providing an overview of project management practice. Most project management practitioners will find that this chapter covers all of the basics in a brief way. Business managers who lack background in project management will find this high level presentation an easy introduction to the major subject areas of project management.

Chapters 2 and 3 form the foundation for project managers to how company accounting and finance function through the use of the Dupont Method of analysis. Chapter 2 provides a basic introduction to the Dupont Method, with illustrations and tables that guide the reader through the definitions of critical financial ratios and what they reveal.

Chapter 3 provides a case study that reinforces Chapter 2, while providing a detailed study of a company's current financial status. In addition, the authors provide guidelines on how analyze business decisions made to improve a company's performance. The analysis and guidelines can easily be applied by the reader to any other company.

The next 3 chapters cover individual topics: Cost, Project Financing and Project Revenue and Cash Flows. In Chapter 4, Callahan, Stetz and Brooks clearly explain the difference between concept of cost and that of expense, crucial to understanding why project budgets often go awry.

In Chapters 5 and 6, the authors illustrate how the manner in which a project is financed effects the final outcome and value of a project. In addition, they provide an easy to understand checklist that the reader can use to guide a decision when trying to prioritize and choose between projects.

Chapter 7 ties the book together with a comprehensive case study that begins with a Dupont analysis to determine the financial health of a company and leads to making business decisions to improve company performance. Of particular interest in this chapter is the use of "pro forma" financial statements to compare the affect of various solutions on potential company performance. The authors conclude the book with a clear method to determine if project performance is enhancing business performance or not. In addition to project managers, many financial managers will find this chapter useful in judging whether or not to continue a particular project. Have you ever had to make that tough call of whether or not to keep putting more money into a project that has so far not lived up to expectations?




 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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