Featured Entry

MANAGING PROJECTS

Projects represent nonroutine business activities that often have long-term strategic ramifications for a firm. In this chapter, we examined how projects differ from routine business activities and discussed the major phases of projects. We noted how environmental changes have resulted in increased attention being paid to projects and project management over the past decade. In the second half of the chapter, we introduced some basic tools that businesses can use when planning for and controlling projects. Both Gantt charts and network diagrams give managers a visual picture of how a project is going. Network diagrams have the added advantage of showing the precedence between activities, as well as the critical path(s). We wrapped up the chapter by showing how these concepts are embedded in inexpensive yet powerful software packages such as Microsoft Project. If you want to learn more about project management, we encourage you to take a look at the Web site for the Proj...

An Overview of Financial Management

This chapter provides a broad overview of financial management. Management’s primary goal should be to maximize the long-run value of the stock, which means the intrinsic value as measured by the stock’s price over time. To maximize value, firms must develop products that consumers want, produce the products efficiently, sell them at competitive prices, and observe laws relating to corporate behavior. If firms are successful at maximizing the stock’s value, they will also be contributing to social welfare and citizens’ well-being.
Businesses can be organized as proprietorships, partnerships, corporations, limited liability companies (LLCs), or limited liability partnerships (LLPs). The vast majority of all business is done by corporations, and the most successful firms end up as corporations, which explains the focus on corporations in this book. We also discussed four important business trends: (1) the focus on business ethics that resulted from a series of scandals in the late 1990s, (2) the trend toward globalization, (3) the ever-improving information technology, and (4) the changes in corporate governance. These four trends are changing the way business is done.
The primary tasks of the CFO are (1) to make sure the accounting system provides “good” numbers for internal decision making and for investors, (2) to ensure that the firm is financed in the proper manner, (3) to evaluate the operating units to make sure they are performing in an optimal manner, and (4) to evaluate all proposed capital expenditures to make sure they will increase the firm’s value. In the remainder of this book, we discuss exactly how financial managers carry out these tasks.

 

Comments

Populer

MANAGING QUALITY

OPERATIONS AND SUPPLY CHAIN STRATEGIES

Internal Analysis: Resources, Capabilities, and Core Competencies

INTRODUCTION to OPERATIONS and SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT

BUSINESS PROCESS