1 / 31

Week 1

Week 1. ACTG 335. Accounting Information Systems Professor: Stacey Poli, CPA. Text/Packet info. Accounting Information Systems , 11 th Edition; Romney and Steinbart Systems Understanding Aid for Auditing , 7 th Edition; Arens and Ward. Otherwise known as Warren Distributing.

MikeCarlo
Download Presentation

Week 1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Week 1

  2. ACTG 335 Accounting Information Systems Professor: Stacey Poli, CPA

  3. Text/Packet info • Accounting Information Systems, 11th Edition; Romney and Steinbart • Systems Understanding Aid for Auditing, 7th Edition; Arens and Ward. • Otherwise known as Warren Distributing

  4. Administrative – 1/2 • My website content: • Most updated Syllabus • Projects • Reading material (ID and Password available Monday via e-mail) • Power Points (avail. week following lecture)

  5. Administrative – 2/2 • Registered Students must attend class first week or will be dropped. (Send e-mail to me if unable to attend but want to remain in class) • 5 spaces currently available to those on waiting list. Add in chronological registration order. Will identify during attendance today. See me at break. • Those remaining on waiting list see me after class on Thursday. I will let in additional students at that time.

  6. Announcements • Send me an email. • Put “ACTG335- Summer 2009” in the subject line. • Send it from the email address you rely on for class info • Document name in text • Send it by 5:00, June 26th • Some readings and updates may be e-mailed to you, check weekly.

  7. Class Decisions • Break(s)? • No break leave at about 8:00 • 1 break of about 10 minutes, leave at 8:10 And the winner is?

  8. Class Expectations • See Syllabus handed out • READ CAREFULLY • Items of note: • Heavy workload outside of class • Keep up on readings; class content builds on itself • Ask questions!!!! • Participate

  9. What we will cover in this course • General place of AIS in accounting • Conceptual place of AIS • Functionality • Documentation techniques • Business cycles • Accounting controls • Concepts—COSO/COBIT and ERM based • SOX- in general and as related to risks and controls • Database • What do accountants need to know • ERP system implementations • Special topics in accounting systems • Impacts and implications

  10. What we will not cover in this course • Accounting calculations (leave your calculators at home) • Information technology (this is not an IT course) • One correct answer for all questions (logic matters)

  11. What I hope you will take away • Why AIS are important to accountants • Basic understanding of business cycles • Ability to identify potential risks • Determine appropriate internal controls • Comfortable using common accounting software tools: MS Excel, MS Visio, MS Access • Ability to communicate/document AIS

  12. What do you want out of this course • ????

  13. Warren Distributing – why? • Exposes you to basic documents and records used to record the results of business activity. • Practical experience of basic business processes and there impact on the financial statements • Illustrates basic transaction flow through typical accounting system (transactions » source documents » journals » ledgers » trial balance » financial statements)

  14. Warren Distributing - suggestions • Recommend do in stages, not all at once • Follow the Instructions, in order, located in the Instructions, Flowcharts and Ledgers book. Be sure to read pages 6 to 12 of this book before start project. Flowcharts contained in back of book are useful reference when performing related process. • Will provide check figures with e-mail on Monday. If do not match, give it about a half hour to find error. After that, ask me and I will help locate. • START NOW

  15. Warren Distributing – Reference Book • Recommend read pages 7 to 31 of Reference book before beginning project; use the rest of the reference book as needed. • Reference book has examples of financial statements and other schedules required to be completed.

  16. Warren Distributing - Other • Will provide class time on July 7th to allow comparison of answers with fellow students. Also I will provide guidance if not matching Check Figures. BRING MATERIAL TO CLASS. • No need to bring Warren to class except for July7th class and open packet quiz on July 16th. • Financial Statements are required to be system generated. Cash Flow statement not required at all.

  17. Warren Distributing - specifics • More specifics are in your Syllabus – last page before class schedule, including deliverables • Be sure to use Transactions List A (blue paper), Option 2 • Year-end Procedure #5 – donot prepare Statement of Cash Flow • Will allow materiality level of $100

  18. Homework • Bring to next class: • Example (does not have to be financial/accounting) of a process broken into 4 AIS Components (see Chapter 1) • Collect Data • Record Data • Store Data • Process Data

  19. What is an Accounting Information System (AIS) • Interrelated components that interact to: • Collect • Record • Store • Process What? Data Resulting in? Information

  20. Information • An effective AIS results in useful and meaningful information for decision makers (external-shareholders/auditors & internal-management/BOD) • What makes it useful and meaningful?

  21. Desirable characteristics of information • Useful • Relevant • Reliable • Complete • Meaningful • Understandable • Verifiable • Credible • Timely • Accessible

  22. Useful—Relevant • Connected to business objectives • Logical, supportable thread from metrics to objectives • Meaningful for the purpose intended, valid • Predictive value (leading) • Training, investment in IT, advertising • Feedback value (lagging) • ROI, net income, productivity

  23. Useful—Reliable • Accurate for the purpose intended • Representational faithfulness • Verifiable • Neutral • meaning objective, but not purposeless • relieves us of the need to assess “values” of the data/information • Acknowledge inherent bias in any metric/measure

  24. Useful—Complete • Covers the time frame required or indicated • Entire population are included, even if located in different locations or systems

  25. Meaningful • Understandable • Avoid information overload • Match audience (numbers vs.. graphs vs. charts) • Make industry specific if appropriate • Sort according to requirements • Verifiable • Can trace back to source document, preferably external • Evidence of approval (e.g. signature, electronic correspondence)

  26. Meaningful • Credible • What users value and trust • Assess and report on the accuracy of key sources • Institute a data-quality program for key data • Timeliness • Available within time required • Includes most current data • Accessibility • Physically • Cognitively

  27. Measurement issues • What to measure, how often • Measurement attributes • What to report • Abstractions • What basis for measuring? For whom? To meet what objective(s)?

  28. Lagging Indicators • Measures of output, end-process measures, record effects • Reflect past performance • Generally quantitative • Example: Quantity of toxic emission; last year’s percentage of on-time deliveries • Strength: Easy to quantify and understand, preferred by regulators and public—deterministic rather than probabilistic • Weakness: Time lag in feedback, ignore present activities

  29. Leading Indicators • In-process metrics of performance, proactive • Reflect current status/activities—for future performance • Quantitative or qualitative • Example: percent of facilities conducting self-audit; training of logistics managers • Strength: Represent current actions and future trends • Weakness: Harder to build support for use, harder to track to performance—probabilistic rather than deterministic

  30. Other AIS objectives • Provide adequate controls to mitigate risks • Integrate data to minimize duplication of effort and maximize efficiency

  31. Factors influencing AIS design • Strategy • Information technology • Organizational culture • Societal demands • …what do we need to account FOR

More Related