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Welcome to Financial Series #1 The Income Statement
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Your Hosts for Today’s Conference are: Gary Elekes in Nashville, Tennessee Gary Oetker in Plano, Texas
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Conference Objectives: Review Income Statement fundamentals. Review how to make the Income Statement a tool to manage your company’s financial performance.
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Review the basic layout and terminology of the Income Statement Review line item expenses that are “above the line” and “below the line” Review handling of Allocated Fringes and Warranty Reserve Review need to departmentalize Review key points in using the Income Statement as a tool to manage company performance Agenda for Conference
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What Does It Do? Used to determine tax obligation Can be used as a management tool to monitor financial performance Need sufficient detail Need processes to collect information Need to format Income Statement in a format that’s meaningful to your needs Is a flexible document It’s a matter of setting up Chart of Accounts The Income Statement
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Sales$650,000(100%) Cost of Sales$377,000(58.0%) Gross Margin$273,000(42.0%) Overhead$195,000(30.0%) Operating Profit$ 78,000(12.0%) Other Gain/Loss$ 6,500( 1.0%) Net Profit$ 84,500(13.0%) Simple Income Statement
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Income (Profit & Loss Statement) Sales (Revenue) Cost of Sales (Direct Costs) Gross Margin (Gross Profit) Overhead (SG&A – Sales, General & Administration; or Indirect Costs) Operating Income Other Gain/Loss Net Income (EBIT – Earning Before Interest or Taxes) Beginning Terminology
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More Detailed Income Statement Total Company The Line Above The Line Percentages to Total Sales
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Daily Activities Feed Financial Statements
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Specified Accounting Period Month Year-To-Date Tied to Chart of Accounts Gross Margin Comparisons Apples-To-Apples Above & Below the Line Costs Industry Benchmarks Tax Document Versus Management Tool Other Income / Loss Income Statement Overview
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Labor Used on a Job or Ticket There’s No Such Thing As Unapplied Time Track Non-Billable Labor for: Training Callbacks Warranty Direct Labor Considerations
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Overhead Tied to Labor Based on a Calculated Percentage Overhead Associated With Labor Versus Labor Cost Multiply Direct Labor Cost by Allocated Fringe Percentage to Get Allocated Fringe Dollar Amount Revisit Calculation Periodically Allocated Fringes Above The Line
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Total Payroll (Labor Cost) Direct Labor Payroll (Including Unapplied Time) Commissions / Sales Salary Bonuses Administrative Wages Warehouse & Purchasing Wages Support Wages Vacation / Holiday Wages Training / Meeting Wages Allocated Fringes (cont)
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Fringe Benefits Vacation / Holiday FICA (Canadian Pension, etc.) Worker Comp. Group Medical 401K Contribution Uniforms Employee Relations Drug Testing Expense Education Expense Allocated Fringes (cont)
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Contra Account Treat Allocated Fringe as an expense above the line Deduct as an Employee Related expense below the line (Account 6900 in sample Chart of Accounts) Allocated Fringes (cont)
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Warranty Reserve Concept Warranty Expense - Take a little bit out of each job and set aside for future warranty work Warranty Reserve – Put the money into an account on the Balance Sheet. This account recognizes the company’s warranty liability. Warranty Call -As warranty work is performed, money is takes from the warranty reserve to pay for warranty call. Warranty / Warranty Reserve
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Below The Line Expenses The Line Broad Categories Of Overhead
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Yellow Pages Direct Mail Newspaper Television Home Show Co-Op Advertising (negative amount) Sub Total Marketing Overhead – Marketing Accounts
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Management Bonus Administrative Wages Warehouse / Purchasing Wages Officer Salary Vacation / Holiday Training / Meeting Wages Payroll Taxes – FICA Payroll Taxes – Other Workers Comp Overhead – Employee Related Accounts Group Medical 401K Contribution Uniforms Employee Relations Drug Testing Hiring Expense Small Tools Education Expense Support Wages Fringe Benefits Contra Sub Total – Employee Related Expenses
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Depreciation - Leasehold Depreciation Equipment Depreciation – Furniture Building Maintenance Shop Supplies Equipment Maintenance General Liability Insurance Overhead – Plant & Equipment Accounts Rent Utilities Telephone Janitorial Expense Property Expense Sub Total – Plant & Equipment Expenses
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Depreciation Expense Vehicle Repair Vehicle Fuel Vehicle Licenses Vehicle Insurance Vehicle Lease Expense Sub Total Vehicle Related Overhead – Vehicle Related Accounts
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Business Licenses Accounting Fees Goodwill Amortization Bad Debts Dues and Subscriptions Industry Group Fees Data Processing Postage Office Supplies Overhead – Administrative Accounts Radio / Pager Expense Utilities Cellular Phone Expense Bank & Credit Card Expense Travel & Entertainment Meals Contributions Mileage Reimbursement Other Sub Total – Administrative Expenses
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Additional Income Statement Information
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Above the Line Why Consider Doing It? It Tracks Revenue Mix of Business It Tracks Direct Costs & Gross Margin by Department – Can be Compared to Industry Benchmarks It Gives Essential Information to Evaluate Individual Department Performance. See Series #5. Departmentalization
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Enter daily paperwork into your accounting system the day so you can get meaningful information during the month Make sure administrative people are diligent in entering information Get Income Statement in a timely manner after month-end Make sure your managers understand Income Statement and the role they play in the numbers Make sure technicians and installers are diligent at recording time and materials Other Income Statement Considerations
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Set up Chart of Accounts to get the information you need to manage your company. Organize the Income Statement the way you want based on the fundamentals learned today. Use the Income Statement to decide if you need to change business mix. Use the Income Statement to compare to industry financial benchmarks Use Income Statement to help analyze pricing Departmentalize your Income Statement to monitor performance in the market segments you work in. Other Words of Advise
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Embrace an “Open Book” philosophy with employees. They are part of the team and deserve to know how the company is doing. Other Words of Advise (cont.)
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Q uestions & A nswers
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