A Quick Glance

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    Gain the skills to navigate Your way around the application interface

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    Delegates will be able to success with your Business Finances

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    Guaranteed lowest price in the industry

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    Understand the best practices within Finance Fundamentals

Finance Fundamentals course is the Speed Reading Course in the Business Skills Training. This training provides a comprehensive introduction to corporate financial management. The subject links the mathematics of finance, valuation and investment analysis. Portfolio theory provides the relationship between risk and discussion of capital structure. The focus is on creating shareholder value, financial and management within the organization to produce effective outcomes.

Who should take this course

  • Insurance professionals
  • Business managers and business owners
  • Finance and accounting personnel
  • Assistant-Treasurers, Treasury employees
  • Bank and financial institution employees
  • Law professionals
  • HR professionals
  • Government employees
  • Administrators
  • Not-For-Profit administrators and managers
  • Professionals in career transition
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Prerequisites

There are no prerequisites for this course

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What Will You Learn

  • Apply the fundamentals of financial management in the workplace
  • Interpret the primary financial statements and make decisions that are in the financial interest of your organisation
  • Understand the principal accounting terms, including recognising the difference between cash and accrual accounting
  • Calculate the key financial ratios and understand the results so you can identify significant issues, prepare recommendations and apply strategies to improve cash flow
  • An understanding of the key drivers of business value and how to work with them
  • The fundamentals of personal finance (income, assets, liabilities, expenses) and how they relate to your life
  • How to get started on a long term investment plan
  • What key numbers you need to know about your student loans, as well as the key resources for finding loan servicers and negotiating payment plans
  • Describe the role and objective of financial management
  • Recognise and apply the time value of money formulae
  • Explain the risk/return tradeoff using examples from Portfolio Theory and the Capital Asset Pricing Model
  • Value bonds and common stocks
  • Apply concepts of cash flow analysis, evaluation techniques and the cost of capital for capital budgeting
  • How to get out of debt if you are already in it (and how to stay out of debt forever)
  • How to check and protect your credit report and credit score
  • How to build credit even if you have no previous credit history
  • How to create a budget that will actually work
  • What to look for when renting an apartment
  • How to give back to your community
  • How retirement accounts work and what account is right for them
  • Two basic principles for business success
  • An understanding of the purpose and uses of business management information, including management accounts, cash flow, profit and loss statements and balance sheets
  • An insight into how your management decisions will affect your company's financial decisions 
  • Identify, understand and apply a model for financial decision-making
  • Identify and appreciate how human behaviour affects financial decisions
  • Identify and understand how financial needs change over the life course
  • Identify and understand the impact of inflation and tax on incomes
  • Apply and appreciate the social and economic factors that influence spending
  • Design and manage a household budget
  • Identify and understand insurance products and when to buy them
  • An understanding of how to use financial information to drive and measure business improvement
  • An understanding of the mechanics of cost structures and pricing decisions with options for development.
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What's included

  Course Overview

Finance Fundamental course explains about basic financial concepts and theories. Which enable you to better understand financial decisions facing individuals and modern business organisations. This course highlight the practical application of financial concepts.  It includes personal finance issues, awareness of stock market, financial operations, and much more. 

Exam:

  • Exam Type: Objective
  • Duration: 90 minutes
  • Pass %age: 45
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  Course Content

Module-1

Basics with the Customers (Sales & Debtors)

  • Invoicing, Credit Notes & Statements
  • Sales & Debtors Control
  • Credit Control & Debt Collection

Basics with the Suppliers (Purchases & Creditors)

  • Invoicing, Credit Notes & Statements
  • Purchases & Creditors Control
  • Credit Control & Debt Collection

Basics with the Banks (Cash Management)

  • Receipts & Lodgements
  • Payments
  • Recording & Reconciliation

Accounting & Financial Statements

  • Profit & Loss Account
  • Balance Sheet

Understanding Cash Flow

  • Cash versus profit
  • Cash generated from operations
  • Sources and Uses of Funds

Financial Ratio Analysis

  • Profitability
  • Financial status
  • Efficiency

Budgets and Planning

  • Breakeven analysis
  • Budgeting process
  • Contribution and profit
  • Matching assets and funding 

Module-2

  • Elements of financial decision-making
  • How business works - business cash-flow, step-by-step
  • Cash flow management 
  • Working capital and overtrading
  • How financial decisions affect the P&L and Balance Sheet
  • Management information - choosing and using KPIs
  • Using a few key ratios to analyse your own and competitor accounts
  • Break-even and margin of safety
  • Marginal costing, the elasticity of demand and pricing decisions. 

Module-3

Introduction to Accounting

  • What is Accounting
  • Accounting Assumptions
  • Assets, Liabilities, and Equity
  • Accounting Principles
  • The Accounting Equation

Balance Sheet

  • Accounting Equation and Balance Sheet
  • Business Transactions and the Balance Sheet
  • Classifying Assets and Liabilities
  • The Balance Sheet in Action

Working with Accounts

  • The General Ledger
  • The Chart of Accounts
  • Using Accounts for Transactions
  • Understanding Debits and Credits
  • Double Entry Accounting
  • Account Balances
  • Revenue and Expense Accounts

Financial Statements

  • Introduction to Financial Statements
  • Revisiting the Balance Sheet
  • The Income Statement
  • Statement of Owner's Equity
  • Generating Financial Statements
  • The Accounting Period
  • Business Entities and Financial Statements

Accounting Cycle

  • Introduction to the Accounting Cycle
  • Identifying Source Documents
  • Recording Journal Transactions
  • Posting to the General Ledger
  • Generating a Trial Balance
  • Recording Adjusting Entries
  • Generating the Adjusted Trial Balance
  • Preparing Financial Statements
  • Recording Closing Entries
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Finance Fundamentals Enquiry

 

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Reach us at +44 1344 961530 or info@pentagonit.co.uk for more information.

About Sheffield

Sheffield is a city area in South Yorkshire, England. Actually part of the West Riding of Yorkshire, its name originates from the River Sheaf, which innings through the city. With some of its southern suburbs occupied from Derbyshire, the city has grown up from its main manufacturing roots to include a broader economic base.

In the 19th century, Sheffield increased a global reputation for steel manufacture. Known as the Steel City, many novelties were industrialised nearby, counting container and stainless steel, powering an almost tenfold increase in the population in the Industrial Rebellion. Sheffield conventional its public charter in 1843, flattering the City of Sheffield in 1893. International rivalry in iron and steel produced a weakening in these businesses in the 1970s and 1980s, according to with the failure of coal withdrawal in the area.

Government:

Sheffield is ruled at the local level by Sheffield City Council. It contains 84 councillors chosen to signify 28 words: three councillors per district. Following the 2016 local votes, the delivery of assembly places is Labor. The city also has a Lord Mayor though now just a ritual position, in the past, the office approved substantial authority, with decision-making powers over the funds and businesses of the city assembly.

Much of its past the assembly was skilful by the Labor Party, and was noted for its leftist understandings; during the 1980s, when David Blunkett ran Sheffield City Council, the area augmented the epithet the Socialist Republic of South Yorkshire. Though, the Liberal Democrats measured the Council between 1999 and 2001 and took control again from 2008 to 2011.

Climate:

Like the break of the United Kingdom, the weather in Sheffield is usually temperate. The Pennies to the west of the city can make a cool, depressed and wet atmosphere, but they also deliver shelter from the usual westerly breezes, forming rain shadow across the area.  Between 1971 and 2000 Sheffield be about 824.7 millimetres (32.47 in) of rain per year. December was the rainiest month with 91.9 millimetres (3.62 in) and July the dehydrated with 51.0 millimetres (2.01 in). July was also the hottest month, with an average maximum temperature of 20.8 °C (69.4 °F). The regular least temperature in January and February was 1.6 °C (34.9 °F), however the lowermost heats recorded in these months can be between −10 and −15 °C (14 and 5 °F), though since 1960, the temperature has never fallen below −9.2 °C (15.4 °F), signifying that urbanization around the Weston Park site during the second half of the 20th century may stop temperatures below −10 °C (14 °F) happening.

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