INTRODUCTION
		
Setting budgets is all about how to plan for the expected
and the unexpected. 
		
Controlling budgets is all about how to react and respond
appropriately when the unexpected happens.
		
This Setting & Controlling Budgets training course deals
comprehensively with the questions you have always wanted to ask about
planning, budget setting, and budgetary control, in plain language that is easy
to understand. It covers in detail how the tools and techniques of successful
budgeting and budgetary control are applied within the overall planning
framework to ensure that organisational goals are met.
		
It clarifies the jargon and methodology, and the links
between strategy, budgeting, costing, and performance measurement. The
Instructor's own business career experiences and many other real-world business
scenarios are shared throughout this stimulating course to illustrate and
reinforce the practical application of the tools and techniques and best
practices.
		
Objectives
		
By the end of this training seminar, participants will have
learned how to:
		
Identify the links between strategic planning, budget
setting, and performance measurement
		
Use alternative approaches to costing for planning,
budgeting and budgetary control
		
Set an operating budget, cash budget, capital budget, and
prepare a master budget
		
Develop budgetary control systems, and analyse variances
using flexed budgets.
		
Course Outline
		
DAY 1
		
Strategic and Financial Planning
		
Financial Accounting and Management Accounting
		
The Links between Strategic Planning, Budget Setting, and
Performance Measurement
		
Planning and Strategic Management
		
Mission, Vision, and Objectives
		
The Planning Process
		
External Environment Analysis, Internal Resources Analysis,
SWOT and PESTEL
		
Shareholder Wealth Maximisation, value Creation and
Financial Strategy
		
Financial Planning and Modelling, and Long-term and
Short-term Financing
		
DAY 2
		
Cost Analysis for Budgeting
		
What is Costing?
		
Cost Behaviour – fixed costs and variable costs
		
Contribution, Cost / Volume / Profit (CVP) Analysis and
break-even models
		
Traceable Costs and Non-traceable Cost Allocation
		
Product Costs and Period Costs – product costing for
inventory valuation and profit ascertainment
		
Direct costs, Indirect costs, Absorption Costing and
Marginal costing
		
Product Costing for Budget Setting, Budgetary Control and
Performance Measurement
		
Refinement of the Costing System and Activity-Based Costing
(ABC)
		
DAY 3
		
The Framework for Budgeting
		
What is a Budget – and Why Budget?
		
The Budgeting Framework and the various Types of Budgets:
top down; bottom up; incremental; zero-based; activity-based
		
The Budget Process
		
Qualitative and Quantitative Techniques of Forecasting Sales
and Costs, and Sales Pricing
		
Budgeting for Labour Costs and Depreciation
		
The Departmental Budget
		
Preparation of the Master Budget and the Cash Forecast /
Budget
		
The Human Side and the Behavioural Aspects of Budgeting
		
DAY 4
		
Activity-Based Budgeting (ABB), Capital Budgeting, Budgetary
Control and Variance Analysis
		
How the Budget is controlled in your Organisation
		
Activity-Based Budgeting (ABB)
		
Budgeting for Capital Projects
		
Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) investment appraisal methods of
Net Present Value (NPV) and Internal Rate of Return
		
Capital Rationing and the Profitability Index (PI)
		
Budgetary Control Systems and Responsibility Accounting
		
Standard Costing for Budgeting and Budgetary Control
		
Fixed Budgets, Flexed Budgets, Variance Analysis and the
Reasons for Variances
		
DAY 5
		
Beyond Budgeting – Broadening Performance Measurement
Systems
		
Integrating Continuous Improvement into the Budget Process
		
Advantages and Disadvantages of Budgeting
		
How to Improve the Budget Process in Your Organisation
		
The Conflict between Performance Improvement and the Costing
System
		
Lean Thinking and Performance Improvement
		
What next – beyond the Budget?
		
The Balanced Scorecard – linking strategy with budgeting and
with performance measurement
		
Developing and Adapting the Balanced Scorecard: Financial
Perspective; Customer Perspective; Internal Business Process Perspective;
Learning and Growth Perspective