Product Details
Accounting For Dummies (For Dummies (Prebound))

Accounting For Dummies (For Dummies (Prebound))
By John A. Tracy

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Product Description

Use smart accounting to maximize profits and minimize confusion

Whether you're a small business owner or just want to understand your 401(k) statements, this new edition of Accounting For Dummies helps you get a handle on all those columns of numbers. With fully up-to-date accounting basics for business and personal finances, this book helps you to balance your books and stay in the black.

Discover how to:

Make sense of bookkeeping basics

Read a financial statement

Manage budgets for a better bottom line

Analyze business strengths and weaknesses

Evaluate accounting methods and business structures


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #8486394 in Books
  • Published on: 2001-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: School & Library Binding
  • 382 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
“…insightful and well-reasoned…” (Money Matters, October 2004)

Review
“…insightful and well-reasoned…” (Money Matters, October 2004)

From the Back Cover
Features new information on accounting methods and standards

The fun and easy way to create great financials and boost your bottom line

Want to make sense of accounting basics? This plain-English guide helps you speak your accountant's language with ease, minimizing confusion as you maximize profits. You'll see how to manage inventory, report income and expenses for public or private companies, evaluate profit margins, analyze business strengths and weaknesses, and manage budgets for a better bottom line.

Discover how to:

  • Read income statements and balance sheets

  • Analyze profits and cash flow

  • Evaluate accounting methods and business structures

  • Use ratios to study financial statements

  • Avoid accounting fraud


Customer Reviews

Not abt Accounting1
While the book does have an excellent layout and has been thoroughly and professionally edited, like almost all of the "for Dummies" books, it lacks content where it needs it most. There is surprisingly little about accounting. There are no examples of how to create any of the three basic accounting reports, the balance sheet, income statement, and the cash flow statement. Double-entry accounting, the foundation of modern accounting, is only given three short pages with, again, no examples. It is not written for those who want to know how to do accounting or how to assist their accountant with their own company's books, but for those who want to have a functional understanding of a small set of reports. This makes it wholly inadequate for someone who wants to learn about accounting. On the other hand, this could make it a good resource for the middle-level manager who needs to know a little about how to read a small group of reports.

Not for you if your looking for a bookkeeping treatise.5
This book is great (I mean great) if you need to understand what is profit, whats in a balance sheet, how to understand it, whats in an income statement. What are assets, etc, etc. This book will open your eyes. Like others have said its not about double entry bookkeeping, or how to prepare your balance sheet. Find that elsewhere. This book addresses what the numbers mean and how to follow them to come to conclusions and how to use that information.

Let me put it this way. If you have a small business, or are put into a position where you need to manage money for a business, or need to buy a business. This book will help you if your not accountant savy.

Its a great book, and is very well written. Another five star success for the dummies series.

Adequate as a non-accountants' everyday reference3
The content is simple with material presented in the usual 'dummie' tradition. It works great as a quick way to understand hard concepts, without going into too much distracting detail. A good reference for people who interface with accountants or accounting departments, but accounting students will find that the material is not detailed enough for cases covered in a typical accounting course. Is it the 'feel good accounting book of the year?' I dunno...but like any other dummies book, buy it for the funny cartoons.