Bob Jensen's
Introduction to e-Business and e-Commerce
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm
Bob Jensen at Trinity University
Top 25 Google
e-searches of the month
Most Popular Web Sites 2006 - 2007 ---
http://www.webtrafficstation.com/directory/
WebbieWorld Picks ---
http://www.webbieworld.com/default.asp
How E-commerce Works --- http://money.howstuffworks.com/ecommerce.htm
Electronic Commerce: The Fastest Growing Phenomenon in World Commerce
Electronic Commerce: Special Problems Arising for Accountants and Auditors
Electronic Commerce: Webledgers
Electronic Commerce: Revenue Accounting Problems and Related Financial Accounting Issues --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm
Electronic Commerce: Training and Education Issues
Electronic Commerce: Assurance Services Opportunities and Risks
Illustration of Topics in a Continuous Assurance Symposium
Investor Relations and Internet Reporting
XBRL Will Change the World of Financial Reporting and Analysis ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#XBRLextended
Education and Online Training Issues
A Special Section on Computer and Networking Security (including spam fighters)
How to make stolen laptop data useless to thieves
Spyware (and SiteAdvisor)
Cell Phone Records are for Sale
Phishing , Pharming, Vishing, Slurping, and Spoofing
Searching Dangers: Beware of Search Engines
Security on Public Wireless Networks
Spy Tools: How safe are unlisted phone numbers?
Forget Big Brother, Now You Are Being Watched by Almost Anybody
Weapons of Information Warfare
Threads on Firewalls --- Go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/firewall.htm
Identity Theft http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#IdentityTheft
The Downside: Psychology of Electronic Commerce and Technology
Intangibles Accounting Issues --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#TheoryDisputes
Managerial Accounting Issues --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/managerial.htm
How Can Technology be Used to reduce Fraud? --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/managerial.htm#Issue7
ROI Issues --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
Implications for
Auditing and Assurance Services ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/assurance.htm
Opportunities of E-Business Assurance & Security: Risks in Assuring Risk --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/assurance.htm
Accounting Fraud, Forensic Accounting, Securities Fraud, and White Collar Crime
Investor Relations and Internet Reporting
Search for Internet, e-Commerce, or e-Business Phrases
Top Year 2002 Accounting Technologies
Bob
Jensen's Threads on Electronic Commerce ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm
Bob Jensen's Threads on Accounting Fraud, Forensic Accounting, Securities Fraud, and White Collar Crime
Bob Jensen's Technology Glossary
Bob Jensen's threads on computer security are under "Security"
(in the S-Terms) at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm
Also look under the C-Terms for "Cookies."
Top 25 Google
e-searches of the month
Most Popular Web Sites 2006 - 2007 ---
http://www.webtrafficstation.com/directory/
WebbieWorld Picks ---
http://www.webbieworld.com/default.asp
I created a timeline of major happenings (on a timeline) leading up to the eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) and On LIne Analytical Process (OLAP) systems. Overviews of XML, VoiceXML, XLink, XHTML, XBRL, XForm, XSLT, RDF and the Semantic Web are also provided --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/xmlrdf.htm
This is what Professor Jim Mahar says about ERisk in the March 24, 2003 edition of TheFinanceProfessor (an absolutely fabulous newsletter) --- www.FinanceProfessor.com
Erisk.com. I simply love the site. I know it has been site of the week before, but it is so good, it earned it again. Try it, you’ll love the case studies and the newsletter! http://www.erisk.com
ERisk --- http://www.erisk.com/
ERisk is the leading provider of strategic solutions for risk and capital management. We deliver a unique combination of world-class analytics for risk-based capital, strategic risk management expertise, risk transfer advice and risk information.You can find out more about our products and services in the Overview section. On this page, you can find out more about the people and ideas that power our company.
The ERisk Report --- http://www.erisk.com/about/about_company.asp?ct=n#report
The ERisk Report is a concise monthly briefing for senior financial executives. Every month, contributors from ERisk's team of risk management experts address today's most pressing issues in strategic risk and capital management. Sign up today for your personal copy of this cutting-edge publication!
Vol 1.6: Measuring the return on risk management; leveraging the economic benefits of risk management
Vol 1.5: Putting the real value on customer relationships; rolling out risk management
Vol 1.4: Making risk more transparent; fed takes pulse of economic capital practices
Vol 1.3: Credit scoring: robots versus humans; James Lam's three lessons from Enron
Vol 1.2: Weathering credit losses; regulators line up behind economic capital
Vol 1.1: Revamping your credit ratings system; measuring bank profitability
The ERisk Portal --- http://www.erisk.com/portal/home.asp
Resources for Enterprise Risk Management
ERisk today continues to successfully develop and install its analytics at client sites, conduct high-value consulting engagements, offer unbiased advice on risk transfer alternatives, and attract thousands of readers to the ERisk portal.
"New e-Accounting Advisor Network Debuts," SmartPros, September 29, 2003 --- http://www.smartpros.com/x40720.xml
Insynq Inc., a provider of Internet-delivered online accounting solutions and services, has launched an online advisor network to assist the accounting professional by supporting back-office processing requirements on a highly cost-efficient basis.
The e-Accounting Advisor Provider Network (http://eaccounting.cpa-asp.com) has created a new cost-effective resource for practices of all sizes to use to expand their practice, or to provide the opportunity of higher gross margins, Insynq announced. Through the use of business process outsourcers -- such as call centers, payroll and HR processing services -- professional practices are able to improve client services, expand their practices, and improve practice profitability.
"These accountants have gained a comprehensive solution that combines our online accounting technology services with business process outsourcing models," said Insynq president John Gorst. "e-Accounting is one of the few providers in the industry with a service model that encompasses online accounting applications, data management, document management and workflow tools."
Insynq will co-sponsor a series of seminars in the top 25 U.S. markets over the next four months for CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers that explain the online accounting model. These seminars will detail the outsourced accounting opportunity, and demonstrate the benefits of using business process outsourcers in support of practice initiatives.
ONLINE SPENDING CLIMBED 25% during the holiday
season from a year earlier, a survey found.
Desiree J. Hanford, The Wall Street Journal, January 4, 2005 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110478868075315675,00.html?mod=technology_main_whats_news
Question
What turns Web retailing into eCommerce?
Answer
A special feature about eCommerce is revenue collection over the Internet.
Today that revenue collection typically entails online credit card
transacting.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting for electronic commerce are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm
"E-tailing Comes of Age," by Nick Wingfield, The Wall Street Journal, December 8, 2003 --- http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB10708342997640400,00.html?mod=technology%5Ffeatured%5Fstories%5Fhs
Dot-com retailers had a message for bricks-and-mortar stores at the start of the 1999 holiday season: We're coming after you.
A year or two later, traditional retailers had their revenge, of course, when stock certificates of such companies as Pets.com Inc., eToys Inc. and Webvan Group Inc. were fit for little more than wrapping paper. With some notable exceptions -- including Amazon.com Inc. and eBay Inc. -- established stores and catalog companies ended up snaring most of the online sales.
But something surprising happened: Some small Web-only retailers refused to die. A handful in unlikely categories such as jewelry, shoes and luggage are profitable and growing far more quickly than their offline counterparts.
These specialty online retailers are prospering at a time when overall online sales are booming. Consumers are expected to spend $12.2 billion online this year in the Thanksgiving-to-Christmas period, up 42% from last year, according to Forrester Research of Cambridge, Mass. The growth reflects a steady shift of retail spending to the online world, as consumers grow more comfortable with the Internet and the spread of high-speed home connections makes browsing and ordering simpler. Online shopping also tends to be more weather-proof; many snowbound Northeasterners ventured out into cyberspace instead of the elements to continue their holiday shopping this past weekend.
Still, a mere 4.5% of total retail spending is expected online this year, compared with 3.6% in 2002. But even the small shift in retail sales represents a combined billions of dollars for Internet retailers.
Traditional retailers are doing their best to keep holiday customers clicking on their sites by offering good deals. Some are discounting heavily; free-shipping offers are commonplace. Gap Inc., for instance, is waiving standard delivery fees on orders of $100 or more until Dec. 15.
Continued in the article
There were 50 global online users of the new World Wide Web in 1990. The worldwide growth is connected consumers, businesses, and other types of organizations is staggering. A study conducted by IDC (2001) estimates the following at http://www.filmsoho.com/marketing/marketing_internet.html
Use of the Internet continues to grow rapidly worldwide. This growth is fuelling e-commerce transactions which are one barometer of the commercial success of the medium. Almost 1 billion people (about 15 percent of the world's population) are forecast by research firm International Data Corp to be using the Internet by 2005. IDC foresee a spending of more than $5 trillion in Internet commerce representing a staggering 70 percent compound annual growth rate from last year's Internet spending of $354 billion in 2000.
The adoption of the Internet as a communications tool is still undergoing explosive growth. In the developed world the proliferation of mobile phones and other Internet access devices will maintain these growth rates even once PC penetration has reached saturation.
Growth statistics are provided the following sites:
| Builder.com ---
http://builder.cnet.com/webbuilding/pages/Servers/Statistics/ This site is great for definitions and explanations. Why Web usage statistics are (worse than) meaningless --- http://www.goldmark.org/netrants/webstats/ Internet Sizer http://www.netsizer.com/ Web Characterization --- http://wcp.oclc.org/ Listings from Webreference.com --- http://webreference.com/internet/statistics.html
Most popular Websites in the world --- http://www.webbieworld.com/ww/ |
| Electronic
Business (B2B)and Commerce B2C) Any computer-networked communications or transactions that were formerly more apt to be transmitted by physical transfers such as in-store purchases and mail ordering and payment. Electronic business makes it possible to eliminate paper documentation such as purchase orders, invoices, monthly account statements, and payment checks or credit card receipts. Electronic communications and transactions with retail customers are generally referred to as e-Commerce. Business-to-business (B2B) communications and transactions between business firms are generally called e-Business. Includes electronic business, but electronicization encompasses other things as well such as Enterprise Resource Modeling (ERP), customer relations management (CRM), artificial intelligence/smart agents, and computerization/networking of virtually all elements of the supply chain. |
| The use of electronic transmission mediums (telecommunications) to engage in the exchange, including buying and selling, of products and services requiring transportation, either physically or digitally, from location to location. |
Electronic Commerce - A Leading Definition --- http://www-cec.buseco.monash.edu.au/links/ec_def.html
A broad definition of 'electronic commerce' is provided by Electronic Commerce Australia (ECA, formerly EDICA) in its 1994 Annual Report as:
The process of electronically conducting all forms of business between entities in order to achieve the organisation's objectives.
The term 'electronic commerce' embraces electronic trading, electronic messaging, EDI, EFT, electronic mail (e-mail), facsimile, computer-to-fax (C-fax), electronic catalogues and bulletin board services (BBS), shared databases and directories, continuous acquisition and lifecycle support (CALS), electronic news and information services, electronic payroll, electronic forms (E-forms), online access to services such as the Internet (discussed later), and any other form of electronic data transmission.
For example, medical and clinical data, data related to taxation, insurance, vehicle registration, case information involving legal proceedings, immigration and customs data, data transmitted for remote interactive teaching, video-conferencing, home shopping and banking, EDI purchase orders and remittance advices - are all applications of electronic commerce.
The term 'electronic commerce' is sometimes incorrectly used as an alternative to EDI. EDI, a subset of electronic commerce, refers specifically to the inter-company or intra-company transmission of business data in a standard, highly structured format. Electronic commerce, however, includes structured business data and unstructured messages or data, such as electronic memos sent via e-mail.
Another term, 'electronic trading', is commonly used to refer to electronic transactions which occur in the procurement of goods and services. Electronic trading uses structured and/or free-form messages. Electronic trading can also be considered a sub-set of electronic commerce.
"Amazon Finally Clicks: Ten years old and profitable at last, it offers a textbook lesson on how to be both focused and flexible," by Russ Banham, CFO Magazine, Spring 2004 Special Issue, pp. 20-22 --- http://www.cfo.com/article/1,5309,12598||M|846,00.html
The foosball tables are still there, as are the desks made from sawhorses, plywood, and old doors. And no one wears a tie, not even CFO Thomas J. Szkutak. But if some E-commerce trappings are alive and well at Amazon.com headquarters, others are not. Red ink, for example, has disappeared—at least for now. The company posted its first indisputably (that is, GAAP-based) profitable year in 2003, propelled by strong holiday sales and a weakened dollar, which boosted overseas results.
That has prompted plenty of backslapping in the halls of Amazon's headquarters, a former hospital with an improbable Art Deco design and a postcard view of downtown Seattle and Puget Sound. As it prepares to celebrate its 10th anniversary, Amazon.com is a very different company from the so-called E-tailer that, at the time of its initial public offering in 1997, had to caution would-be investors not to confuse it with Amazon Natural Treasures, a retailer and E-tailer of rain-forest products.
Few would make that mistake today. While still sometimes referred to as an online bookstore, Amazon now boasts a product line that staggers the imagination, from apparel, sporting goods, and jewelry to new services including a feature that lets customers make "1-Click" Presidential campaign contributions.
Behind Amazon's breadth of products and services are myriad business arrangements: some products the company owns, inventories, sells, and ships; others it sells on behalf of third-party retailers. Some of these third-party products Amazon ships and fulfills; others are shipped and fulfilled by the third parties themselves. Among those third parties are thousands of mom-and-pop E-tailers that collectively make Amazon's Marketplace division a perpetual online garage sale surpassed only by E-bay.
With 39 million active customer accounts (based on the number of E-mail addresses from which orders originated in 2003), Amazon seems to be making good on its promise to offer the "Earth's biggest selection of products," or as Szkutak puts it, "to build a place where people can find, discover, and buy anything they want online." To do that, he says, the company has learned—sometimes the hard way—to "start with the customer and work backward."
Working backward has changed Amazon from an online retailer to an E-commerce platform. Today, it is not a store so much as a channel, a place where brand-name third-party retailers, smaller businesses, and just plain folks can hawk their goods to a worldwide clientele. This past holiday season, shoppers traipsed through Amazon to buy products from Gap, Toys "R" Us, True Value Hardware, and Kitchen Etc.—and maybe some kid in Idaho who was trying to unload his slightly dog-eared Harry Potter library. Assembling such a vast collection of partners and building the systems that allow customers to buy from an individual as easily as they buy from a retail giant has not been easy, and analysts praise Amazon's achievements. "Amazon has knocked 10 steps down to 1," says Adam Sarner, a research analyst at Stamford, Connecticut-based technology research firm Gartner Inc. "This is what they mean by 'customer convenience.'"
Jonathan Gaw, a research manager at technology research firm IDC, says, "No one else has this kind of expertise, because no one else has invested the capital to build this kind of infrastructure."
Amazon.com was once viewed as a leading member of the E-commerce vanguard, but most of the followers have fallen by the wayside. True, the survivors—E-bay, MSN, AOL, Yahoo, and Google—have become household names, but success remains precarious and depends on, among other things, the ability to be nimble. Amazon built its brand initially on low-priced books and waited for customers to come bargain-hunting. Today it pulls out all the stops to get people to visit, from "never-before-seen" Bruce Springsteen concert footage to a "secret message" from Madonna. If that sounds like the sort of pop-culture gimmickry one might expect from, say, AOL, there's good reason: the E-commerce giants are out to eat one another's lunch. When Google, for example, announced Froogle, a new service that allows users to search for a product name and be directed only to sites that sell that product, Amazon launched a new subsidiary, A9, devoted to Web searching, and even located its offices close to Google in Silicon Valley. Similarly, the boundaries between the business models of E-bay, Yahoo, and even Microsoft can be hard to discern, as all of these companies seek to protect themselves and to copy whatever seems to work.
Continued in the article
Yahoo's Links to Electronic Commerce Sites
Categories
|
The U.S. Government Knows How to Sell
Online (e-Commerce)
From InformationWeek Online May 30, 2001
Uncle Sam Rings Up $3.6B In Online Sales
Look out, Jeff Bezos. Amazon.com Inc.'s $2.8 billion in annual revenue has been eclipsed by another E-commerce contender--a purveyor of flame throwers, burros, and Lamborghini Diablos that generated $3.6 billion in sales last year. The mastermind behind this E-retailing juggernaut? Uncle Sam.
That revelation comes from a recent study by the Pew Internet & American Life Project and Federal Computer Week magazine, which tracked the government's E-commerce activity. Of course, straight revenue comparisons may not be fair. After all, it's not exactly a level playing field for Amazon since the government's $3.6 billion came from 164 sites. That was a bit of a shock for Allan Holmes, editor-in-chief of Federal Computer Week. "When we first started, I had no idea how many sites we would find. I thought maybe a few dozen." Plus, that revenue figure would be significantly lower without the Treasury Department, which generated $3.3 billion from the sale of bonds and notes.
But the remaining $300 million in sales is still a significant achievement, considering the government hasn't done much to promote its efforts. Looking to bid on luxury items such as helicopters or sports cars? Try Bid4Assets, which sells property seized by the U.S. Marshals Service in criminal raids. "The federal government has always had surplus property and auctioned off property seized in drug busts. Now they're able to do it more efficiently and reach more people," Holmes says.
|
While so many others are still struggling to make the Web pay, Walt Disney's Internet ventures are thriving --- http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,56314,00.html
LOS ANGELES, November 11, 2002 -- Last year, the Walt Disney Co. surrendered in the Internet portal wars after spending hundreds of millions of dollars to compete against Yahoo!, America Online and others.
But it didn't give up entirely. In a strategic retreat, the company refocused on Web projects that highlighted its core brands, such as ABC News and ESPN, which is the exclusive provider of sports on the MSN service.
That strategy has started to pay off. Last week, Disney announced a modest milestone -- its Internet properties are profitable.
The company doesn't report the results of its Internet properties as a group, so Disney did not provide any profit figure when it reported fourth-quarter earnings. But the company said profits from individual sites, led by ESPN and Disney's online store; from licensing content to other Internet sites; and from advertising and subscriptions pushed online operations into the black.
Disney's Internet ventures contribute only about several hundred million dollars to the company's $25 billion in annual revenue. Nonetheless, Disney can say it is profiting online while so many others are still struggling to make the Internet pay.
"I feel good that we've been able to sort of figure it out," said Steve Wadsworth, president of the Walt Disney Internet Group.
What Disney learned and other companies are discovering is that it's best to abandon a one-size-fits-all approach to the Web.
"There is not one single formula that is going to work," said Charlene Li, principal analyst for Forrester Research, a technology consulting firm based in Cambridge, Mass. "What works for Disney.com and its characters isn't the same thing that will work for ESPN. Even The New York Times and The Boston Globe are completely different. They're owned by the same company, but they use completely different approaches."
Disney's announcement of its modest profit is a victory of sorts for chairman and CEO Michael Eisner. During the heyday of e-commerce, he resisted pressure to merge with Yahoo or Microsoft, even after AOL merged with Time Warner.
Today, AOL is struggling, weighed down by declining advertising revenue and a government investigation into its accounting practices. Chairman Steve Case reportedly has considered separating the companies.
Continued at http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,56314,00.html
Webledger alternatives are becoming a much bigger deal in accounting information systems. I suspect that many accounting educators are not really keeping up to date with the phenomenal growth in vendor services.
I am a strong advocate of Webledger accounting and
information systems.
In my viewpoint they are the wave of the future for small and even medium-sized
business and other organizations. The main obstacle is overcoming the
natural tendency to fret over having data stored with a Webledger vendor.
But the advantages of cost savings (e.g., savings not having to employ technical
database and IT specialists. savings in hardware costs, and savings in software
costs), advantages of worldwide access over the Internet, and advantages of
security (due to the millions invested by vendors to ensure security) far
outweigh the disadvantages until organization size becomes so overwhelming that
Webledgers are no longer feasible for accounting ledgers, inventory controls,
payroll processing, billings, etc.
Webledger software and databases offer accounting, bookkeeping, inventory control, billings, payrolls, and information systems that can be accessed interactively around the globe. Companies and other organizations do not maintain the accounting systems on their own computers. Instead, the data are stored and processed on vendor systems such as the Oracle database systems used by NetLedger.
NetLedger is part of the NetSuite described at http://www.netledger.com/portal/home.shtml
Click on the "See One System in Action" Link
NetSuite's all-in-one business management application allows each user to work off the same, real-time information, but with a user interface and functionality appropriate to them. Watch the role-based demo
As a project in Fall of 2000, a team of my students set up an accounting system on Netledger. This team's project report is available at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5342/projects/Netledger.pdf
Bob Jensen’s threads on Webledgers can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/webledger.htm
A Guide to E-Commerce at http://e-comm.internet.com/
An Electronic Encyclopedia at http://e-comm.internet.com/library/glossary.html
A longer listing of this and similar glossaries can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm
U.S. Policy on E-Commerce at http://www.ecommerce.gov/
Electronic Books Directory (U. Mn.)
Electronic Commerce: Special Problems Arising for Accountants and Auditors
You must be very careful when viewing a corporate Website that you think is authentic but is a total fraud. One such site is http://www.dowethics.com/ which spoofs the genuine http://www.dow.com
The site at dowethics.com is a very clever spoof site that mirrors the real corporate site but runs it with stories against the company. It is interesting because it appears to be very authentic and illustrates how companies really do need authentication seals such as Verisign, the Better Business Bureau BBB seal, or the WebTrust Seal --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialProblems
|
|
| Advantages | Disadvantages |
| Convenience Speed Information Access Volume Expense Savings (e.g., Marketing) Reduced Transactions Cost Improved Training & Education (Army University and IRS University) Revenue Enhancing Reduced Barriers to Entry Innovative Products & Services Increased Price Competition Increased Vendor Selection Increased Access to Customers Customer Behavior/Interest Databases (Like it or not, have a cookie!) Increased Ability to Place Custom Orders Improved Warranty & Customer Service Customized & Personalized Feedback Common Interest Virtual Communities Globalization of Business and Labor |
Ever-Changing Technologies Geek Dependent Systems Going Concern Risks Risk of Service Disruptions Customers Need Computers Customers Need Access Shortage of Bandwidth Frauds & Error Risk Highly Creative Deceptions Security Nightmares Privacy Risks (Data sale, theft, sniffers) Hacker Targets Dehumanization of Life Rise in Gambling & Porn Cut-Throat Competion (e.g., Encyclopedia Britannica) Information Warfare System-Wide Vulnerability |
Electronic Commerce: Revenue Accounting Problems and Related Financial Accounting Issues --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm
Disruption
of service
Unauthorized access
Loss of data/information Privacy issues |
Answer:
General Electric in 1996 had a separate part of GE for electronic commerce. Several years later, GE did away with the electronic commerce unit and elected to build electronic commerce into virtually all divisions of the company.
| Pro-Forma Earnings (Electronic
Commerce, e-Commerce, eCommerce)
From the Wall Street Journal's Accounting Educators'
Reviews, October 4, 2001 Sample from the October 4 Edition: TITLE: Sales Slump Could Derail Amazon's Profit Pledge SUMMARY: Earlier this year Amazon promised analysts that it will report first-ever operating pro forma operating profit. However, Amazon is not commenting on whether it still expects to report a fourth-quarter profit this year. Questions focus on profit measures and accounting decisions that may enable Amazon to show a profit. QUESTIONS: 1.) What expenses are excluded from pro forma operating profits? Why are these expenses excluded? Are these expenses excluded from financial statements prepared in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles? 2.) List three likely consequences of Amazon not reporting a pro forma operating profit in the fourth quarter. Do you think that Amazon feels pressure to report a pro forma operating profit? Why do analysts believe that reporting a fourth quarter profit is important for Amazon? 3.) List three accounting choices that Amazon could make to increase the likelihood of reporting a pro forma operating profit. Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of making accounting choices that will allow Amazon to report a pro forma operating profit. SMALL GROUP ASSIGNMENT: Assume that you are the accounting department for Amazon and preliminary analysis suggest that Amazon will not report a pro forma operating profit for the fourth quarter. The CEO has asked you to make sure that the company meets its financial reporting objectives. Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of making adjustments to the financial statements. What adjustments, if any, would you make? Why? Reviewed
Bob
Jensen's threads on pro forma accounting issues can be found at
|
| Introduction
Financial Accounting Issues --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm Intangibles Accounting Issues --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#TheoryDisputes Managerial Accounting Issues --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/managerial.htm How Can Technology be Used to reduce Fraud? --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/managerial.htm#Issue7 ROI Issues --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm Implications
for Auditing and Assurance Services --- Opportunities of E-Business Assurance & Security: Risks in Assuring Risk --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/assurance.htm Accounting Fraud, Forensic Accounting, Securities Fraud, and White Collar Crime Investor Relations and Internet Reporting Search for Internet, e-Commerce, or e-Business Phrases Top Year 2002 Accounting Technologies Bob
Jensen's Threads on Electronic Commerce ---
|
| Introduction to Accounting Theory --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm
Accounting for Electronic Commerce, Including Controversies on Business Valuation, ROI, and Revenue Reporting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm State of Accountancy in the Year 2002: My Lectures for Germany (Augsburg and Rothenburg) in June 2002 --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm Accounting Tricks and Creative Accounting Schemes Intended to Mislead Investors, Creditors, and Employees --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/AccountingTricks.htm Letter to Senator Schumer --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory/sfas123/jensen01.htm Links to the following accountancy documents: Accounting Theory Course --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/index.htm Pro forma reporting --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/theory/00overview/theory01.htm Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments and Hedging Activities --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm Real Options, Option Pricing Theory, and Arbitrage Pricing Theory --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/realopt.htm An Accounting Theory Final Examination, The Open Polytechnic of New Zealand Semester Two, 2000, http://www.topnz.ac.nz/info/services/pdf/71300_00_2.pdf Bob Jensen's threads on e-Commerce and e-Business can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce.htm Bob Jensen's threads on XBRL are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#XBRLextended Bob Jensen's Helpers for Accounting Educators --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default3.htm Bob Jensen's Accountancy Bookmarks --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob.htm Bob Jensen's Threads --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/threads.htm |
Electronic Commerce: Revenue Accounting Problems and Related Financial Accounting Issues --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm
Accounting Issues Addressed by the SEC and FASB
| DESCRIPTION OF THE PROPOSED
PROJECT
This potential FASB project on disclosure about intangibles would focus on improving information about intangible assets that are seen by many as increasingly important to business success but are not currently recognized as assets in financial statements. Intangible assets are generally recognized only if acquired, either separately or as part of a business combination. Intangible assets that are generated internally, and some acquired assets that are written off immediately after being acquired, are not reflected in financial statements, and little quantitative or qualitative information about them is reported in the notes to the financial statements. The principal goals of the project would be to make new information available to investors and creditors and to improve the quality of information currently being provided—information vital to well-reasoned investment and credit resource allocation decisions. A secondary goal of the project would be to take a first step in what might become an evolution toward recognition in an entity’s financial statements of internally generated intangible assets. The balance of this Proposal discusses the problem to be addressed, the scope of the project, the issues that would have to be resolved, how practice might change, and the FASB agenda criteria. It concludes with a request for comments and several questions for constituents. |
Every accounting educator and practitioner should read Professor Beresford's Lecture at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/beresford01.htm
Corporate
America's New Math: Investors Now Face Two Sets of Numbers In Figuring
a Company's Bottom Line
By Justin Gillis
The Washington Post
Sunday, July 22, 2001; Page H01
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-adv/archives/front.htm
Cisco Systems Inc., a bellwether of the "new economy," prepared its books for the first three months of this year by slicing and dicing its financial results in the old ways mandated by the rules of Washington regulators and the accounting profession.
Result: a quarterly loss of $2.7 billion.
Cisco did more, though. It sliced and diced the same underlying numbers in ways preferred by Cisco, offering an alternative interpretation of its results to the investing public.
Result: a quarterly profit of $230 million.
That's an unusually large swing in a company's bottom line, but there's nothing unusual these days about the strategy Cisco employed. Across corporate America, companies are emphasizing something called "pro forma" earnings statements. Because there are no rules for how to prepare such statements, businesses have wide latitude to ignore various expenses in their pro forma results that have to be included under traditional accounting rules.
Most of the time, the new numbers make companies look better than they would under standard accounting, and some evidence suggests investors are using the massaged numbers more and more to decide what value to attach to stocks. The pro forma results are often strongly emphasized in news releases announcing a corporation's earnings; sometimes the results computed under traditional accounting techniques are not disclosed until weeks later, when the companies file the official results with the Securities and Exchange Commission, as required by law.
Cisco includes its results under both the pro forma and the traditional accounting methods in its news releases. People skeptical of the practice of using pro forma results worry that investors are being deceived. Karen Nelson, assistant professor of accounting at Stanford University, said some companies were "verging on fraudulent behavior" in their presentation of financial results.
Companies that use these techniques say they are trying to help investors by giving them numbers that more accurately reflect the core operations of their businesses, in part because they exclude unusual expenses. Cisco's technique "gives readers of financial statements a clearer picture of the results of Cisco's normal business activities," the company said in a statement issued in response to questions about its accounting.
Until recently, pro forma results had a well-understood and limited use. Most companies used pro forma accounting only to adjust previously reported financial statements so they could be directly compared with current results. This most frequently happened after a merger, when a company would adjust past results to reflect what they would have been had the merger been in effect earlier. Pro forma, Latin for "matter of form," ref