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Overview of Business Processes

The document discusses business processes and transaction cycles. It describes five major transaction cycles that occur in businesses: the revenue cycle, expenditure cycle, production cycle, human resources/payroll cycle, and financing cycle. Each cycle involves a "give-get" exchange of goods, services or cash. The cycles interact with each other and provide data to the general ledger and reporting system.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
849 views68 pages

Overview of Business Processes

The document discusses business processes and transaction cycles. It describes five major transaction cycles that occur in businesses: the revenue cycle, expenditure cycle, production cycle, human resources/payroll cycle, and financing cycle. Each cycle involves a "give-get" exchange of goods, services or cash. The cycles interact with each other and provide data to the general ledger and reporting system.

Uploaded by

Hay Jirenyaa
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CHAPTER 2

Overview of Business Processes


INFORMATION NEEDS AND
BUSINESS ACTIVITIES
 Businesses engage in a variety of activities,
including:
 Acquiring capital
 Buying buildings and equipment Each decision
 Hiring and training employees requires
 Purchasing inventory different types
 Doing advertising and marketing of information.
 Selling goods or services
 Collecting payment from customers
 Paying employees
 Paying taxes
 Paying vendors
INFORMATION NEEDS AND
BUSINESS ACTIVITIES
 Types of information needed for
decisions:
 Some is financial
 Some is non-financial
 Some comes from internal sources
 Some comes from external sources
 An effective AIS needs to be able to
integrate information of different
types and from different sources.
INTERACTION WITH EXTERNAL AND
INTERNAL PARTIES

External
AIS Parties

 The AIS interacts with external parties,


such as customers, vendors, creditors,
and governmental agencies.
INTERACTION WITH EXTERNAL AND
INTERNAL PARTIES

Internal External
Parties AIS Parties

 The AIS also interacts with internal


parties such as employees and
management.
INTERACTION WITH EXTERNAL AND
INTERNAL PARTIES

Internal External
Parties AIS Parties

 The interaction is typically two-way, in


that the AIS sends information to and
receives information from these parties.
BUSINESS CYCLES
 A transaction is:
 An agreement between two entities to
exchange goods or services; OR
 Any other event that can be measured in
economic terms by an organization.
 EXAMPLES:
 Sell goods to customers
 Depreciate equipment
BUSINESS CYCLES
 The transaction cycle is a process:
 Begins with capturing data about a
transaction
 Ends with an information output, such
as financial statements
BUSINESS CYCLES
 Many business activities are paired in
give-get exchanges
 The basic exchanges can be grouped
into five major transaction cycles.
 Revenue cycle
 Expenditure cycle
 Production cycle
 Human resources/payroll cycle
 Financing cycle
BUSINESS CYCLES
 Many business activities are paired in
give-get exchanges
 The basic exchanges can be grouped into
five major transaction cycles.
 Revenue cycle
 Expenditure cycle
 Production cycle
 Human resources/payroll cycle
 Financing cycle
REVENUE CYCLE
 The revenue cycle involves interactions
with your customers.
 You sell goods or services and get cash.

Give Get
Goods Cash
BUSINESS CYCLES
 Many business activities are paired
in give-get exchanges
 The basic exchanges can be
grouped into five major transaction
cycles.
 Revenue cycle
 Expenditure cycle
 Production cycle
 Human resources/payroll cycle
 Financing cycle
EXPENDITURE CYCLE
 The expenditure cycle involves
interactions with your suppliers.
 You buy goods or services and pay cash.

Give Get
Cash Goods
BUSINESS CYCLES
 Many business activities are paired in
give-get exchanges
 The basic exchanges can be grouped
into five major transaction cycles.
 Revenue cycle
 Expenditure cycle
 Production cycle
 Human resources/payroll cycle
 Financing cycle
PRODUCTION CYCLE
 In the production cycle, raw materials and
labor are transformed into finished goods.

Give Raw Get


Materials & Finished
Labor Goods
BUSINESS CYCLES
 Many business activities are paired in
give-get exchanges
 The basic exchanges can be grouped
into five major transaction cycles.
 Revenue cycle
 Expenditure cycle
 Production cycle
 Human resources/payroll cycle
 Financing cycle
HUMAN RESOURCES/
PAYROLL CYCLE
 The human resources cycle involves
interactions with your employees.
 Employees are hired, trained, paid,
evaluated, promoted, and terminated.

Give Get
Cash Labor
BUSINESS CYCLES
 Many business activities are paired in
give-get exchanges
 The basic exchanges can be grouped
into five major transaction cycles.
 Revenue cycle
 Expenditure cycle
 Production cycle
 Human resources/payroll cycle
 Financing cycle
FINANCING CYCLE
 The financing cycle involves interactions
with investors and creditors.
 You raise capital (through stock or debt),
repay the capital, and pay a return on it
(interest or dividends).

Give Get
Cash cash
BUSINESS CYCLES
 Thousands of transactions can occur
within any of these cycles.
 But there are relatively few types
of transactions in a cycle.
BUSINESS CYCLES
 EXAMPLE: In the revenue cycle,
the basic give-get transaction is:
 Give goods
 Get cash
BUSINESS CYCLES
 Other transactions in the revenue cycle include:

 Handle customer inquiries  Update sales and Accts


 Take customer orders Rec. for sales
 Approve credit sales  Receive customer
payments
 Check inventory availability
 Update Accts Rec. for
 Initiate back orders
collections
 Pick and pack orders
 Handle sales returns,
 Ship goods discounts, & bad debts
 Bill customers  Prepare management
reports
Note that the last activity in any  Send info to other cycles
cycle is to send information to other
cycles.
BUSINESS CYCLES
 Click on the buttons below if you
wish to see the transactions that
occur in the other cycles:
Expenditure
Expenditure HumanRes./
Human Res./
Cycle
Cycle PayrollCycle
Payroll Cycle

Production
Production Financing
Financing
Cycle
Cycle Cycle
Cycle
BUSINESS CYCLES
 Every transaction cycle:
 Relates to other cycles
 Interfaces with the general ledger and
reporting system, which generates
information for management and
external parties.
Finished Goods

Revenue Expenditure Production


Cycle Cycle Cycle

Da
ta
Fu

General Ledger
nd
s

and Reporting  The revenue cycle


System  Gets finished
goods from the
production cycle
 Provides funds to
the financing
cycle
Human Res./ Financing  Provides data to
Payroll Cycle Cycle the General
Ledger and
Reporting System
Raw
Mats.
Revenue Expenditure Production
Cycle Cycle Cycle

Data
nds
Fu

General Ledger
and Reporting  The expenditure
System cycle
 Gets funds from
the financing
cycle
 Provides raw
Human Res./ materials to the
Financing production cycle
Payroll Cycle Cycle  Provides data to
the General
Ledger and
Reporting
System
Finished Goods

Raw
Mats.
Revenue Expenditure Production
Cycle Cycle Cycle

a ta
D

General Ledger
and Reporting The production
r


bo

System cycle:
La

 Gets raw materials


from the
expenditure cycle
 Gets labor from the
HR/payroll cycle
Human Res./ Financing  Provides finished
goods to the
Payroll Cycle Cycle revenue cycle
 Provides data to
the General Ledger
and Reporting
System
Revenue Expenditure Production
Cycle Cycle Cycle

General Ledger
and Reporting The HR/payroll
r


bo

System cycle:
La

 Gets funds from


ta the financing
a
D cycle
 Provides labor to
the production
Human Res./ Funds Financing cycle
Payroll Cycle Cycle  Provides data to
the General
Ledger and
Reporting System
Revenue Expenditure Production
Cycle Cycle Cycle

Fu
n
ds
Fu

General Ledger
nd

 The Financing
s

and Reporting
cycle:
System  Gets funds from
the revenue cycle
Provides funds to

Data

the expenditure
and HR/payroll
Human Res./ Funds cycles
Financing  Provides data to
Payroll Cycle Cycle the General
Ledger and
Reporting System
Revenue Expenditure Production
Cycle Cycle Cycle

Data
ta

D
Da

at
a Information for
General Ledger
Internal & External Users
and Reporting
System
ta
Da The General Ledger
Data

and Reporting
System:
Human Res./ Financing  Gets data from all
Payroll Cycle of the cycles
Cycle  Provides
information for
internal and
external users
BUSINESS CYCLES
 Many accounting software packages
implement the different transaction
cycles as separate modules.
 Not every module is needed in every
organization, e.g., retail companies don’t
have a production cycle.
 Some companies may need extra modules.
 The implementation of each transaction
cycle can differ significantly across
companies.
BUSINESS CYCLES

 However the cycles are


implemented, it is critical that the
AIS be able to:
 Accommodate the information needs
of managers
 Integrate financial and non-financial
data.
TRANSACTION PROCESSING:
THE DATA PROCESSING CYCLE
 Accountants play an important role in data
processing. They answer questions such
as:
 What data should be entered and stored?
 Who should be able to access the data?
 How should the data be organized, updated,
stored, accessed, and retrieved?
 How can scheduled and unanticipated
information needs be met.
 To answer these questions, they must
understand data processing concepts.
TRANSACTION PROCESSING:
THE DATA PROCESSING CYCLE
 An important function of the AIS is to
efficiently and effectively process the
data about a company’s transactions.
 In manual systems, data is entered
into paper journals and ledgers.
 In computer-based systems, the
series of operations performed on data
is referred to as the data processing
cycle.
TRANSACTION PROCESSING:
THE DATA PROCESSING CYCLE
 The data processing cycle consists
of four steps:
 Data input
 Data storage
 Data processing
 Information output
TRANSACTION PROCESSING:
THE DATA PROCESSING CYCLE
 The data processing cycle consists
of four steps:
 Data input
 Data storage
 Data processing
 Information output
DATA INPUT
 The first step in data processing is
to capture the data.
 Usually triggered by a business
activity.
 Data is captured about:
 The event that occurred
 The resources affected by the event
 The agents who participated
DATA INPUT
 A number of actions can be taken to
improve the accuracy and efficiency
of data input:
 Turnaround documents
 EXAMPLE: The stub on your telephone bill that you tear off
and return with your check when you pay the bill.
 The customer account number is coded on the document,
usually in machine-readable form, which reduces the
probability of human error in applying the check to the
correct account.
DATA INPUT
 A number of actions can be taken to
improve the accuracy and efficiency
of data input:
 Turnaround documents
 Source data automation
 Capture data with minimal human intervention.
 EXAMPLES:
 ATMs for banking
 Point-of-sale (POS) scanners in retail stores
 Automated gas pumps that accept your credit card
DATA INPUT
 A number of actions can be taken to
improve the accuracy and efficiency
of data input:
 Turnaround documents
 Source data automation
 Well-designed source documents
and data entry screens
 How do these improve the accuracy and efficiency
of data input?
DATA INPUT
 A number of actions can be taken to
improve the accuracy and efficiency of
data input:
 Turnaround documents
 Source data automation
 Well-designed source documents and data
entry
Whatscreens
does it mean if a document number is missing
in the sequence?
 Using pre-numbered documents or
having the system automatically
assign sequential numbers to
transactions
DATA INPUT
 A number of actions can be taken to
improve the accuracy and efficiency of
data input:
 Turnaround documents
 Source data automation
 Well-designed source documents and data
entry
Whatscreens
does it mean if there are duplicate document
numbers?
 Using pre-numbered documents or
having the system automatically
assign sequential numbers to
transactions
DATA INPUT
 A number of actions can be taken to
improve the accuracy and efficiency of
data input:
 Turnaround documents
 Source data automation

 Well-designed source documents and data


entry screens
 Using pre-numbered documents or having the
 EXAMPLE: Check for inventory availability before
system automatically
completing assign
an online sales sequential
transaction.
numbers to transactions
 Verify transactions
TRANSACTION PROCESSING:
THE DATA PROCESSING CYCLE
 The data processing cycle consists
of four steps:
 Data input
 Data storage
 Data processing
 Information output
DATA STORAGE
 Data needs to be organized for easy
and efficient access.
 Let’s start with some vocabulary
terms with respect to data storage.
DATA STORAGE
 Ledger
A ledger is a file used to store cumulative
information about resources and agents. We
typically use the word ledger to describe the set
of t-accounts. The t-account is where we keep
track of the beginning balance, increases,
decreases, and ending balance for each asset,
liability, owners’ equity, revenue, expense, gain,
loss, and dividend account.
COMPUTER-BASED STORAGE
CONCEPTS
 A master file is a file that stores
cumulative information about an
organization’s entities.
 It is conceptually similar to a ledger in a
manual AIS in that:
 The file is permanent
 The file exists across fiscal periods
 Changes are made to the file to reflect the
effects of new transactions.
COMPUTER-BASED STORAGE
CONCEPTS
 A transaction file is a file that contains
records of individual transactions
(events) that occur during a fiscal
period.
 It is conceptually similar to a journal in a
manual AIS in that:
 The files are temporary
 The files are usually maintained for one fiscal
period
COMPUTER-BASED STORAGE
CONCEPTS
 A database is a set of interrelated, centrally-
coordinated files.
 When files about students are integrated with
files about classes and files about instructors,
we have a database.

Student Class
File File

Instructor
File
TRANSACTION PROCESSING:
THE DATA PROCESSING CYCLE
 The data processing cycle consists
of four steps:
 Data input
 Data storage
 Data processing
 Information output
DATA PROCESSING
 Once data about a business activity has
been collected and entered into a
system, it must be processed.
DATA PROCESSING
 There are four different types of file
processing:
 Updating data to record the occurrence of an
event, the resources affected by the event,
and the agents who participated, e.g.,
recording a sale to a customer.
 Changing data, e.g., a customer address
 Adding data, e.g., a new customer.
 Deleting data, e.g., removing an old
customer that has not purchased anything in
5 years.
DATA PROCESSING
 Updating can be done through several
approaches:
 Batch processing
DATA PROCESSING
 Batch processing:
 Source documents are grouped into batches,
and control totals are calculated.
 Periodically, the batches are entered into the
computer system, edited, sorted, and stored
in a temporary file.
 The temporary transaction file is run against
the master file to update the master file.
 Output is printed or displayed, along with
error reports, transaction reports, and
control totals.
DATA PROCESSING
 Updating can be done through several
approaches:
 Batch processing
 On-line Batch Processing
DATA PROCESSING
 On-line batch processing:
 Transactions are entered into a computer
system as they occur and stored in a
temporary file.
 Periodically, the temporary transaction file is
run against the master file to update the
master file.
 The output is printed or displayed.
DATA PROCESSING
 Updating can be done through several
approaches:
 Batch processing
 On-line Batch Processing
 On-line, Real-time Processing
DATA PROCESSING
 On-line, Real-time Processing
 Transactions are entered into a computer
system as they occur.
 The master file is immediately updated with
the data from the transaction.
 Output is printed or displayed.
DATA PROCESSING
 Updating can be done through several
approaches:
 Batch processing
 On-line Batch Processing
 On-line, Real-time Processing
 If you’re going through enrollment,
which of these approaches would
you prefer that your university was
using?
 Why?
TRANSACTION PROCESSING:
THE DATA PROCESSING CYCLE
 The data processing cycle consists
of four steps:
 Data input
 Data storage
 Data processing
 Information output
INFORMATION OUTPUT
 The final step in the information
process is information output.
 This output can be inarethe
 Documents form
records of of:
 transactions or other company
Documents
data.
 EXAMPLE: Employee paychecks or
purchase orders for merchandise
 Documents generated at the end of
the transaction processing
activities are known as operational
documents (as opposed to source
documents).
 They can be printed or stored as
electronic images.
INFORMATION OUTPUT
 The final step in the information
process is information output.
 Reports are used by employees to
 This output can beoperational
control in the form of:and
activities
by managers to make decisions
 Documents and design strategies.
 Reports  They may be produced:
 On a regular basis
 On an exception basis
 On demand
 Organizations should periodically
reassess whether each report is
needed.
INFORMATION OUTPUT
 The final step in the information
process is information output.
 This output can be in the form of:
 Documents
 Queries are user requests for
specific pieces of information.
 Reports  They may be requested:
 Queries  Periodically
 One time
 They can be displayed:
 On the monitor, called soft copy
 On the screen, called hard copy
INFORMATION OUTPUT
 Output can serve a variety of
purposes:
 Financial statements can be provided to
both external and internal parties.
 Some outputs are specifically for
internal use:
 For planning purposes
 Examples of outputs for planning
purposes include:
 Budgets
 Budgets are an entity’s formal
expression of goals in financial terms
 Sales forecasts
INFORMATION OUTPUT
 Output can serve a variety of
purposes:
 Financial statements can be provided to
both external and internal parties.
 Some outputs are specifically for
internal use:
 For planning purposes
 For management of day-to-day

operations
 Example: delivery schedules
INFORMATION OUTPUT
 Performance reports are outputs that
are used for control purposes.
 These reports compare an
 Outputorganization’s
can serve astandard
varietyorofexpected
purposes:
performance with its actual outcomes.
 Management by exception is an
 Financial statements can be provided to
approach to utilizing performance
both reports
externalthat
andfocuses
internal
onparties.
investigating
and acting on only those variances that
 Some outputs are specifically for
are significant.
internal use:
 For planning purposes
 For management of day-to-day operations

 For control purposes


INFORMATION OUTPUT
 Output can serve a variety of
purposes:
 Financial statements can be provided to
both external and internal parties.
 Some outputs are specifically for internal
use:
 For planning purposes
 For management of day-to-day operations

 For control purposes


 These outputs might include:
 For evaluation purposes
 Surveys of customer satisfaction
 Reports on employee error rates
The End

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