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_c39.95
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_c39.95
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_cDLC
_dDLC
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050 0 0 _aHF5691
_b.B675 2012
069 _a09455094
090 _aHF 5691 .B675 2012
100 1 _aBolten, Randall,
_d1952-
_9144125
245 1 0 _aPainting with numbers :
_bpresenting financials and other numbers so people will understand you /
_cRandall Bolten.
260 _aHoboken, N.J. :
_bWiley,
_cc2012.
300 _axviii, 322 p. :
_bill. (some col.) ;
_c27 cm.
336 _2rdacontent
_atext
_btxt
337 _2rdamedia
_aunmediated
_bn
338 _2rdacarrier
_avolume
_bnc
505 0 _a Foreword xiii Preface xv Acknowledgments xvii introdUCtion This book Is Not About Numbers-Honest! 1 Being "Literate" 2 It's What They Think That Matters 2 What You Were Never Taught 3 The Ultimate Goal 5 Some Notes about Reading This Book 5 Part I the rules 11 Chapter 1 Numerals Matter 13 Lining Up the Numbers 14 The Units of Measure 16 Precision 17 Negative Numbers: What Do They Mean? 20 Chapter 2 Looks Matter 25 The Tabula Rasa Decision 26 The "Where's Waldo?" Effect 27 White Space Is Your Friend 29 But White Space Is Not Always Your Friend 30 Time and Other Dimensions: Across or Down? 33 Borders, Shading, and Other Visual Effects 35 Comments and Artwork 41 The "Ransom Note" Effect 43 Two Truly Helpful Hints 44 Chapter 3 Words Matter 47 Mean What You Say and Say What You Mean 48 Choosing between Precision and Presentability 52 Treating Words Like Numbers 55 Remember the Title. Please 57 Chapter 4 Your Audience Matters 61 The Right Amount of Data 62 Appropriate Emphasis on Critical Information 64 Consistency 67 Meaningful and Relevant Numbers 69 Respect for Your Audience's Time 73 Wrap-Up for Part I: The Rules 77 Part II The Tools 81 Chapter 5 You Can Pay Me Now 83 The Instant Payoff Tips 85 Instant Payoff Tip #1: Set Up Templates and Styles 85 Instant Payoff Tip #2: Customize Your Toolbar 86 Instant Payoff Tip #3: Learn Some Shortcut Keys 87 Instant Payoff Tip #4: Use Consistent Formats 89 Instant Payoff Tip #5: Learn to Use Excel as a Database 90 Instant Payoff Tip #6: Learn to Use the Lookup & Reference Functions 94 Instant Payoff Tip #7: Organize Data for Easy Computation 95 Instant Payoff Tip #8: Learn to Use Automated Help 98 Instant Payoff Tip #9: Don't Learn Too Many Ways to Do the Same Thing 99 Chapter 6 ... Or Pay Me Later 103 The Long-Term Payoff Tips 104 Long-Term Payoff Tip #1: Use Sensible, Intelligent Filenames and Folder Organization 104 Long-Term Payoff Tip #2: Use Consistent Formats 106 Long-Term Payoff Tip #3: Design Intelligent, Intelligible Formulas 106 Long-Term Payoff Tip #4: Use Named Ranges 110 Long-Term Payoff Tip #5: Use Named Formulas or Macros 112 Long-Term Payoff Tip #6: Links: A Force That Can Be Used for Good or Evil 117 Long-Term Payoff Tip #7: Make Different Types of Cells Visually Distinguishable and Physically Separate 118 Long-Term Payoff Tip #8: Document Your Work! 120 Long-Term Payoff Tip #9: Check Your Work! 121 Long-Term Payoff Tip #10: Avoid Cool New Features 122 Chapter 7 Graphs: The "Cartoons" of Numbers 125 Why Do People Use Graphs? 126 Help Your Audience 127 First, Do No Harm 138 Chapter 8 The Pitfalls of Presentations and PowerPoint 153Why Do People Make Fun of Business Presentations? 154 Real Estate Is a Scarce and Precious Commodity 154 Help Your Audience 156 First, Do No Harm 161 Some Basic Truths That Go Double for Quantation 162 Wrap-Up for Part II: The Tools 166 Part III Real Mastery 169 Chapter 9 It's Clear, but Is It Meaningful? 171 The War of the Adjectives 171 A Quantation Professional 173 Relating to Your Audience in a Constructive Way 174 Chapter 10 53 ... Uh, Is That a Lot? 179 What Is a Key Indicator? 180 What Makes a Good Key Indicator? 183 A Simple Example 185 How Do You Present Key Indicators Effectively? 185 A Note on Precision 190 A Note on Dashboards 191 Chapter 11 The One Report Every Organization Needs 197 A Sample Natural P&L, and What Makes It a Good One 199 1. One Page! 200 2. Decision-Focused Line Items 200 3. Appropriate Dollar Amounts, neither Too Big nor Too Small 204 4. Intuitive Organization of the Line Items 205 5. Understandable Categories, Meaningful to All Users 208 6. Plain-English Terminology 208 7. Consistent Look-and-Feel 209 8. Key Results Equal to the Corresponding Numbers in the Accounting System (or an Explanation Why Not) 209 Mapping the Chart of Accounts 211 Generate a Natural P&L from a Spreadsheet, or from the Accounting System? 212 Now Let's Talk about the Columns 213 Appendix 11A a Sermon to the Accounting Purists 219 Chapter 12 The Gaps in GAAP 225 Rules-Based versus Principles-Based 226 Where Is All This Headed? 227 "Expensing" Stock Options 228 Software Revenue Recognition 230 Tying GAAP to Internal Management Reports 232 Appendix 12A Some Notes on GAAP 235 What Is GAAP? 235 Stock Options 236 Revenue Recognition 237 Chapter 13 Quantation: It's Not Just for Business Anymore 239 One Taxpayer at a Time 240 All the Taxpayers at Once 243 What's Really Going on Here? 249 Chapter 14 Quantation in Ordinary Life 255 Models 255 The Meaning of Words 260 That Quiz I Promised 263 Part IV Wrap-Up 269 Chapter 15 Speaking Truth to Power 271 My "Tell the Truth" Syllogism 272 Reason #1 for Telling the Truth: It's the Right Thing to Do 272 Reason #2: It's in Your Employer's Interest 272 Reason #3: It's in Your Interest 273 Reason #4: You Will Get Caught 273 Reason #5: It's the "Gotcha" of This Book 275 Don't Be So Smug, You Civil Servants and Elected Officials! 276 Your Audience Has a Role, Too 276 Chapter 16 Now, What's the First Thing You Do? 281 My Last, Best Tip 282 It's Just a Skill 282 Where We Have Been 283 Appendix Jazz Meets Theology 287 Revisitation 288 The Sins of Presentation 289 The Sins of Behavior 297 The Deadliest Sin of All 301 About the Author 305 Index 307
520 _a"Painting with Numbers is a thoughtful, yet practical and readable, guide to presenting numerical information effectively. The chapters are divided into two sections: "Technique" - focuses on how readers and listeners perceive numbers and what they look for in reports, describes how reports should be laid out and organized, and provides tips on how to take advantage of the available tools - principally Microsoft Excel - to minimize time spent "beautifying" reports."Content" - provides thoughts and guidelines on specific types of reports. One chapter alone is devoted to the "Natural P&L", the statement that is the cornerstone of management financial reporting. Other chapters discuss other reports common to businesses, reports relevant to other walks of our lives, and information that especially lends itself to presentation in graphs rather than tables"--
_cProvided by publisher.
500 _aIncludes index.
650 0 _aBusiness mathematics.
_9144126
630 0 0 _aMicrosoft Excel (Computer file)
_9144127
650 7 _aBUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Decision-Making & Problem Solving.
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