Managerial-finance


Related Subjects: Corporate-finance
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Book reviews for "Managerial-finance" sorted by average review score:

The Business Accounting and Finance Blueprint (Business Blueprints)
Published in Paperback by Blackwell Publishers (01 May, 1993)
Authors: Ian R. Davidson and Chris A. Mallin
Amazon base price: $39.95

Business Cost Reduction Techniques (Business Cost Reduction Techniques)
Published in Hardcover by Add-Effect Associates, Incorporated (01 May, 1983)
Author: David Wright
Amazon base price: $125.00

Business Cases in Statistical Decision Making: Computer Based Applications/Book and Disk
Published in Hardcover by Prentice Hall (01 January, 1994)
Authors: Lawrence H. Peters and J. Brian Gray
Amazon base price: $39.65
Used price: $7.50

Business and Society: A Managerial Approach
Published in Hardcover by McGraw-Hill/Irwin (01 November, 1997)
Author: Heidi Vernon
Amazon base price: $133.50
Used price: $3.98
Buy one from zShops for: $8.95
Average review score:

It should be a zero star rating
I hate to say this, but this book is a waste of paper and ink. It is poorly organized. It reads like somebody just copy and pasted paragraphs and sentences from a million and one source and never ever re-read the paragraph. The chapter headings and paragraph headings mean absolutely nothing. You will find yourself reading a sentence and wondering where is it going, then you will realize that you have no idea where it came from so you just give up and attempt the next section or next paragraph. But no matter how much you skip, you never ever come across anything worthwhile. If you have bought this book, fight hard to get your money back. I wonder if the editor that approved of this book still has a job? I have no idea how it made it to the sixth edition.

This is a poorly written book!
The rating of 1-star for this book is rather a compliment for this poorly written book by Heidi Vernon. The book is outlined in a confusing manner with chapter content unrelated to it's chapter titles. Terminologies and definitions are not clearly defined. In fact, there ARE no definitions in this book. Since this textbook is written mostly in an essay form, students to this subject are expected to already know any terms or jargon in this subject. There are grammatical errors and typos in this book. THIS IS THE SIXTH EDITION? How did it ever get this far?


Business and Managerial Communication
Published in Hardcover by Dryden Press (01 January, 1992)
Author: Linda Driskill
Amazon base price: $66.95
Used price: $9.49

Business and Finance for It People (Applied Computing)
Published in Paperback by Springer-Verlag Telos (11 May, 2001)
Author: Michael Blackstaff
Amazon base price: $49.95

Business Accounting for Hospitality and Tourism (Chapman & Hall Series in Tourism and Hospitality Management)
Published in Paperback by Chapman & Hall (01 April, 1996)
Authors: H. Atkinson, A. Berry, R. Jarvis, Aidan Berry, and Robin Jarvis
Amazon base price: $40.99
Used price: $13.98

Business 2000: Managerial Accounting
Published in Paperback by South-Western Educational Publishing (28 March, 2002)
Author: Bill Lee
Amazon base price: $18.95
Used price: $10.25
Buy one from zShops for: $9.95

Building Public Trust: The Future of Corporate Reporting
Published in Hardcover by Wiley (14 June, 2002)
Authors: Samuel A. DiPiazza and Robert G. Eccles
Amazon base price: $16.97
List price: $24.95 (that's 32% off!)
Used price: $3.25
Collectible price: $5.29
Buy one from zShops for: $3.00
Building Public Trust, by Samuel A. DiPiazza Jr. and Robert G. Eccles, couldn't be more timely or necessary. Arriving in the wake of a seemingly endless stream of corporate accounting scandals--which in a matter of months have bankrupted Enron and brought WorldCom and Global Crossing down to earth--this book offers a bona fide framework for a new, open form of transparent financial reporting that should prove more palatable to businesses and their stakeholders, and more effective than any of those in misuse today. DiPiazza, CEO of PricewaterhouseCoopers, and Eccles, president of Advisory Capital Partners, certainly know of which they speak, and they lay out a highly informed and quite feasible system that actively involves every member of the so-called corporate reporting supply chain: executives, boards of directors, independent auditors, information distributors, third-party analysts, investors, and various other stakeholders. They propose specific ways to develop three key elements (a spirit of transparency, a culture of accountability, and people of integrity) that work together to "create public trust in markets." Based on their extensive firsthand experiences, they further show how using these principles can lead to a scenario where "capital is being allocated more efficiently all over the world." The timeliness of this book is one thing, the content within its pages another, and on both counts Building Public Trust definitely delivers. --Howard Rothman
Average review score:

Hollow advice from a company that betrays its own employees
There is a bitter irony to the heads of PriceWaterhouseCoopers issuing a publication about inspiring trust in the public in large corporations in the wake of Enron and Worldcom scandals when PwC constantly undermines the trust of its own employees. With an infrastructure that makes it nearly impossible for employees to find their own project work and employment practices that left thousands of employees without a job and insufficient experience to get another one (while still continuing to hire new employees), PwC does a horrible job on taking care of those who work for them. In addition, they are just another example of a company that engages in the same shady, conflict-of-interest business practices as Arthur Andersen, yet they just have not been caught yet. Yet, here they are, trying to issue some sort of definitive work about restoring public trust. If a company like this shows no understanding of how to take care of their own employees, how can one even remotely think that they have any business providing a framework of how to take care of the public.

Building Public Trust: The Future of Corporate Reporting
The public trust in corporate America has been shaken in the wake of several recent accounting scandals and, as a result, the capital markets are in upheaval. There is, rightfully so, a public outcry for reform - the government has cranked up its regulatory machine and members the class-action plaintiff bar are sharpening their litigation pencils. Many question, justifiably so, whether such attempts at reform are the legal equivalent of putting a bandage on a gunshot wound. In addition, investors and other stakeholders query whether there can be any meaningful reform to the extent that special-interests and their representatives (lawyers and accountants) are successful in jockeying for position in these efforts.

Messrs. DiPiazza and Eccles present a compelling blueprint for wholesale restructuring of corporate reporting and the concomitant rebuilding of public trust in the capital markets. The foundation for their model is built on the values of transparency, accountability and integrity. Their model -- development of a global GAAP, development and application of industry-specific standards, and establishment of guidelines for disclosure of company specific information -- makes sense given the expansion of capital markets across country-specific boundaries, but also is timely given the wide-availability of enabling technology (i.e., the Internet and XBRL).

Meaningful reform cannot be had solely through governmental reform, the lobbying of special interest groups, self-regulation or lawsuits by regulators and disgruntled investors. The end results will likely be half-baked attempts to address the symptoms of the breakdown in corporate reporting and the capital markets, rather than development of a cure. Accordingly, DiPiazza and Eccles stress that meaningful reform through development of their three-tiered model must be had through open dialogue and lines of communication with all members of what they term as the "Corporate Reporting Supply Chain" which, in a nutshell, includes all stakeholders in the capital markets.

"Building Public Trust: The Future of Corporate Reporting" provides, in plain English, a detailed description of the problems plaguing corporate reporting and roadmap to a meaningful solution. The road to reform, however, is long and, as DiPiazza and Eccles suggest, requires that the journey (read: participation) be undertaken by ALL members of the Corporate Reporting Supply Chain. The book is a must read for corporate directors and officers, regulators, lawyers, accountants, analysts, the investing public and all other persons who (or whose clients) have a stake in the smooth functioning of the capital markets.

The time for open debate on reform is now. It is up to members of the "Corporate Reporting Supply Chain" whether they want such reform to take the form of a lecture leading to mandates by the few, or an open dialogue leading to a consensus by the majority. This book provides its readers with a grounding for developing the tools to accomplish the latter...

Brilliant - Everyone ought to read this
A most insightful and timely book that is a must read for regulators, politicians, businessmen, investors, and everyone interested in - and worried about - the state of public trust today. A well written book that lays out some useful and practical advice for changing our approach to and processes for corporate reporting. Best of all the advice is applicable to the world of business immediately - without changing the way we do business completely as Congress is currently debating.

This book is destined to become a classic in its field. therefore, buy it, read it, but don't loan it - because you ought to keep it on your bookshelf and refer to it. If you ahve any interest in investing, this is the best [amount of money] you will ever spend.


Building Managerial Effectiveness (Work in America Institute Studies in Productivity)
Published in Paperback by Pergamon (January, 1985)
Author: J. Timothy McMahon
Amazon base price: $55.00

Related Subjects: Corporate-finance
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