Accounting Made Simple: Accounting Explained in 100 Pages or Less (Financial Topics in 100 Pages or Less)
E**E
Short and clear, a solid stepping stone for learning more advanced accounting
As an academic turned entrepreneur, I needed a quick and systematic introduction to accounting concepts. I've bought many books, but so far Piper's has been the clearest of them all. (Not to mention the shortest, another quality that most academic books painfully lack!) Its strength is that it provides clear definitions and explanations that assume no prior knowledge of accounting or finance. One example from page 2: "At its most fundamental level, accounting is the system of tracking the income, expenses, assets and debts of a business." Using these simple but not dumbed-down explanations, the reader quickly develops a good understanding of accounting as a whole. I feel I can now integrate more advanced concepts and methods into this general framework.The book is divided into two main sections with respectively 6 and 8 chapters.Part One ["Financial Statements"]:* introduces the basic accounting equation ("Assets = Liabilities + Owner's Equity");* defines "retained earnings";* explains the three types of financial statements that a company needs to produce (Balance Sheet, Income Statement, and Cash Flow Statement);* teaches you how to use these statements to calculate a company's liquidity (ability to repay debts), profitability, leverage (reliance on debt), and inventory turnover.Part Two ["General Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP)"] explains:* why all public companies have to use the same accounting principles (called GAAP);* the notions of debit and credit used in bookkeeping;* the difference between "cash accounting" and "accrual accounting";* how companies balance their books at the end of each accounting period;* other GAAP concepts like recording assets at their "historical cost", what transactions are "material" to the company's financial statements, etc.* depreciation and amortization;* how companies keep track of their inventory (LIFO method vs. FIFO method) and how they calculate the "Cost of Goods Sold."If you're not too sure what these concepts mean, this book is probably for you. Each chapter ends with a "Simple Summary" of the chapter's main points. Using these summaries, you can skim the entire book in a few minutes before delving into the chapter of your choice. Whenever Piper mentions a concept he hasn't explained yet, he refers you to the chapter where that concept is explained, so that you never lose thread. And if that's not user-friendly enough, he even offers a refund to readers who are not fully satisfied with the book!The index, an oft-neglected tool, is very thorough. As such, it is much more useful than the very basic index you find at the end of most finance and accounting books. It will prove invaluable to those who wish to study one particular concept more thoroughly. The notion of "Accounts Payable", for instance, is discussed mainly on pp. 12-14, but it is also mentioned on pages 24, 35, 51, 58, 67, and 83, something you wouldn't know from reading the table of contents or a less well-designed index.Finally, to make sure you've mastered all the concepts presented in the book, you can head to the author's blog (called "oblivious investor"; full link given in the book) and try to answer the practice questions. You'll be surprised at how quickly you become proficient at calculating a company's "debt to equity ratio" or its "inventory turnover"!All in all, an excellent little book and a solid stepping stone for learning more complex accounting.
K**R
Great book
The book is concise and well explained. It is a short book but great information which is presented in an easy to follow manner.
L**C
Informative and helpful, but inadequate
This book was helpful to me as I run several small biotech companies and as a scientist by training only had a cursory understanding of the various financial reports my CFOs and accountants provide. I only need a bit more understanding, but this book only got me 50% of where my understanding needs to be. I have to take a star off because I think the author's ideal of making these "100 page" books comes at the price of producing a book that is incomplete and inadequate to cover the material in even a cursory manner. I don't want or need to become an accountant and I would think I am the very demographic that this book was intended for, but for me, it was lacking in sufficient depth. I have already bought a second book which covers the same material but in more depth, and I would recommend any one in the same position as me, to look elsewhere.
S**N
Helps alot about accounting
Step daughter loves it
J**A
Takes an hour or two to read and teaches all the important concepts in an intuitive way.
Accounting is one of those fields that's pretty easy once you get a solid grasp of the basic concepts and principles, but where that's easier said than done because said concepts and principles can be very counter-intuitive at times. I have ADHD and struggled a lot with trying to learn from big, wordy textbooks. This book does what it promises to do -- it teaches you the basic concepts in plain, understandable, ELI5 English. It's short and to the point, and breaks down each concept until it's simple and intuitive. There were certain concepts I hadn't fully grasped even after hours of study with other texts, which this text was able to break down fully within 5 minutes. It's awesome.Understanding something and being able to actually teach it are two very different things. A lot of experts aren't able to successfully manage the latter. This author does, and does so very effectively. Once you have a firm handle on the principles explained in this book, you'll have a much easier time with longer and more in-depth accounting texts. It's a great jumping-off point. Highly recommend.
J**L
Pretty basic !!!!
This information is pretty basic (simple) as the title indicates. It just covers some key essential definitions. The first part covers Financial Statements: Accounting equation; Balance sheet; Incoming statement; Statement of retained earnings; Cash flow statement; and financial ratios. The second part covers the General accepted accounting principles (GAAP): GAAP; Debits and credits; Cash and accrual; The accounting close process; Other GAAP concepts & assumptions; Depreciation of fixed assets; Amortization of intangible assets; Inventory & CoGS; and the Conclusion.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
2 weeks ago