Business Administration Enhanced: Part 2
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About this ebook
The world we live in changes dramatically every second. Globalization, terrorism, social inequities and all other problems have a huge impact on our economy and security. For the next period, these two main domains of study will be predominant because nowadays, the world faces multiple risks and challenges.
If you wanted to succeed in growing your business and reaching new markets, you would need to develop new skills.
By this book you will find easy-to-understand useful information on:
*How to manage a project and take the best decisions during its implementation
*Latest trends in international project management
*How to consider your business taking into consideration operational risks
*How to act in a global environment and take proper decisions when it comes to business taxation
*Key points of business taxation (tax engineering) to enhance your margins
*Key concepts of managerial finance and how you can use them to foster your business
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Business Administration Enhanced - Daniel B. Smith
Business Administration Enhanced: Part 2
Daniel B. Smith
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the author, excepting the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.
Copyright © 2020
Table of contents
Introduction
Chapter 1: International Project Management
1. Projects: types and purpose
2. Choosing the project
3. Project management
4. Project planning
5. Project leadership
6. Project teams
7. Cost estimation and project budgeting
8. Projects and change
9. Problems related to project - Conflict resolution
10. Project monitoring and control. Project completion.
Chapter 2: Business Taxation
1. Introduction to taxation
2. Business structures and tax return
3. Corporate income tax
4. Value added tax (VAT)
5. Employees’ salaries and enterprises’ fiscal responsibilities
6. Excises and custom duties
7. Enterprises and fiscal autonomy of local authorities
8. Tax audit
9. Basic concepts on tax avoidance, tax evasion and tax engineering
Chapter 3: Managerial Finance
1. Financing and company lifecycle. Initial public offering (IPO) and the role of underwriters
2. Security valuation
3. Market efficiency
4. Portfolio theory and the CAPM model. Risk and return.
5. Capital structure: theory and practice
6. Dividend policy
7. Leasing
Conclusion
Introduction
The world we live in changes dramatically every second. Globalization, terrorism, social inequities and all other problems have a huge impact on our economy and security. For the next period, these two main domains of study will be predominant because nowadays, the world faces multiple risks and challenges.
If you want to succeed in growing your business and reaching new markets, you will need to develop new skills. By reading this book you will find easy-to-understand useful information on:
1.How to manage a project and take the best decisions during its implementation;
2.Latest trends in international project management;
3.How to consider your business taking into consideration operational risks;
4.How to act in a global environment and take proper decisions when it comes to business taxation;
5.Key points of business taxation (tax engineering) to enhance your margins;
6.Key concepts of managerial finance and how you can use them to foster your business.
Chapter 1: International Project Management
1. Projects: types and purpose
Change has become an ordinary feature of life. Many of these changes take the form of project
and are often driven and controlled by managers whose experience and dexterity were acquired on daily basis operations. As every project is unique, there are a few conditions that need to be accomplished so as to reach an accurate and properly finalized project, together with a series of abilities and competencies, which are mostly different than the ones required in routine management activities.
During the 90’s projects have become more frequent, especially inside organizations, for at least two reasons:
1.The increasing awareness of the fact that a project can be a powerful tool for management – in that it can increase the manager’s ability to plan, conduct and effectively use the organization’s resources.
2.Within the operational environment of every company there has been an increase in competition and volatility. In order to survive and maybe the luckiest ones to thrive in this hostile and demanding environment, the organizations need to use and develop the ability to react promptly to their customer’s needs.
Despite a large usage of projects, it is obvious that some of them are extremely expensive and they expect important outcomes. Not all projects are as massive and expensive as The man on the moon
(for example). They also do not need billions, decades and high technologies in order to be finished. The corporation projects are often shorter and they aim less expensive activities, such as launching a new product or redecorating a store.
Projects do not necessarily end in tangible results; there are also projects that require collecting data, changing the organization structures or influencing others’ behaviour or opinions (e.g. promotional campaigns which are meant to convince us to buy a certain product or a certain diet which may prevent heart diseases). The purpose of these project is often to change the way we behave in certain situation. For example, the key process in increasing effectiveness is seen by many companies as a continuous process which requires many little steps. Sometimes there are situations when a big step is necessary. These steps are often referred to as projects and they vary considerably when it comes to size, cost or duration.
Here are several characteristics of projects, as they are not used only inside organizational structures. Projects may:
-have any size, from small to big;
-take days or decades to be finished;
-involve cost;
-have a certain goal;
-reach a different number of participants, from individual to national level.
Despite the obvious diversity regarding results, size, cost or duration of projects, there are a series of common characteristics among all of them:
1.Every project involves people: projects require regardless of duration or results human skills so as to create, plan and manage the processes and activities involved, thus allowing the flow and content of the projects to adapt and change depending on the real world requirements.
2.Every project is unique: each project has at its core individual distinct features.
3.Every project exists for a limited and defined period of time: this means that the project has a limited period (it cannot be endless) and will sooner or later reach a point in time when it is considered to be finished.
4.Every project has to face change: while current operations are mainly defined by continual flow, predictability and stability, the activities of a project have to deal almost exclusively with changes – throw what is old and replace it with what is new.
5.Every project requires clearly defined outcomes/goals: each project has goals, targets, objectives and/or a desired set of results (according to its type), which can be further divided into sub-objectives so as to ease planning, control and management of the project.
6.Every project needs a variety of resources: a project for crime reductions requires information on the type and location of past offenses, offenders and victims, as well as the ability to analyze that information. These pieces of information may be obtained from various sources and are required at different times during the project.
Taking into consideration these common characteristics, the projects should be organized, planned and conducted in ways that differ from those commonly used in everyday work-related tasks.
What is a project? A project is a series of connected activities undertaken for a limited time, aiming to generate a unique and well designed result. Therefore, we can use a project for:
-reorganizing the organization of one of its departments;
-increasing the company’s performances;
-introducing new procedures and removing the old ones;
-influencing how people think of feel about something.
The project is only one of many other tools that leaders can use. They must understand not only when to use it but, perhaps more importantly, how to use it. Every project manager should know that there are four phases which compose project’s lifecycle:
1.Conception: in this phase, the project is identified, its feasibility is analyzed and the initial cost estimations are done. The final goal and the necessary time are also predefined in this phase. At the end of this step, along which the project is compared with other projects or performance standards, a decision is made whether to implement the project or not. The decision of implementing the project will lead to the next phase of development, while the opposite decision leads to the end of the project.
2.Initiation and development: along this phase the project is developed in detail and certain things must be known: who
, what’ and
when" will have to realize the proposed tasks and activities. Cost estimation and required time to complete the project will also be redefined.
3.Maturity: this is the phase when the most intense work is done and it required careful monitoring, controlling and forecasting. The project manager should know at this stage what was made and what not, how much was spent or not, what should or should not have been done. At the end of this phase the project will reach its end and the result will be delivered.
4.Aging and finalization: this phase implies a low rate of activity such as the audit of the final project and dissolving the project team.
Keep in mind that the manager struggles to maintain a balance between the contradictory needs of the organization, customers, team members etc. A good manager will daily mitigate the 4 dimensions (time, performance, quality and cost) in order to satisfy different needs.
Is there a general recipe for project management? Well, not an obvious one. The project management process is obtained using a variety of inputs: information (about time, cost, performance, quality, client), people (their perception, abilities, needs, experiences) and resources (materials, time, money).
The project manager’s role is essential in the process, as he has to maintain a balance between the customer’s needs, the project itself and his own team. The manager has to assure the integrity of the project by decreasing the risk of conflict and rivalries that may lead to altering the initial definition of the proposed result, costs and durations of the project, as well as solving possible problems as they might arise. As a project team leader, he needs to lead and motivate his team members, which will participate in the project just until the final result and which are often borrowed
from other functional departments of the organization.
In selecting the winning team, the project manager has to assure that all members have the necessary skills and at the end of the project they will be transferred to other roles.
2. Choosing the project
All projects involve change and the change process has an ambivalent action: as an opportunity for success as well as a risk of failure. Successful projects are not only lead, planned and carefully monitored, but also chosen with cleverness and with a better understanding of the risk involved. Uncertainty can occur due to a lack of information regarding duration, incidence or the impact of the future events.
Projects are deliberate and committed changes regarding the actions we take and the way we take them. Consequently, risk levels will follow similar steps to those of change. One of the key actions in successful project management is to ensure that the changes that may occur are manageable and tolerable. In order to achieve this key action it is necessary to rigorously evaluate them.
Since we can not eradicate risk and uncertainty from projects, what we should do if we want to achieve success is to limit their impact on projects. To do this one needs to:
-identify the type, level, and source of the risk;
-follow the necessary steps to reduce or eliminate (if possible) that risk;
-decide whether to accept that risk or not.
This 3-phase sequence is part of an important process of project evaluation, often used to examine a number of alternative projects, process which also allows us to choose which one we want to implement. The first step in reducing the level of risk is to identify the nature and source of it. You can assess it by yourself using the risk matrix:
After we identify the cause and the risk level associated to the project, we will have to determine its consequences. Therefore, we will have to check the likelihood of the considered risk to occur and the risk’s potential consequences.
For example, a risk with a higher likelihood to occur needs more attention, for the simple reason that is has higher chances to appear while a risk with a lower probability needs less information for analysis purposes.
Thus, this can change radically when we consider the risk consequences.
For