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Industrial Mangement

- tools and techniques
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Everyone who works in a technology-intensive context must be able to conduct business activities, make financial assessments, and understand the relationship between technology and management. Thus, there is a huge demand for people with a good knowledge of management and business administration at the interface with technology and engineering. Engineers must have the skills to understand the technical implications of management and financial decisions as well as the business and managerial i...

Everyone who works in a technology-intensive context must be able to conduct business activities, make financial assessments, and understand the relationship between technology and management. Thus, there is a huge demand for people with a good knowledge of management and business administration at the interface with technology and engineering. Engineers must have the skills to understand the technical implications of management and financial decisions as well as the business and managerial implications of technical decisions. Today’s engineers are expected to be able to support their decisions in financial terms and to use various tools and techniques to make calculations, perform analyses, develop the business, conduct projects, and market goods and services. Industrial Management – tools and techniques is primarily for engineering students at university level who are taking an introductory course in industrial management. The book addresses a number of management and financial terms, methods, and tools which engineers must be able to use and understand in order to develop and manage industrial operations.

    • Foreword to the English edition
    • 1
      About the authors
      • 1
        13
        Introduction
        • 1.1
          14
          Industrial Management as an academic field
        • 1.2
          16
          Industrial Management – yesterday, today, tomorrow ...
        • 1.3
          20
          Value creation and the economic cycle of an industrial venture
      • 2
        23
        Value creation as the point of departure
        • 2.1
          23
          Value propositions: goods and services
        • 2.2
          29
          Industrial value creation
        • 2.3
          39
          Value capture
        • 2.4
          42
          Efficiency, effectiveness, productivity, and profitability
      • 3
        45
        Organizing operations
        • 3.1
          45
          Organizing an organization
        • 3.2
          49
          Structure – more than an organization chart
        • 3.3
          51
          Various organizational forms
        • 3.4
          52
          Division of labor
        • 3.5
          58
          Integration of operations
        • 3.6
          66
          Accountability and performance measures
        • 3.7
          68
          Conflicts of interest and objectives – 
the organization’s largest problem
      • 4
        69
        Product costing – estimation, determination, and allocation
        • 4.1
          69
          The basic concepts of accounting and costing
        • 4.2
          78
          Cost determination and product costing
        • 4.3
          78
          Contribution costing
        • 4.4
          80
          Full costing
        • 4.5
          86
          Step costing
        • 4.6
          89
          Activity-based costing (ABC)
        • 4.7
          93
          Operations determine the costing techniques
        • 4.8
          95
          Calculations – before and after
      • 5
        97
        Capital investment analysis
        • 5.1
          97
          What is a capital investment?
        • 5.2
          101
          How are investments evaluated?
        • 5.3
          102
          Investment calculations
        • 5.4
          119
          How is the required rate of return calculated?
        • 5.5
          122
          Capital investment analysis in practice
      • 6
        125
        Accounting
        • 6.1
          126
          Current recording of transactions
        • 6.2
          130
          T-accounts and double-entry bookkeeping
        • 6.3
          138
          Systematic order of the accounts
        • 6.4
          140
          Bookkeeping for VAT
        • 6.5
          141
          Accurate bookkeeping is not easy in practice
        • 6.6
          142
          Management accounting
      • 7
        145
        Financial accounting – reporting to external stakeholders
        • 7.1
          145
          Financial accounting
        • 7.2
          150
          The annual financial statements – balance sheet and income statement
        • 7.3
          159
          Administration report, cash flow analysis, interim report, and the auditor’s report
        • 7.4
          161
          Preparation of the financial statements
        • 7.5
          171
          Taxed profit compared with accounting profit
        • 7.6
          172
          What do the financial statements tell us?
        • 7.7
          179
          Consolidated financial statements
      • 8
        183
        Corporate finance
        • 8.1
          184
          Capital requirements: Working capital
        • 8.2
          191
          Capital structure
        • 8.3
          195
          Financing the operations
        • 8.4
          201
          Cash flow analysis
        • 8.5
          203
          Financial risks
        • 8.6
          210
          Two sides of financing
      • 9
        211
        Industrial operations – a link in a larger value chain
        • 9.1
          211
          The company’s operations in the value chain
        • 9.2
          217
          The company’s supply chain
    • 221
      References
    • 223
      Appendix
    • 225
      Dictionary for Terms in Industrial Management: English–Swedish
    • 232
      Dictionary for Terms in Industrial Management: Swedish–English
    • 239
      Interest tables
    • 243
      Index

Information

Författare:
Mats Engwall Anna Jerbrant Bo Karlson Fredrik Lagergren Per Storm Paul Westin
Översättare:
Marcia Halvorsen
Språk:
Engelska
ISBN:
9789144107882
Utgivningsår:
2016
Artikelnummer:
38967-01
Upplaga:
Första
Sidantal:
248

Författare

Mats Engwall

Mats Engwall är professor i industriell ekonomi på KTH. Han är civilingenjör i flygteknik och tekn.dr i industriell ekonomi och organisation från K...

Anna Jerbrant

Anna Jerbrant är universitetslektor på Institutionen för industriell ekonomi och organisation på KTH och har haft ansvar för ett stort antal kurser...

Bo Karlson

Bo Karlson undervisar och forskar på Institutionen för industriell ekonomi och organisation på KTH, där han också är studierektor. Han är civilinge...

Fredrik Lagergren

Fredrik Lagergren är tekn.dr i industriell ekonomi från KTH och verkställande direktör för KTH Executive School. Som programledare inom KTH Executi...

Per Storm

Per Storm är bergsingenjör och tekn.dr i industriell ekonomi samt docent i material­vetenskap på KTH. Han har tidigare varit verkställande direktör...

Paul Westin

Paul Westin är civilingenjör i industriell Ekonomi från KTH och ställföreträdande avdelningschef på Energimyndigheten. Han har tidigare varit verks...

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