Practical Finance for Operations and Supply Chain Management

Practical Finance for Operations and Supply Chain Management by Alejandro Serrano, published by MIT Press on March 10, 2020, is a comprehensive resource designed to introduce financial tools and concepts from an operations perspective. This 480-page book addresses the finance and operations trade-offs that professionals in engineering and related fields often encounter, providing essential knowledge for effective decision-making in operations and supply chain management.
Readers will find a thorough exploration of financial accounting, including the creation and interpretation of balance sheets, income statements, and cash flow statements. The book also delves into key concepts such as operating working capital, financial forecasting, and investment analysis tools like net present value and internal rate of return. By covering topics such as inventory management and the strategic trade-offs between offshoring and local operations, this edition serves as a valuable reference for both students and practitioners, requiring no prior knowledge of finance or accounting.
Official synopsis Publisher
An introduction to financial tools and concepts from an operations perspective, addressing finance/operations trade-offs and explaining financial accounting, working capital, investment analysis, and more.
Students and practitioners in engineering and related areas often lack the basic understanding of financial tools and concepts necessary for a career in operations or supply chain management. This book offers an introduction to finance fundamentals from an operations perspective, enabling operations and supply chain professionals to develop the skills necessary for interacting with finance people at a practical level and for making sound decisions when confronted by tradeoffs between operations and finance. Readers will learn about the essentials of financial statements, valuation tools, and managerial accounting.
The book first discusses financial accounting, explaining how to create and interpret balance sheets, income statements, and cash flow statements, and introduces the idea of operating working capital—a key concept developed in subsequent chapters. The book then covers financial forecasting, addressing such topics as sustainable growth and the liquidity/profitability tradeoff; concepts in managerial accounting, including variable versus fixed costs, direct versus indirect costs, and contribution margin; tools for investment analysis, including net present value and internal rate of return; creation of value through operating working capital, inventory management, payables, receivables, and cash; and such strategic and tactical tradeoffs as offshoring versus local and centralizing versus decentralizing. The book can be used in undergraduate and graduate courses and as a reference for professionals. No previous knowledge of finance or accounting is required.
Publisher
Topics
FAQ
What is “Practical Finance for Operations and Supply Chain Management” about?
Who is the author of “Practical Finance for Operations and Supply Chain Management”?
When was “Practical Finance for Operations and Supply Chain Management” published?
What is the ISBN for “Practical Finance for Operations and Supply Chain Management”?
What are the book details (language, pages, edition)?
