Sales Forecasting / cash flow Flashcards

1
Q

What are the methods of sales forecasting?

A

moving averages, correlation, extrapolation

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2
Q

What is a moving average?

A

a technique for identifying an underlying trend by smoothing out fluctuations in data.
These can be 3 or 4 period M.A

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3
Q

What are positives and negatives of using moving averages?

A

+ reduces fluctuations, easier to predict sales, good for erratic and dynamic markets
- doesn’t show exactly when failures occur/success periods, no external input on data

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4
Q

What is extrapolation?

A

using trends established from historical data to forecast the future.

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5
Q

What are positives and negatives of extrapolating data?

A

+ rough idea where business is headed, simple, logical (established data)
- making a decision that everything will remain constant, line drawn across sales is subjective

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6
Q

What is correlation?

A

looking at the strength of a relationship between two variables.

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7
Q

What is the independent variable?

A

the factor that causes the dependant variable to change

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8
Q

What is the dependant variable?

A

The variable that is influenced by the independent variable.

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9
Q

give an example of when an independent variable works with sales:

A

when investing money into marketing trying to boost sales figures. If the money invested into marketing isn’t making a positive correlation then it would be ineffective marketing.

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10
Q

What are positives and negatives of using correlation?

A

+ considers external factors, simple model, hard to incorrectly use, find previous research
- hard to select correct variables, possible doesn’t show the potential sales, could choose a manipulating variable

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11
Q

What is working capital?

A

pays for the day-to-day running costs such as wages and sales on credit. The cash available in the business

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12
Q

What is the cycle of working capital?

A
  1. sell to customers on credit
  2. customers (debtors) pay up
  3. buy materials
  4. produce goods
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13
Q

What is a cash flow forecast?

A

prediction of future inflow and outflow

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14
Q

What is net cash flow?

A

Total inflows - total outflows

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15
Q

What is a closing and opening balance?

A

the closing balance of the previous month is the opening balance of the new month.

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16
Q

What are limitations of a cash flow forecast?

A

doesn’t show profitability, doesn’t consider other factors, hard to accurately predict, easy to overestimate, only a prediction, wont be useful if the business has no post data, uncertainty in a market fluctuations

17
Q

What are uses of a cash flow forecast?

A

identifies issues where resources need to be allocated, to secure finance, measure success and growth, allows business to set targets.

18
Q

What are index numbers?

What is a base value?

A

are an economic data figure reflecting price or quantity compared with a standard or base value.
The base value is 100
This then increases or decreases depending on capital made.

19
Q

Give an example of a base number:

A

If the index number was 95 from a previous year being 100 then the profit made would be 95% of the 100 from last year.

20
Q

How can a business increase inflows?

A
advertising effectively
market research
new products
extension strategy
deals
increase prices
sell unwanted assets
21
Q

How can a business decrease outflows?

A
change supplier
relocate
just-in-time
production method
redundancies
economies of scale
operate efficiently
delayering (remove hierarchy layers - less managers)
sacrifice quality 
better deals on utilities
remove motivators
22
Q

What is a direct cost?

A

costs which are directly associated with the manufacturing - (income statement = cost of sales)