Accounting is the language of business. You should be able to explain the top 30 concepts to your cousin in a way they understand it.



Mastering Business Essentials: Accounting


Instructeurs : John Kim
Enseignant de premier plan
Inclus avec
Expérience recommandée
Ce que vous apprendrez
Understand key differences between revenue and cost drivers. Delineate financial statements and they questions they help to answer.
Détails à connaître

Ajouter à votre profil LinkedIn
avril 2025
2 devoirs
Découvrez comment les employés des entreprises prestigieuses maîtrisent des compétences recherchées


Obtenez un certificat professionnel
Ajoutez cette qualification à votre profil LinkedIn ou à votre CV
Partagez-le sur les réseaux sociaux et dans votre évaluation de performance

Il y a 5 modules dans ce cours
Accounting is the universally accepted language of business. It allows managers, investors, creditors - everyone - to have a unified, and commonly accepted way to analyze the business. It's like a superhero with x-ray vision to see the insides of a company's business. It helps to answer questions like: How much did we sell? Are we profitable? Who owns the business? How much debt do we have? Do we have enough cash to pay our bills?
Inclus
4 vidéos1 lecture
The income statement (starting with revenues) is like a waterfall, where you take out different expenses until you get to the "bottom line" of net profits. Your ability to do this simply and develop personal intuition about the different types of margin (gross, operating, net) will immediately differentiate you from most people. Let's use the example of a pen company to dig into what's driving costs and profitability.
Inclus
3 vidéos1 lecture1 devoir
The balance sheet is a financial snapshot of the ownership of a business. Namely, how much of it do you own (equity) and how much it was borrowed from other people with debt (liabilities). The main formula to remember is A = L + E. Assets (what you have) = Liabilities (what you owe) + Equity (what you own). This is a super powerful way to answer questions like a) What's our ability to pay our bills? b) How much debt do we have? c) How much inventory do we have?
Inclus
3 vidéos2 lectures
Debt is a powerful tool in business that is sometimes misunderstood. 1) Debt can be good if you can borrow funds responsibly, make a good return on it, pay back the interest, and grow the business faster than if you didn't have debt. 2) Debt can be bad if you borrow beyond your ability to repay it, so that you are stuck in a cycle of debt. (e.g., keeping credit card balance and paying 20%+ annually) This same dynamic "debt can be good or bad" applies to student loan debt and government public debt.
Inclus
1 vidéo2 lectures
Cash flow statement is the 3rd financial statement. The cashflow statement shows how money comes in/out of a company through operations, financing (raising money), and investing (getting a return on their investments). Often it only gets attention when a company is in crisis or is having trouble paying their bills. Return on investment (ROI) is a common and useful tool in business. If I invest X, and get Y, how much of a ROI did I get? Of course, it gets very complicated quickly because of the addition question: a) how accurate is that forecast b) what's your risk tolerance? c) what's the time frame d) what are the alternatives?
Inclus
3 vidéos1 lecture1 devoir1 évaluation par les pairs
Instructeurs


Offert par
Pour quelles raisons les étudiants sur Coursera nous choisissent-ils pour leur carrière ?





Ouvrez de nouvelles portes avec Coursera Plus
Accès illimité à 10,000+ cours de niveau international, projets pratiques et programmes de certification prêts à l'emploi - tous inclus dans votre abonnement.
Faites progresser votre carrière avec un diplôme en ligne
Obtenez un diplôme auprès d’universités de renommée mondiale - 100 % en ligne
Rejoignez plus de 3 400 entreprises mondiales qui ont choisi Coursera pour les affaires
Améliorez les compétences de vos employés pour exceller dans l’économie numérique
Foire Aux Questions
Accounting is the global language of business. This is what enables global trade, mergers & acquisitions, fiduciary responsibility, and investor confidence. Accounting has a rich history and there are many levels of expertise.
Do you need to become a CPA-level expert with detailed practitioner-level knowledge of debits and credits? No.
Do you need to know the difference between COGS and SG&A? Yes.
If accounting has 10 levels of understanding, this will easily cover the essentials for you.
John Kim, is an associate professor in the practice, at Emory University. He is a management consultant by experience and passion. He's been teaching strategy, healthcare, and consulting since 2017.
He has a Management Consulting specialization here with 1,300+ reviews with a weighted average 4.9 star rating here.
His teaching style is interactive - yes, even with online videos - and wants you to succeed. See his teaching philosophy here.
Access to lectures and assignments depends on your type of enrollment. If you take a course in audit mode, you will be able to see most course materials for free. To access graded assignments and to earn a Certificate, you will need to purchase the Certificate experience, during or after your audit. If you don't see the audit option:
The course may not offer an audit option. You can try a Free Trial instead, or apply for Financial Aid.
The course may offer 'Full Course, No Certificate' instead. This option lets you see all course materials, submit required assessments, and get a final grade. This also means that you will not be able to purchase a Certificate experience.
Plus de questions
Aide financière disponible,