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Building Financial Models with Microsoft Excel: A Guide for Business Professionals
 
 
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Building Financial Models with Microsoft Excel: A Guide for Business Professionals [Hardcover]

K. Scott Proctor (Author)
2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Wiley Finance October 4, 2004
A comprehensive guide to building financial models
Building Financial Models with Microsoft Excel + CD-ROM provides beginning or intermediate level computer users with step-by-step instructions on building financial models using Microsoft Excel-the most popular spreadsheet program available. The accompanying CD-ROM contains Excel worksheets that track the course of the book and allow readers to build their own financial models. This comprehensive resource also covers important topics such as the concept of valuation, the concept of sensitivity analysis, the concepts of contribution margin and financial ratios and the basics of building and using a Capitalization Table.
K. Scott Proctor, CFA, is the Director of Investor Analytics at SNL Financial, a financial information provider.

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Editorial Reviews

From the Inside Flap

A financial model is a quantitative representation of a company’s past, present, and future business operations. Companies of all types and sizes use financial models every day to analyze and plan their business activities. Financial models serve as the foundation and basis of standard financial accounting reports, including the balance sheet, the income statement, and the statement of cash flows.

While many business professionals are familiar with the "output" of financial models, namely consolidated financial statements, few are truly adept at building an accurate and effective financial model from the ground up. Building Financial Models with Microsoft Excel addresses this real, immediate, and significant issue like no other book. Written in a straightforward and accessible manner, it is a comprehensive resource for business professionals with a beginner or intermediate level of experience in both Microsoft Excel and finance or accounting.

Building a financial model is a logical, step-by-step process, where each component builds upon or feeds into another component. Building Financial Models with Microsoft Excel–organized to closely follow this process–is divided into three major parts and includes a companion CD-ROM, which contains sample Excel worksheets that allow you to follow the examples illustrated within the book or build your own financial models according to your specific situation.

Part One of Building Financial Models with Microsoft Excel introduces the concepts of budgets and financial models, and covers the steps involved in building the master budget –as well as its two key elements, the operating budget and financial budget. You’ll learn the fundamentals of the budgeting process and how various components of a master budget relate to one another. The master budget template provided in this part of the book serves as a road map for building each individual component of the financial model.

Part Two of this book deals with a company’s consolidated financial statements and free cash flows. It provides you with a guide to building these statements from scratch, based upon the operating and financial budgets of a company. The final part of Building Financial Models with Microsoft Excel–Part Three–deals with several important topics, including: various ways to analyze a financial model; the concept of valuation; and capitalization, or ownership, charts.

Filled with in-depth insights and easy-to-understand instructions, Building Financial Models with Microsoft Excel is a practical guide to understanding and creating fully functioning financial models.

From the Back Cover

Praise for Building Financial Models with Microsoft Excel

"Scott Proctor offers a comprehensive and easy-to-understand guide to constructing and using financial models; I recommend this book as a tutorial and a reference for business professionals, entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, and angel investors."
–Jack M. Gill, PhD, Vanguard Ventures

"This book is about making good decisions. . . . The modeling tools described in this book establish an analytical framework which adds much needed clarity to effective decision-making. This in-depth guide should well serve experienced professionals as a reference and business students and entrepreneurs as a tutorial."
–Eugene V. Fife, Retired Chairman, Goldman Sachs International

"Excel has become a critical element for decision-making in the modern business environment. Mr. Proctor’s book is a solid introduction to utilizing this complex tool."
–William Polk Carey, Chairman and Founder, W.P. Carey & Co. LLC

"Readable, comprehensive, and engaging–buy this book; study it; and thereby build your capacity to harness the computer in the solution of real-world business problems."
–Robert F. Bruner, Distinguished Professor of Business Administration and Executive Director of the Batten Institute, Darden Graduate Business School, University of Viginia

"Proctor provides a thoughtful and coherent link between financial/accounting theory and common Wall Street practice by addressing key questions in financial modeling like what to build, how to build, and how to analyze."
–Reid Nagle, Chairman and Founder, SNL Financial LC

"This book offers an excellent guide to building financial models. Proctor guides readers through the many interrelated steps involved in constructing and using financial models, a vital skill in today’s business world."
–Jeffrey Nuechterlein, Managing Partner, Isis Capital

"Building Financial Models with Microsoft Excel takes a complex but critical subject and presents it in a concise, easy-to-follow fashion. This book is an indispensable reference guide for anyone who needs to build or analyze financial models using Microsoft Excel."
–Michael R. Lincoln, Partner, Cooley Godward LLP

"A get-serious, get-gritty modeling enabler that is thoughtfully written and executed."
–Robert Albertson, Principal and Chief Strategist, Sandler O’Neill & Partners, LP


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley (October 4, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0471661031
  • ISBN-13: 978-0471661030
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #917,055 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Scott Proctor is the Head of Global Corporate Technology Operations at eBay. Scott's experience includes working as the CTO (Chief Technology Officer) and Head of Quality for the Global Marketing Services Division of GSI Commerce, as an Executive Director at AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals and as a CIO (Chief Information Officer) at GE (General Electric) Healthcare Life Sciences.

He earned his BA, MBA, and MS (Management Information Systems) from the University of Virginia and he is a CFA (Chartered Financial Analyst) charterholder. Mr. Proctor also is a Certified Six Sigma Black Belt (CSSBB) by the American Society for Quality (ASQ) and he has an ITIL (v3) Foundation Certificate in IT Service Management.

 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
2.7 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

55 of 58 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Hardly a Guide for any Professional in Finance, September 27, 2006
This review is from: Building Financial Models with Microsoft Excel: A Guide for Business Professionals (Hardcover)
Chances are that if you are even thinking about financial modeling you have at least a basic understanding of excel and accounting. If that is the case, this book will prove to be almost completely useless. The modeling examples used within the book are so simplistic that if you have had half a semester in an accounting class you will have a more indepth understanding than what the book provides. Financial valuation is almost non existant as is sensitivity analysis, with each getting a short token chapter. The use of excel is at such a beginner level that I feel as if I did more indepth work with excel attempting to figure out my student loan payments. I have read the book from front to back and feel as if it has provided me with no useful manner in which to conduct any sort of modeling other than in an imaginary world where companies only sell one product, have almost no expenses, collect all their recievables within the next pay period and other such ludicrious assumptions. In addition there are several errors in the examples provided in the book. These made me chuckle since anyone who could catch them would not need the book and anyone who actually needs the book for its rudimentary "guidance" would be left bewildered and confused as to why they got the answers wrong.
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24 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars goes somewhat beyond introductory Excel, March 18, 2007
This review is from: Building Financial Models with Microsoft Excel: A Guide for Business Professionals (Hardcover)
The book has some merit to a reader new to Excel, and who wants something a bit more indepth than the Idiots or Dummy's books on Excel. Proctor gives examples that do more with the spreadsheets, and you get to appreciate what Excel can provide.

But, as other reviewers have cogently pointed out, the book really is not for business professionals, despite what the title says. An accountant or businessperson should already have more background on financial modelling with spreadsheets that the level provided here.
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26 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars WAY too Basic for Most, March 13, 2007
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This review is from: Building Financial Models with Microsoft Excel: A Guide for Business Professionals (Hardcover)
This work lacks substance for anyone remotely likely to have to do any real financial analysis. The examples are too simplistic to be of much practical value. If you have virtually no training or experience in Excel or accounting or finance then this book might be worth borrowing from a library to get you up to speed. If you have more than a week of experience in this area then it will sit on the shelf.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The Cambridge Dictionary defines a budget as "a plan to show how much money a person or organization will earn and how much they will need or be able to spend." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Cash Budget, Operating Expenses Budget, Headcount Cost, Inventory Budget, Cost-of-Goods-Sold Budget, Cap Chart, Headcount Overview, Hardware Engineer, Chief Financial Officer, Depreciation Budget, Customers Budget, Sales Composition Budget, Business Development, Microsoft Excel, Chief Executive Officer, Headcount Budget, Budgeted Statement of Income, Inventory Turnover, Asset Turnover, Receivable Turnover, Administrative Assistant, Calculation of Return, Pre-Tax Margin, Sales Income Assets, Above Calculations
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