Sunday, February 22, 2009

Hi Today is Sunday

Wish you happy blogging

Friday, February 20, 2009

Include cost auditing in accounting practices, says ICWAI chief

Special Correspondent Hindu

HYDERABAD: The President of the Institute of Cost and Works Accountants of India, Kunal Banerjee, has urged the Government to incorporate cost auditing mechanism in company audits.

Second audit, as proposed by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), should provide for a different approach by checking the efficiencies, costs and other activities, he said.

Addressing a press conference here on Saturday, Mr. Banerjee said the institute wanted the Government to set up a regulatory body, Accounting Oversight Board, to supervise auditing and accounting practices.

Operational eficiencies

Verification of operational efficiencies of all sectors that played a role in the country’s economy should be made mandatory. Only then, any malpractice could come under the radar of the disciplinary committee.

He made a strong pitch for the companies to move from corporate governance to enterprise governance practice that would encompass not just the financial performance but the overall efficiency of an entity.

Corporate governance

Corporate Governance was about how companies were directed ad controlled. Though compliance and conformance to regulations was essential, there should be a structure that supported the governance of a company.

“Move away from compliance governance to business governance. The practice should come out of the check-list mentality which leads to governance in letter but not spirit,” he said.

He also urged the Government to constitute a ‘quality review board’ to check if everything was going on well. Building competence and reducing wastages should become in-built in the accounting practices, said Mr. Banerjee. Vice-President of the institute A. S. Durga Prasad said corporate reporting system needed to be strengthened. Clause 49 of SEBI guidelines on listing agreements specifically mentioned about performance monitoring.

http://www.hindu.com/2009/02/08/stories/2009020855461300.htm

 

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Guide to Public Speaking

Know the room.
Be familiar with the place in which you will speak.
Arrive early, walk around the speaking area and practice using the microphone and any visual aids.

Know the audience.
Greet some of the audience as they arrive.
It's easier to speak to a group of friends than to a group of strangers.

Know your material.
Practice your speech and revise it if necessary.
If you're not familiar with your material or are uncomfortable with it, your nervousness will increase.

Relax.
Ease tension by doing exercises.

Visualize yourself giving your speech.
Imagine yourself speaking, your voice loud, clear, and assured.
When you visualize yourself as successful, you will be successful.

Realize that people want you to succeed.
They don't want you to fail.
Audiences want you to be interesting, stimulating, informative, and entertaining.

Don't apologize.
If you mention your nervousness or apologize for any problems you think you have with your speech, you may be calling the audience's attention to something they hadn't noticed. Keep silent.

Concentrate on the message -- not the medium.
Focus your attention away from your own anxieties, and outwardly toward your message and your audience.
Your nervousness will dissipate.

Turn nervousness into positive energy.
Harness your nervous energy and transform it into vitality and enthusiasm.

Gain experience.
Experience builds confidence, which is the key to effective speaking.
A Toastmasters club can provide the experience you need.