Reading: Lesson 1 - A career as an entrepreneur
Most successful entrepreneurs have learned that it takes a lot more than a great marketing idea or product innovation to make a successful business. There are many steps involved before an idea becomes a successful and rewarding business. Entrepreneurs must be able to raise capital, either from banks or investors. Once a business has been launched, the entrepreneur must be a manager—a manager of people, inventory, facilities, customer relationships, and relationships with the very banks and investors that provided the capital. Business owners quickly learn that in order to survive they need to be well-rounded, savvy individuals who can successfully manage these diverse relationships. An accounting education is ideal for providing this versatile background.
In addition to providing a good foundation for entrepreneurship in any business, an accounting
degree offers other ways of building your own business. For example, a large percentage of public
accountants work as sole proprietors—building and managing their own professional practice. This can be a very rewarding career, working closely with individuals and small businesses. One advantage of
this career is that you can establish your practice in virtually any location ranging from large cities to
rural settings. Finally, many accountants who have gained specialized expertise and experience in a
particular field start their own practice as consultants. Expertise such as this, which may be in a field
outside of traditional accounting practice, can generate billing rates well in the excess of USD 100 an
hour.
The introduction to this text provided a background for your study of accounting. Now you are
ready to learn about the forms of business organizations and the types of business activities they
perform. This chapter presents the financial statements used by businesses. These financial statements
show the results of decisions made by management. Investors, creditors, and managers use these
statements in evaluating management’s past decisions and as a basis for making future decisions.
In this chapter, you also study the accounting process (or accounting cycle) that accountants use to
prepare those financial statements. This accounting process uses financial data such as the records of
sales made to customers and purchases made from suppliers. In a systematic manner, accountants
analyze, record, classify, summarize, and finally report these data in the financial statements of
businesses. As you study this chapter, you will begin to understand the unique, systematic nature of
accounting—the language of business.