Banking and Financial 2018 - Cash Management: A User’s Perspective – The How’s, Why’s and Wherefores
Date2018-01-16
Deadline2018-01-16
VenueAurora, USA - United States
KeywordsCashFlow Management; Finance Training Program
Website
Topics/Call fo Papers
OVERVIEW
Cash management seems simple enough; money comes in, money goes out. However, managing the flows and gathering the right information at the right time is complicated and tricky. Understanding the pitfalls and anticipating Murphy’s Law is both a science and an art.
WHY SHOULD YOU ATTEND
Cash is King! You’ve heard that I’m sure. But managing cash can be a pain in the butt. Establishing procedures, maintaining banking relationships, and getting good, reliable information are some of the key elements of good cash management.
The larger the company, the more complex the issues and hence the solutions. No longer a pencil and paper enterprise; managing cash is the Rubik’s Cube of finance.
A bank that is not making its commercial and small business customers’ lives easier cannot expect them to utilize its Cash Management products. Internet cash management is typically the anchor product and ancillary systems such as ACH, positive pay and bill pay are often bolted on as an afterthought.
AREAS COVERED
Inflows, outflows, and information
Bank products and services
Where to get data
Internal and external information
Cash position
Budgeting and forecasting
Excel versus Treasury workstations
Department structure
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
An essential part of cash management is budgeting and forecasting and managing actuals against both expectations. Understanding the source of the data as well as the confidence you have in its reliability plays a large part in the management of your company’s cash.
WHO WILL BENEFIT
Treasurers
Cash Managers
Assistant Treasurers
Operations managers
Payments managers
Compliance Officers
Accountants and CPAs
Accounts receivables managers
Accounts payables managers
Procurement managers
SPEAKER
Ray Graber has a deep and thorough understanding of banking, technology, and finance. His experience includes banking technology research at TowerGroup; best practices internet policies at FleetBoston, wire transfer operations and product launches at Citibank and BankBoston; and treasury operations for a $325 million public company.
Mr. Graber was an adjunct professor at the Carroll Graduate School of Management at Boston College where he taught E-Banking, the MBA Leadership Course, Corporate Finance, and the Financial Management of Commercial Banks. He also taught Working Capital and Cash Management at the Bentley College Graduate Business Program.
Ray holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Mathematics and an MBA in Finance and Computer Science from Boston College.
For more details click on this link
http://bit.ly/2kqyCMO
Email: support-AT-trainingdoyens.com
Toll Free:+1-888-300-8494
Tel: +1-720-996-1616
Fax: +1-888-909-1882
PRICE :$199
Cash management seems simple enough; money comes in, money goes out. However, managing the flows and gathering the right information at the right time is complicated and tricky. Understanding the pitfalls and anticipating Murphy’s Law is both a science and an art.
WHY SHOULD YOU ATTEND
Cash is King! You’ve heard that I’m sure. But managing cash can be a pain in the butt. Establishing procedures, maintaining banking relationships, and getting good, reliable information are some of the key elements of good cash management.
The larger the company, the more complex the issues and hence the solutions. No longer a pencil and paper enterprise; managing cash is the Rubik’s Cube of finance.
A bank that is not making its commercial and small business customers’ lives easier cannot expect them to utilize its Cash Management products. Internet cash management is typically the anchor product and ancillary systems such as ACH, positive pay and bill pay are often bolted on as an afterthought.
AREAS COVERED
Inflows, outflows, and information
Bank products and services
Where to get data
Internal and external information
Cash position
Budgeting and forecasting
Excel versus Treasury workstations
Department structure
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
An essential part of cash management is budgeting and forecasting and managing actuals against both expectations. Understanding the source of the data as well as the confidence you have in its reliability plays a large part in the management of your company’s cash.
WHO WILL BENEFIT
Treasurers
Cash Managers
Assistant Treasurers
Operations managers
Payments managers
Compliance Officers
Accountants and CPAs
Accounts receivables managers
Accounts payables managers
Procurement managers
SPEAKER
Ray Graber has a deep and thorough understanding of banking, technology, and finance. His experience includes banking technology research at TowerGroup; best practices internet policies at FleetBoston, wire transfer operations and product launches at Citibank and BankBoston; and treasury operations for a $325 million public company.
Mr. Graber was an adjunct professor at the Carroll Graduate School of Management at Boston College where he taught E-Banking, the MBA Leadership Course, Corporate Finance, and the Financial Management of Commercial Banks. He also taught Working Capital and Cash Management at the Bentley College Graduate Business Program.
Ray holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Mathematics and an MBA in Finance and Computer Science from Boston College.
For more details click on this link
http://bit.ly/2kqyCMO
Email: support-AT-trainingdoyens.com
Toll Free:+1-888-300-8494
Tel: +1-720-996-1616
Fax: +1-888-909-1882
PRICE :$199
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Last modified: 2017-12-21 14:36:14