i need a memo done. i will attach the outline, the prompt, an and an example . and cite sources from this website. i need at least 3-4 sources
http://www.ulib.niu.edu:2541/bsi/search/advanced?vid=0&sid=b704d115-a103-49ac-aee0-4df5b3518db0%40sdc-v-sessmgr01ACCY 375 Memo Assignment Prompt Carefully read the following hypothetical scenario. Identify and research the relevant issues and write a properly formatted and well-organized memo that adequately responds to the situation. Cite any source material used in properly formatted footnotes or in-text citations with a works cited page. You will be sending the memo as an email attachment, so you also need to write the email to the intended recipient! The Scenario: CFC’s Financial Fiasco Upon graduating with your accounting degree and several thousand dollars of student loan debt, you decide to work in the non-profit sector, so you will qualify for the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program and be debt-free after 10, rather than 20, years of payments. You find a job as the controller of City Futbol Club, LLC (“CFC”). The pay isn’t great, but you get to set your own schedule, work from home when you want to, and take on more responsibility while gaining valuable experience in all of the various aspects of a business, not just accounting. CFC was founded five years ago by the head coach, Frank Lampard, with the help of soccer mom / team manager, Fiona Apple. The club started with just two teams but has since grown to 10 teams (approximately 180 players) and is continuing to grow. From the beginning, CFC has been operated exclusively by Frank and Fiona, neither of whom has a background in business or accounting. There are also three assistant coaches (Wally, Diana, and Sean), and Fiona’s 18- year-old son, Brad, helps part-time with bookkeeping and prepares CFC’s tax returns (because he’s the only one who could figure out how to use the tax-preparation software). CFC is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization. Its mission is to make travel soccer accessible to underprivileged children whose families would otherwise be unable to afford it. During the process of obtaining 501(c)(3) status, Frank’s cousin Orlando, an IT specialist, used generic online forms to draft the necessary documents, including the bylaws, which Frank and Fiona saw mostly as a formality so never actually reviewed. Frank is the president of the organization. There is a board of directors, which consists of Frank, Fiona, and Fiona’s sister Selena, but they have never held a meeting. There is also no policies and procedures manual or budget. Frank has delegated all responsibility for the finances to Fiona, so he can focus on coaching, recruiting, and developing the club’s programming. Thus, Fiona handles all of the money. Among other things, she does the billing; collects the players’ fees; pays herself, Frank, the assistant coaches, and her son; pays the fees for referees and field usage; pays her and the coaches’ miscellaneous expenses, such as tournament travel, hotel expenses, and meal reimbursements; and pays for Frank’s, Brad’s, the assistant coaches’, and her cellphones. Fiona doesn’t use the 20-year-old desktop computer in the club’s office to keep track of the finances because she finds it more complicated than the paper system she has created. She enters all payments received into one spiral notebook, then deposits them into a checking account opened in the club’s name. She then uses a separate notebook for all outgoing payments. She has a set of binders that contain a folder for each player where she puts the various registration forms, participation waivers, health information, etc. At the beginning of every season, she sends each player an invoice for their fees, and places a copy of that invoice in their folder, but there are no subsequent invoices once the first one goes out. She keeps the binders, used notebooks, deposit slips, monthly bank statements, vendor agreements and invoices, and other miscellaneous documents in boxes in Frank’s office. In addition to coaching, Wally, Diana, and Sean take turns working in the small shop outside the club’s office, selling equipment and uniforms and ordering inventory as needed. The store only accepts cash or check as payment and provides hand written receipts. They also sometimes collect fees from parents who bring their payments to the shop or to practice instead of mailing them to the office, but sometimes they lose or forget to give Fiona the fees. Frank has hired you because the club has grown so large that managing the finances has become too much for Fiona. He is also concerned because one of the parents, an attorney, cautioned him that non-profit organizations are prone to mismanagement and fraud and frequently fail because issues are not identified and addressed before it is too late. While Fiona is stressed out and sometimes suggests that she is overworked and being taken advantage of, Frank doesn’t believe Fiona would ever intentionally do anything to hurt the club. He does worry, however, that the club may be losing money because everything is so disorganized. In your first week as controller, a.k.a. Superhero Accountant ready to save the club from certain death, you immediately see that there are some very obvious red flags in how the club is operated. You definitely have your work cut out for you, but you have created a plan for how to fix things, starting with the most significant problems. You have scheduled a meeting with Frank to discuss the problems and solutions, hopefully getting his approval to start implementing your plan right away. Because it is fairly complicated, and you want the meeting to be as productive as possible, you decide to send him a memo in advance. The memo explains the problems you have identified and how you plan to address them. Below is a generic job description from Monster.com Controller Job Responsibilities: Maximizes return on financial assets by establishing financial policies, procedures, controls, and reporting systems. Guides financial decisions by establishing, monitoring, and enforcing policies and procedures. Protects assets by establishing, monitoring, and enforcing internal controls. Monitors and confirms financial condition by conducting audits; providing information to external auditors. Maximizes return, and limits risk, on cash by minimizing bank balances; making investments. Prepares budgets by establishing schedules; collecting, analyzing, and consolidating financial data; recommending plans. Achieves budget objectives by scheduling expenditures; analyzing variances; initiating corrective actions. Provides status of financial condition by collecting, interpreting, and reporting financial data. Prepares special reports by collecting, analyzing, and summarizing information and trends. Complies with federal, state, and local legal requirements by studying existing and new legislation; anticipating future legislation; enforcing adherence to requirements; filing financial reports; advising management on needed actions. Ensures operation of equipment by establishing preventive maintenance requirements and service contracts; maintaining equipment inventories; evaluating new equipment and techniques. Completes operational requirements by scheduling and assigning employees; following up on work results. Maintains financial staff by recruiting, selecting, orienting, and training employees. Maintains financial staff job results by coaching, counseling, and disciplining employees; planning, monitoring, and appraising job results. Maintains professional and technical knowledge by attending educational workshops; reviewing professional publications; establishing personal networks; participating in professional societies. Protects operations by keeping financial information and plans confidential. Contributes to team effort by accomplishing related results as needed. Problems Identified As a matter of concern there are a lot of red flags to be focused upon. Mismanagement and obsolete technology are one of the main concerns including lack of expertise in entrepreneurship. Another critical area is proper record keeping and policy making by the company along with budgeting and setting targets for everyone. · Tax preparation · Brad is very young and inexperienced · Brad does the bookkeeping and prepares CFC’s tax returns · CFC is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization · Get informed about penalties regarding 501(c)(3) and why it’s important and requirements to prepare tax return correctly. · Finances · Fiona handles all the money · No use of technology; all paper · Wally, Diana and Sean sell equipment and uniforms at the shop outside, which I question as they collect fees which are supposed to be collected at the office · There is high risk in doing this as there is no check or fee collection attendance and Fiona is careless in financial management. · Only cash and check accepted as form of payment · Handwritten receipts · No record keeping · Lack of policy making with regards to regulation, supervision and oversight of business and financial operations. · No inventory tracking; ordering inventory as needed · Segregation of Duties · There is no separation of duties · Fiona does mostly everything; Billing, Authorization, collection etc. · No internal controls · Implement internal controls and describe the benefits · Give an example of another organization with the same problem and how it benefited them having controls in place · Board of Directors · Board of directors, which consists of Frank, Fiona, and Fiona’s sister Selena · Never held a meeting · Explain what this concept is and who it should include; Parents/Accountants/Professionals · Mandatory to undertake communication meetings to discuss what is happening in Company · Organize weekly meetings with Fiona for supervising day to day activities and a monthly meeting with board of directors. · Budget · No goal setting · No financial statements · helpful to track a nonprofit’s cash flow · Explain budget and benchmarking · help estimate outlined to foresee proposed expenditures and incomes for a given period and comparing with actual performance