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Courses/Accounting & Tax/NASBA - Accounting

Revenue Recognition – Identify the Contract Part 2

This course is a continuation of discussion over Step One in the revenue recognition process of Identify the Contract.

Created byLynn Fountain
4.3
(17 reviews)
BeginnerUpdated Jun 18, 2022
Revenue Recognition – Identify the Contract Part 2

What You'll Learn

check_circleExplore the components and requirements around contract modifications.
check_circleIdentify methods to determine contract modification status.
check_circleExplore accounting considerations for contract modifications.
check_circleIdentify methods to account for unpriced change orders.
check_circleExplore modifications that fall under the cumulative catch-up accounting rules.
check_circleExplore accounting for non-finalized contract changes.
check_circleExplore accounting for contract cancellations.
check_circleIdentify accounting treatment when it is determined a contract does not exist.
check_circleExplore the concept of contract combinations.

About This Course

This course is a continuation of discussion over Step One in the revenue recognition process of Identify the Contract. Specifically, this session delves further into the considerations surrounding contract modifications, change orders, unpriced change orders, cancellations, non-finalized changes, and accounting treatment when a contract does not exist.

On May 28, 2014, the FASB and IASB issued converged guidance on recognizing revenue in contracts with customers. The objective of the guidance is to establish principles to report useful information to users of financial statements about the nature, amount, timing, and uncertainty of revenue from contracts with customers. The new guidance provides several benefits to financial statement users. Entities applying the new standard for contract revenue recognition will follow five steps:

• Identify the contract with the customer • Identify performance obligations • Determine transaction price • Allocate transaction price to performance obligations • Recognize revenue when each performance obligation is satisfied

The course utilizes many examples from numerous industries to enhance learning of the various concepts.

Resources Consulted: • ASC 606-10-32-15 to 32-20, 55-244 to 55-246. • ASU 2014-09: “Revenue from Contracts with Customers.” BC229-BC247. • Croner-I, “A14 Revenue from Contracts with Customers.” (2019). Section 7.4.2-2 and 7.4.2-2. • FASB, ”Revenue Recognition Implementation Q&As.” January 2020). Questions 31-37. • FASB TRG Memo 20: “Significant Financing Components.” 26 January 2015. • FASB TRG Memo 30: “Significant Financing Components.” 30 March 2015. • EY, Financial Reporting Developments: “Revenue from contracts with customers.”January 2020. Section 5.5. • KPMG, Handbook: “Revenue Recognition.”December 2019. Section 5.5. • PWC, “Revenue from contracts with customers” March 2020. Section 4.4. • https://www.revenuehub.org/

Field of Study: Accounting

Your Instructor

Lynn Fountain
Lynn Fountain
menu_book206 courses
star10,633 reviews

Lynn Fountain has over 45 years of experience spanning public accounting, corporate accounting and consulting. 24 years of her experience has been working in the areas of internal and external auditing. She is a subject matter expert in multiple fields including internal audit, ethics, fraud evaluations, Sarbanes-Oxley, enterprise risk management, governance, financial management and compliance. Ms. Fountain has held two Chief Audit Executive positions for international companies. In 2011, as the Chief Audit Executive for an international construction/ engineering firm, she was involved in the active investigation of a joint venture fraud. The investigation included work with the FBI and ultimately led to indictment of the perpetrators and recovery of $13M. Ms. Fountain is currently engaged in her own training and consulting business and is a regular trainer for the AICPA. Ms. Fountain is the author of three separate technical books. “Raise the Red Flag – The Internal Auditors Guide to Fraud Evaluations” was published by the Institute of Internal Auditors Research Foundation. -“Leading The Internal Audit Function” and -“Ethics and The Internal Auditor Political Dilemma” were published by Taylor & Francis In addition Ms. Fountain was a contributing author to the certification program exam for the National Association of Accountants. She also has certificate programs on various on-line platforms. Ms. Fountain has performed as an adjunct instructor for the School of Business for Grantham University and developed the first internal audit curriculum for the School of Business at the University of Kansas. Ms. Fountain obtained her BSBA from Pittsburg State University and her MBA from Washburn University in Kansas. She has her CGMA, CRMA credentials and CPA certificate (non-active).

Credit Information

Do these courses count toward my professional development requirements?

This portal is provided as a training and development resource for City of Markham employees. Every course is delivered by a qualified subject matter expert or learning organization, is quantifiable in hours, and is verifiable — you receive a documented certificate of completion for every course you finish, stored on LearnFormula indefinitely.

If you hold a professional designation (for example in engineering, accounting, human resources, or law), courses may be counted as professionally relevant, verifiable learning activities toward your continuing professional development. Individual practitioners are responsible for confirming that an activity meets the requirements of their professional body. For questions about the City of Markham's training and development policies, please speak with your people leader or Human Resources.

What Students Are Saying

4.3
Student's Choice
17 reviews

Frequently Asked Questions

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