Title: Lady and the Tramp Student Coaching Slides
1Lady and the TrampStudent Coaching Slides
2Contracts are Legally Enforceable Agreements
- Contracts are agreements enforced by courts
consistent with the parties intention at the
time they entered the agreement - Courts seek to protect the reasonable
expectations of the parties The court will
interpret based on what the parties agreed to,
not what the court thinks is fair or best
3Contracts Missing orAmbiguous terms
- If contractual terms are missing or ambiguous, a
court will supply missing terms or clarify
ambiguities to the extent that the court can
determine what the parties intended at the time
they entered the agreement. - However, they do not substitute terms based what
the court feels is right or fair.
4Contracts Custom Usage
- In trying to interpret the parties intent on
entering a contract, courts sometimes look to
terms that may have been implied but not
specified in an agreement. - In some industries, certain terms are routinely
used and may be assumed to exist in contracts,
even if it is not specifically spelled out. - Courts look to an industrys custom and usage
in trying to determine whether an ambiguous or
missing contractual term was implied through
standard industry practice.
5Invasion of Privacy
- There are four different types of invasion of
privacy - Intrusion on privacy or solitude
- Public disclosure of private information
- Placing someone in a false light (i.e. giving a
wrong and damaging impression about someone) - Commercial appropriate of ones name or likeness
- Which of these four might apply to this case?
6Invasion of Privacy
- People have the right to commercialize their name
or image, including their likeness (for example,
a photo of a model) or their voice (for example,
an actor doing the voice of a cartoon character.)
- People may give their consent to having their
name or image commercialized, which occurs, for
example, when an athlete is paid to sponsor a
product.
7Gross Margin
- Gross Margin or Gross Profit is sales revenue
minus cost of goods sold. - This definition is for a retailer or
manufacturer, not a service company. - Footnotes under the project income statement
explain what is included in each account. - Footnotes to the financial statements provide
readers information that help them better
understand the accounting rules, assumptions and
items in the statements.
8Sales Revenue
- Sales revenue represents the amount that a
company records for sales of products or
services.
9Contribution to Overhead
- Contribution to overhead represents the amount
that a product or project generates after it
covers all of its direct costs. - It represents the amount that would be lost in
profit if the product was discontinued, assuming
that overhead is not affected by the product.
10Direct Cost
- A direct cost is an item that can be traced
directly to a product. It is a cost that would
be avoided if no production and sales of this
product took place.
11Profit before Tax
- Profit before tax is the amount that is left
after all expenses are subtracted from revenue,
including an allocation of Buena Vistas cost of
running its operations. - Taxes are not allocated to products/projects in
this company.
12Future Value
- Future value represents the amount that will
accumulate at a future time given an investment
amount and an interest rate. - Future value calculations that can be done in
excel or with a hand held calculator. The basic
formula for the future amount is - amount (1interest rate per period)number of
periods
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