Creative visualization – astounding use of a map to show statistical data

(cross-post from Attestation Update)

A graph of Napoleon’s invasion of Russia shows the devastating losses suffered during the advance on Moscow and retreat.  It is the best illustration I’ve seen of creatively presenting a complex body of information.  Dare I say it is a beautiful graph?  Why is this of interest to us?  It shows a powerful way to communicate statistical data.

You can see the graph here at Cartographia.  Click on the map to enlarge.

One sentence of explanation allows you to interpret the entire view – (more…)

Convergence report from La Piana Consulting – part 2

Previous post introduced an article by La Piana Consulting, which discusses their report called Convergence- How Five Trends Will Reshape the Social Sector.

In their report, La Piana identifies five emerging trends.  I will mention the five with a brief comment or two on each.  As I mentioned earlier, I will clearly identify the direct quotes from their article.

Demographic shifts redefine participation ” – (more…)

Creative visualizations-military history illustration

(cross-post from Attestation Update)

I’ve been interested lately in creative ways to show data.  We accountants are great at absorbing a lot of numbers and finding the patterns.  Other people who don’t have our mind-set can not see what we see.  We need to find new ways to explain things.

How would you summarize the location and intensity of wars over the last several centuries?  One of my favorite historians would do that verbally over the course of a full-length book or a dozen columns.  (And I’d love every word of it too!)

Jordi Colomer has done so in a 5 minute video:

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Going concern issues under SSARS 19

I have two posts at Attestation Update explaining how to address going concern issues under SSARS 19.  The guidance found in SSARS 19 is rather brief.  Here are the posts:

I won’t cross-post those comments to this blog.  Please click the links above to read the discussion.

Update – SSARS 19 had been replaced by SSARS 21. All the reports have been revised. You can check out these posts at my other blog, Attestation Update:

Convergence report from La Piana Consulting – part 1

I previously discussed an article by La Piana Consulting here and here and now would like to discuss their report  Convergence – How Five Trends Will Reshape the Social Sector.

One of their key concepts is convergence.  That is the title of their report, so I guess it would make sense that is the overriding issue.  Their point is that not only are there some very major trends that are going to have a dramatic impact on the nonprofit community, but these trends will interact with each other to reinforce and compound change.

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How to get 20 co-workers fired – today’s lesson on how NOT to use social media

Seems that a fellow who was doing some marketing work for Chrysler sent out a tweet criticizing the driving skills of Detroit drivers and threw in an obscenity for spice.  He sent the tweet while stuck in traffic. 

Unfortunately, he accidentally used the Chrysler brand twitter feed instead of his personal twitter account. 

Oops.

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Don’t have all your backup media on-site the day you swap out media

So you are taking backup data off-site on a regular basis.  Good. 

Your key staff person faithfully makes a daily backup of your server to a portable hard drive.  Once a week this person dutifully brings in the portable hard drive used for last week’s daily backups.  As directed, this person disconnects the portable drive with the newest data from the server, plugs the other one in to the server, then puts the drive with new data in her backpack to take it home that night.

What else could go wrong?  Do you see the risk?

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How could an auditor pick up any red flags to this corruption case?

I’m writing a series of posts on my other blog about a corruption indictment of officials in the city of Upland.  The focus of that series of posts is a case study for CPAs based on a live, developing situation.  Since the audience will be CPAs, I will not cross-post those discussions to this blog.  If you’re interested, the posts start here and continue here and here.