My articles were not bad, but it could never be the best 3 years of my life because you earn much more money after completing your articles lol so money wise, you'll obviously enjoy life much more after articles 😅 But from that perspective you'll learn how to save money well which is also awesome!You will miss the vibe and all your friends from articles so just enjoy it ❤
Haha, completely agreed from a financial perspective. 😅 and absolutely, I think it'll be rare to experience a work environment where you are surrounded by so many people your age, so definitely a time to savour. 😇
@@accountingwithmaddy I guess that's a really great advantage we enjoyed in this profession when we experienced that sort of work environment with all our colleagues 💯 It's the one thing I miss the most from my days of articles, but the money is much better now so it evens out 😅 Also, this is an awesome clip, spot on 💯
Hi Maddy, I am an accounting student and I was wondering if it would be possible for you to share your email, I had a few questions I wanted to ask you?
@@accountingwithmaddy Ok, great. I struggle to answer discuss type questions in Financial accounting. I understand what is required however I don't know how to structure my answer. Do you perhaps have an approach that you used to answer such questions? Also are you willing to accept video suggestions?
@@petrinaabraham6078 So with discussion questions (specifically relating to Financial Reporting), the rule of thumb is always Principle and Application. For example, if you are given a Revenue question, and it deals with a principal vs agent principle (as discussed in IFRS 15), then you would structure your answer by first stating what IFRS 15 says around the principal/agent situation. You would say something like "This situation is implicit of a Principal vs Agent scenario as described in IFRS 15, where it would need to be identified whether the seller in this context has control over the goods transferred..." (basically hitting all of the buzzwords required by the IFRS 15 principle). Then you need to APPLY your particular scenario to the underlying principle (in this case the IFRS 15 principal vs agent principle). You could say "In this scenario, the entity in question demonstrates control over the good because of XYZ reason..." and then apply all of the facts of the scenario that address each of the principles stated above. The P + A rule works every time (and for every subject) and it also helps clarify to you what your argument is, so it doesn't get all muddled. I hope this helps!
I love your videos so much 😂 always insightful and chilled and relaxing......looking forward to your APC video
awww yay, this makes me so happy to hear!
Let’s gooooo 🎉
thanks for filming, mister!
Another banger! Nice studio space you've got goin there!
thanks will - thought it might be time that my teeny apartment makes an appearance!
Hy used your videos in third year, cta am still here catching up, thanks a mil 😊
Good luck with CTA, I’m sure you’ll crush it!
My articles were not bad, but it could never be the best 3 years of my life because you earn much more money after completing your articles lol so money wise, you'll obviously enjoy life much more after articles 😅 But from that perspective you'll learn how to save money well which is also awesome!You will miss the vibe and all your friends from articles so just enjoy it ❤
Haha, completely agreed from a financial perspective. 😅 and absolutely, I think it'll be rare to experience a work environment where you are surrounded by so many people your age, so definitely a time to savour. 😇
@@accountingwithmaddy I guess that's a really great advantage we enjoyed in this profession when we experienced that sort of work environment with all our colleagues 💯 It's the one thing I miss the most from my days of articles, but the money is much better now so it evens out 😅 Also, this is an awesome clip, spot on 💯
Hi Maddy, I am an accounting student and I was wondering if it would be possible for you to share your email, I had a few questions I wanted to ask you?
hi petrina! Happy to answer queries in the comments. 😇
@@accountingwithmaddy Ok, great.
I struggle to answer discuss type questions in Financial accounting. I understand what is required however I don't know how to structure my answer.
Do you perhaps have an approach that you used to answer such questions?
Also are you willing to accept video suggestions?
@@petrinaabraham6078 So with discussion questions (specifically relating to Financial Reporting), the rule of thumb is always Principle and Application.
For example, if you are given a Revenue question, and it deals with a principal vs agent principle (as discussed in IFRS 15), then you would structure your answer by first stating what IFRS 15 says around the principal/agent situation. You would say something like "This situation is implicit of a Principal vs Agent scenario as described in IFRS 15, where it would need to be identified whether the seller in this context has control over the goods transferred..." (basically hitting all of the buzzwords required by the IFRS 15 principle).
Then you need to APPLY your particular scenario to the underlying principle (in this case the IFRS 15 principal vs agent principle). You could say "In this scenario, the entity in question demonstrates control over the good because of XYZ reason..." and then apply all of the facts of the scenario that address each of the principles stated above.
The P + A rule works every time (and for every subject) and it also helps clarify to you what your argument is, so it doesn't get all muddled.
I hope this helps!
@@accountingwithmaddy This is very helpful thank you.
Very helpful